Oenothera villosa subsp. strigosa |
Oenothera sect. Oenothera |
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hairy evening primrose, stiff hairy evening-primrose, yellow evening-primrose |
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Habit | Herbs flushed with red, at least proximally, often red throughout, strigillose, rarely exclusively so, usually also villous with erect to ascending or subappressed red-pustulate hairs, and glandular puberulent, at least distally. | Herbs annual, biennial, or perennial, caulescent; from a usually large taproot, sometimes developing adventitious shoots from lateral roots producing a fibrous root system. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | erect to ascending or decumbent, branched or unbranched. |
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Leaves | green to dull green, blade margins usually denticulate or subentire, sometimes moderately dentate, venation not prominent. |
in a basal rosette and cauline, cauline (1–)3–25 cm; blade margins pinnately lobed to sinuate-dentate, serrate to dentate or subentire. |
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Inflorescences | relatively open, apex obtuse, internodes in fruit usually equal to or longer than capsule. |
solitary flowers in axils of distal leaves, usually forming a dense or lax spike. |
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Flowers | sepals red-striped or flushed with red. |
opening near sunset, with a sweet scent or nearly unscented; buds erect or recurved, terete or weakly quadrangular, with free tips; floral tube 12–165(–190) mm; sepals separating in pairs and reflexed, or splitting along only 1 suture and reflexed to one side as a unit, or separate and reflexed individually; petals yellow, usually fading orange, reddish orange, yellow, or yellowish white, usually obcordate to obovate, sometimes rhombic, elliptic, or rhombic-ovate; stigma deeply divided into 4 linear lobes. |
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Capsules | straight, curved, or somewhat sigmoid, becoming somewhat woody in age, cylindrical to narrowly lanceoloid or ovoid, terete to weakly 4-angled dehiscent nearly throughout their length; sessile. |
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Seeds | numerous, in (1 or) 2 rows per locule, prismatic and angled, narrowly to broadly ellipsoid to subglobose, rarely obovoid and obtusely angled, surface reticulate and regularly or irregularly pitted, rarely flat. |
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2n | = 14. |
= 14. |
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Oenothera villosa subsp. strigosa |
Oenothera sect. Oenothera |
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Phenology | Flowering Jun–Sep. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Open, often wet sites, streamsides, fields, roadsides. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 30–3200 m. (100–10500 ft.) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
AZ; CA; CO; ID; MI; MN; MT; ND; NE; NM; NV; OR; SD; UT; WA; WI; WY; AB; BC; MB; NT; ON; SK |
North America; Mexico; Central America; South America; West Indies (Cuba); Bermuda [Introduced widely in temperate areas of the world] |
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Discussion | Subspecies strigosa occurs primarily in the Pacific Northwest southeast through the Rocky Mountains, and is found in mostly montane and foothill habitats. It has not spread much, if at all, outside of its native range. Oenothera strigosa (Rydberg) Mackenzie & Bush is an illegitimate later homonym that pertains here; O. rydbergii House and O. strigosa (Rydberg) Mackenzie & Bush var. subulifera R. R. Gates also pertain here and are superfluous names. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Species 68 (26 in the flora). Section Oenothera is the largest section in the genus, consisting of 68 species (79 taxa) divided into six subsections, one of which is further divided into three series. Section Oenothera has a wide geographic distribution from Canada south to Panama and throughout temperate South America, essentially encompassing the full natural distribution of the genus, although there is very sparse representation (only O. elata) from central Mexico south to Panama. Species of this section occur in a variety of habitats, often disturbed ones, from sea level to 5000 m. Most of the species are self-compatible, but with a few self-incompatible taxa and individual populations of others (W. Dietrich et al. 1997; W. L. Wagner et al. 2007). The flowers are vespertine, fading the following morning, and are pollinated by hawkmoths (in O. versicolor Lehmann perhaps by hummingbirds), or autogamous. In sect. Oenothera, as in several other sections of the genus, the diploid, bivalent-forming, usually outcrossing, species often have relatively narrow geographic and ecological ranges, whereas closely related PTH species derived from them are usually autogamous and have much wider ranges. There are 37 PTH species in sect. Oenothera, which includes the majority of species of angiosperms with this anomalous genetic system. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 10. | FNA vol. 10. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Sibling taxa | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | Onagra strigosa, O. biennis var. strigosa, O. cheradophila, O. procera, O. strigosa subsp. cheradophila, O. strigosa var. cheradophila, O. strigosa var. procera, O. subulifera, O. villosa subsp. cheradophila, O. villosa var. strigosa, Onagra biennis var. strigosa, O. strigosa var. subulata, Usoricum strigosum | |||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | (Rydberg) W. Dietrich & P. H. Raven: Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 63: 383. (1977) | unknown | ||||||||||||||||||||
Web links |