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burrowing four o'clock, dune-groundnut

Stems

0.2–2 m. Leaves: small leaf of pair often not equaling petiole of larger leaf;

petiole 8–45 mm;

blade ovate, ovate-deltate, or elliptic-ovate, 9–50 × 3–45 mm, base slightly to strongly oblique, truncate to cordate, margins sinuate and undulate, apex usually rounded, sometimes obtuse or acute, surfaces often red-punctate.

Inflorescences

peduncle 1–9 mm at anthesis, rapidly elongating and curving downward as perianth wilts, ultimately 10–30 cm.

Perianth

magenta [rarely yellow], 10–30[–50] × 9–30[–45] mm.

Fruits

brownish or whitish, 9–13 × 6–9 mm.

Okenia hypogaea

Phenology Flowering early spring–late fall [year-round].
Habitat Sandy areas along coast [inland]
Elevation 0[-1800] m (0[-5900] ft)
Distribution
from FNA
FL; Mexico; Central America (Nicaragua)
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

A. L. Bogle (1974) indicated that the flowers of Okenia hypogaea may be cleistogamous. Information provided on a specimen label suggests that flowers with a conspicuous perianth are staminate and that cleistogamous flowers are rare. The reproductive biology is in need of study. Herbarium specimens very rarely contain fruits. Peduncles may be mistaken for adventitious roots by collectors, the fruit very easily torn from the peduncle as the plant is taken. The descending peduncle resembles a root to the point that a conic cap of cells, resembling a root cap, develops over the tip of the perianth base that is to become part of the fruit (A. L. Bogle 1974).

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Source FNA vol. 4, p. 39.
Parent taxa Nyctaginaceae > Okenia
Name authority Schlechtendal & Chamisso: Linnaea 5: 92. (1830)
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