Bartonia

Muhlenberg ex Willdenow

Ges. Naturf. Freunde Berlin Neue Schriften 3: 444. 1801. name conserved

Endemic
Etymology: For Benjamin Smith Barton, 1766–1815, American botanist
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 14.

Herbs annual or perennial, weakly chlorophyllous, with stems and leaves yellowish green or purplish, glabrous. Leaves cauline, alternate, subopposite, or opposite, scalelike. Inflorescences dichasial or racemoid cymes, reduced thyrses, or solitary flowers. Flowers 4-merous; calyx lobed nearly to base, or some or all lobes proximally connate; corolla white or greenish white to pale yellow, yellowish green, to green, sometimes purple-tinged, narrowly campanulate, glabrous, lobes longer than tube, margins entire or erose, plicae between lobes absent, spurs absent; stamens inserted in corolla sinuses; anthers distinct; ovary sessile or subsessile; style short and stout or absent; stigma 2-lobed or decurrent along distal portion of sutures; nectaries absent. Capsules compressed-cylindric. x = 11, 13.

Distribution

c, e North America.

Discussion

Species 3 (3 in the flora).

Plants cultivated as Bartonia are species of Mentzelia (Loasaceae), to which the homonym Bartonia Sims of 1804 was formerly applied.

Bartonia has a reduced root system, minute leaves, and stems that are sometimes weakly chlorophyllous, and is partially mycotrophic (D. D. Cameron and J. F. Bolin 2010). Bartonia species have been assumed to be annuals, from the appearance of the basal and underground parts, but this has been questioned.

Selected References

None.

Key

1 Leaves ± evenly spaced; corollas 4.8–11 mm, lobed nearly to base, lobes narrowly spatulate-obovate to elliptic; flowering winter–spring. Bartonia verna
1 Leaves crowded near base of stem, distally widely separated; corollas 1.9–6.2 mm, lobed 0.5–0.8 times their length, lobes oblong or oblong-lanceolate; flowering summer–fall. > 2
2 Corolla lobe margins distally erose-serrate, apices rounded to abruptly acute, mucronate. Bartonia virginica
2 Corolla lobe margins entire, apices acute to acuminate, not mucronate. Bartonia paniculata