Castilleja scabrida var. barnebyana

(Eastwood) N. H. Holmgren

in A. Cronquist et al., Intermount. Fl. 4: 488. 1984.

Common names: Barneby’s paintbrush
Endemic
Basionym: Castilleja barnebyana Eastwood Leafl. W. Bot. 3: 88. 1941
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 17. Treatment on page 655. Mentioned on page 654.

Stems greenish. Leaves greenish, rarely reddish purple to grayish green, 0–3(–5)-lobed, lobes spreading-ascending, sometimes divergent, linear. Bracts: distally bright red, sometimes orange-red or brick red; lobe apex acute. Calyces: lateral clefts 3–6 mm. Corollas: tube (12–)14–20 mm; beak adaxially green to yellow.


Phenology: Flowering May–Jul.
Habitat: Sun or shade, rocky slopes, ledges, ridges, sagebrush steppes, limestone.
Elevation: 2100–2600 m.

Discussion

Variety barnebyana grows on limestone substrates in the mountains of eastern Nevada and western Utah. It is frequently parasitic on Petrophyton caespitosum, a mat-forming plant from which the stems of the Castilleja often emerge, though the relationship is not obligate.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
J. Mark Egger +, Peter F. Zika +, Barbara L. Wilson +, Richard E. Brainerd +  and Nick Otting +
(Eastwood) N. H. Holmgren +
Castilleja barnebyana +
Barneby’s paintbrush +
Nev. +  and Utah. +
2100–2600 m. +
Sun or shade, rocky slopes, ledges, ridges, sagebrush steppes, limestone. +
Flowering May–Jul. +
in A. Cronquist et al., Intermount. Fl. +
Euchroma +  and Oncorhynchus +
Castilleja scabrida var. barnebyana +
Castilleja scabrida +
variety +