Schizanthus

Ruiz & Pavon

Fl. Peruv. Prodr., 6. 1794.

Common names: Poor man’s orchid
Introduced
Etymology: Greek schizos, divide, and anthos, flower, alluding to irregularly divided corolla
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 14.

Herbs, annual [biennial], taprooted [rhizomatous], glandular-pubescent. Stems branched. Leaves alternate; petiolate (or petiolate proximally, sessile distally); blade pinnate or pinnate-pinnatifid [toothed]. Inflorescences axillary and terminal, paniculate. Flowers 5-merous, bilaterally symmetric (resupinate); calyx not accrescent, campanulate, deeply 5-lobed nearly to base, lobes lanceolate-linear; corolla white, pink, red, purple, or blue [yellow, orange, or brownish], often mottled, bilateral, funnelform, lobes spreading, longer than tube, adaxial larger and often deeply dissected; stamens inserted at base of corolla tube, unequal, 2 fertile and lateral, 3 sterile; anthers dorsifixed, ellipsoidal, dehiscing (explosively) by longitudinal slits (introrse); ovary 2-carpellate (2-locular); ovules 10–50; style filiform; stigma discoid, unlobed. Fruits capsules, ellipsoidal (slightly exceeding calyx), dehiscence septicidal. Seeds 8–40, ovate-reniform, flattened, (muricate-reticulate, dull). x = 10.

Distribution

Introduced; s South America (Argentina, Chile).

Discussion

Species 12 (1 in the flora).

Schizanthus is sister to the rest of the Solanaceae in phylogenetic studies, possibly pointing to a Southern Hemisphere origin of the family (R. G. Olmstead et al. 2008). Indument of Schizanthus is a mixture of unicellular hairs and glandular, multiseriate, multicellular capitate hairs that are seemingly unique in the Solanaceae (A. T. Hunziker 2001). Species of Schizanthus are cultivated as ornamentals for their butterfly- or orchid-shaped flowers (L. H. Bailey 1924).

Selected References

None.