Difference between revisions of "Limnanthes douglasii subsp. rosea"

(Hartweg ex Bentham) C. T. Mason

Madroño 36: 50. 1989.

Basionym: Limnanthes rosea Hartweg ex Bentham Pl. Hartw., 302. 1849
Synonyms: Limnanthes douglasii var. rosea (Hartweg ex Bentham) C. T. Mason
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 7. Treatment on page 179. Mentioned on page 174, 176, 177.
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Latest revision as of 22:32, 5 November 2020

Leaflets: blade usually linear, sometimes wide-ovate, margins entire or deeply, irregularly lobed. Flowers cup- or bell-shaped; sepals lanceolate, 7–8 mm; petals white (sometimes aging or drying pale pink or yellow, veins rose), cuneate to obovate, 12–18 mm (apex sometimes obcordate); filaments 5 mm; anthers cream, yellow, dark pink, orange-red, or nearly black, oval, 1.5 mm. Tubercles present, whitish or pinkish, lamellar, planar, or blunt. 2n = 10.


Phenology: Flowering Mar–May.
Habitat: Wet meadows, edges of vernal pools
Elevation: 0-800 m

Discussion

Subspecies rosea occurs in the Inner Coast Ranges, Central Valley, and Sierra Nevada Foothills. C. T. Mason (1952) noted that populations in the northern part of the range tend to have white petals with pink veins, stamens, and pistils; those in the southern part of the range have petals with cream bases and yellow stamens and pistils.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.