Difference between revisions of "Mirabilis sect. Oxybaphoides"

A. Gray in W. H. Emory

in W. H. Emory, Rep. U.S. Mex. Bound. 2(1): 173. 1859.

Synonyms: Undefined sect. Allioniella Rydberg Undefined sect. Hesperonia Standley
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 4. Treatment on page 46. Mentioned on page 41.
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Revision as of 22:26, 16 December 2019

Herbs, herbaceous to suffrutescent or shrubby perennial [annual]; roots cylindric, cordlike. Stems erect to decumbent or prostrate, densely to sparsely leafy, leaves ± evenly distributed. Leaves: basal leaves petiolate, larger; distal leaves short petiolate or sessile, smaller, margins entire. Inflorescences axillary and terminal in open or congested, few or repeatedly branched cymes; involucres slightly accrescent, bell-shaped, with 1(–3) flowers inserted at base. Flowers: perianth broadly and shortly funnelform, abruptly flared from narrow tube, deeply 5-lobed; stamens 3–5. Fruits with (0–)5–10 indefinite or prominent lines, ellipsoid or obovoid, round in cross section, base not or slightly constricted, apex rounded, truncate, or somewhat nipplelike, surface of fruit smooth or very slightly rugose, glabrous, mucilaginous when wetted.

Distribution

sw United States, n Mexico, South America, s Asia.

Discussion

Species ca. 17 (3 in the flora).

Mirabilis sect. Oxybaphoides is poorly understood. It is the only section with species native to the Old World. In North America, two genera have been recognized: the monotypic Allionella, and the complex series of intergrading forms in Hesperonia, where P. C. Standley (1918) recognized nine species and A. Heimerl (1934c) referred to the group (in Mirabilis) as a “formenkreis.” Most later botanists have included all taxa in the complex in a broad Mirabilis, variously treating the different morphologic entities as species, infraspecies, or variously combining them into broadly constructed, variable taxa. One species in the section, Mirabilis expansa (Ruiz & Pavon) Standley, has recently been discovered to be an important food crop among indigenous peoples of the Andes (National Research Council 1989b).