Hydrolea

Linnaeus

Sp. Pl. ed. 2, 1: 328. 1762. name conserved

Etymology: Greek hydor, water, and elaia, olive, probably alluding to habitat and oiliness and/or form of leaves
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 14.

Herbs or small shrubs, usually perennial. Stems green, brown, or purple, glabrous or hispid-hirsute, with or without glandular trichomes or long, jointed hairs; thorns occasionally bearing small leaves toward tips. Leaf blades ovate, lanceolate, or linear, occasionally orbiculate, pin­nately veined, base attenuate, acute, round, or obtuse, margins entire or serrulate, often undulate, apex acuminate to acute, surfaces glabrous or densely pubescent, sometimes gland-dotted, with or without glandular trichomes or long, jointed hairs, occasionally pubescent only along main veins. Inflorescences terminal or axillary, pedunculate, highly branched or unbranched. Flowers: sepals lanceolate or ovate, margins entire, surfaces glabrous or hispid-hirsute, with or without glandular trichomes or long, jointed hairs; corolla blue or white, campanulate; anthers pale pink, white, or blue; filaments white or blue, abruptly dilated at base, glabrous; pollen white or yellow; ovary green or blue, globose or subglobose, proximal 1/2 glabrous, distal 1/2 glabrous, puberulent, or glandular-pubescent; styles white, brown, or blue, often curved inward to summits, glabrous, puberulent, or glandular-pubescent (especially at base); stigmas funnelform. Capsules brown or purple, globose or ovoid, occasionally truncated at style bases, 3–7 × 2.5–7 mm, proximal 1/2 glabrous, distal 1/2 glabrous, puberulent, or glandular-pubescent. Seeds tan to dark brown, ovoid to cylindric, symmetric or occasionally asymmetric, 0.4–0.7 × 0.2–0.4 mm.

Distribution

sc, e United States, Mexico, Central America, South America, s, se Asia, Africa, Indian Ocean Islands (Madagascar), Pacific Islands (Philippines), n Australia.

Discussion

Species 11 (5 in the flora).

Species in the flora area are placed in Hydrolea sect. Hydrolea.

Selected References

None.

Key

1 Inflorescences axillary fascicles. > 2
2 Stems and sepals with long, jointed hairs. Hydrolea quadrivalvis
2 Stems and sepals without long, jointed hairs. Hydrolea uniflora
1 Inflorescences terminal corymbs or leafy panicles. > 3
3 Stems pubescent or hispid-hirsute, usually densely covered with glandular trichomes, occasionally glabrous. Hydrolea spinosa
3 Stems pubescent, sometimes with few glandular trichomes. > 4
4 Leaf blades ovate, 1–2.5 cm wide, margins entire, surfaces pubescent; styles 10–15 mm. Hydrolea ovata
4 Leaf blades lanceolate, 0.3–1 cm wide, margins serrulate, surfaces glabrous or pubescent; styles 5–10 mm. Hydrolea corymbosa
... more about "Hydrolea"
Lawrence J. Davenport +
Linnaeus +
sc +, e United States +, Mexico +, Central America +, South America +, s +, se Asia +, Africa +, Indian Ocean Islands (Madagascar) +, Pacific Islands (Philippines) +  and n Australia. +
Greek hydor, water, and elaia, olive, probably alluding to habitat and oiliness and/or form of leaves +
Sp. Pl. ed. +
Hydrolea +
Hydroleaceae +