Callirhoë |
Callirhoë scabriuscula |
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poppy mallow, wild hollyhock, wine cup |
Texas poppy mallow |
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Habit | Herbs, annual, perennial, or sometimes biennial, hairy, hairs stellate, 4-rayed, and/or simple, or plants glabrous and glaucous. | Plants perennial. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | erect, ascending, or decumbent. |
1(–6), stiffly erect, 3.2–10 dm, densely hairy, hairs 6–8-rayed, stellate. |
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Leaves | stipules persistent, caducous, or tardily deciduous, ovate, linear-lanceolate to subulate, auriculate, or rhombic-ovate; blade often pedate, suborbiculate, cordate, ovate, triangular, or hastate, palmately cleft or entire and crenate, base truncate, cordate, or sagittate to hastate, margins 1 per carpel; styles 10–28-branched; stigmas introrsely decurrent, filiform. |
stipules persistent, linear-lanceolate, 5.8–8.5 mm; petiole 1.5–10 cm; blade suborbiculate, 3- or 5-lobed, 4–6.5 × 3.8–7 cm, surfaces stellate-hairy, lobes oblong to oblanceolate or linear-oblanceolate. |
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Inflorescences | racemose; involucellar bractlets (1–)3, linear, 5.5–10 × 0.7–1.5 mm. |
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Flowers | bisexual; calyx lobes valvate in bud, forming apiculate or acuminate point; petals reddish purple with deep-red basal spot, 3–3.7(–4) cm. |
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Fruits | schizocarps, erect, not inflated, oblate or depressed-discoid, indurate, reticulate and rugose, strigose or glabrous, indehiscent or dehiscent (annual species only); mericarps 10–28, 2-celled, prominently obtusely beaked or not, drying tan or brown, distal locule sterile, lower 1-seeded. |
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Seeds | 1 per locule, reniform or reniform-pyriform (annual species only), glabrous. |
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Schizocarps | 7.8–12 mm diam.; mericarps 12–20, 4.2–5 × 3.2–4 mm, hairy, indehiscent; beaks not prominent, 0.7–2 mm; collars absent. |
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x | = 14, 15. |
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2n | = 30. |
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Callirhoë |
Callirhoë scabriuscula |
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Phenology | Flowering spring. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Quaternary (Holocene) wind-blown sand deposits | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 600 m (2000 ft) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution | United States; n Mexico |
TX |
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Discussion | Species 9 (9 in the flora). Several species of Callirhoë are gynodioecious; populations of C. alcaeoides, C. involucrata, and C. leiocarpa have individuals with either bisexual or functionally pistillate (that is, male-sterile) flowers. In these species the functionally pistillate flowers can be recognized by their reduced number of anther sacs, failure of these anther sacs to dehisce, stigmatic lobes often conspicuous at early anthesis, reduced petal size, and in C. alcaeoides shorter calyx lobe length. A few populations of C. pedata in Arkansas exhibit a corolla size dimorphism suggesting that this species too may be gynodioecious. Several species of Callirhoë are cultivated and may escape. All taxa of this genus occur within the flora area except C. involucrata var. tenuissima Palmer ex Baker f., which is wholly Mexican. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Of conservation concern. Callirhoë scabriuscula is found only in west-central Texas along the upper Colorado River where it has adapted to a rare edaphic niche, relict Quaternary sand dunes. Plants produce taproots up to one meter long. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service lists this species as endangered. Callirhoë scabriuscula is in the Center for Plant Conservation’s National Collection of Endangered Plants. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 6, p. 240. | FNA vol. 6, p. 245. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Name authority | Nuttall: J. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 2: 181. (1821) | B. L. Robinson: in A. Gray et al., Syn. Fl. N. Amer. 1(1,2): 302. (1897) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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