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Photo is of parent taxon

coast Indian paintbrush

Stems

hairs sparse or dense, unbranched, rarely branched.

Leaves

not or ± fleshy.

Inflorescences

(2.5–)3–5 cm wide;

bracts proximally green or deep purple, distally bright red to red-orange, crimson, or scarlet, rarely yellow, orange, rose, magenta, or pinkish red, 5(–7)-lobed.

Corollas

(21–)25–40 mm;

beak usually long-exserted, sometimes slightly so, 12–20 mm.

Calyces

colored as bracts, or yellow with red (or light orange or yellow) lobes, sometimes white with colored lobes, 20–35 mm.

Castilleja affinis var. affinis

Phenology Flowering Feb–Aug(–Oct).
Habitat Chaparral slopes, openings, open woods, coastal scrub, stabilized dunes.
Elevation 0–1900 m. (0–6200 ft.)
Distribution
from FNA
CA; Mexico (Baja California)
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Plants of var. affinis of the immediate coast have more or less fleshy leaves. Populations with somewhat inflated and distinctively colored calyces, with yellow tubes and red lobes, are found from Point Reyes south to San Mateo County and have been called Castilleja inflata. A similar situation occurs on the northern Channel Islands, where plants with shorter corollas and paler inflorescences were named subsp. insularis. Their indument includes some branched hairs, which might cause them to be identified as the strictly mainland var. contentiosa. Hybrids with C. wightii are known from Marin County, California.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Source FNA vol. 17, p. 583.
Parent taxa Orobanchaceae > Castilleja > Castilleja affinis
Sibling taxa
C. affinis var. contentiosa, C. affinis var. neglecta
Synonyms C. affinis subsp. insularis, C. californica, C. douglasii, C. douglasii subsp. insularis, C. inflata, C. wightii subsp. anacapensis, C. wightii subsp. inflata
Name authority unknown
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