Hibiscus coccineus |
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brilliant hibiscus, scarlet rose-mallow, Texas star |
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Habit | Herbs, perennial, to 3(–3.5) m, herbage glabrous throughout. |
Stems | glaucous. |
Leaves | stipules caducous, linear-subulate, 1–3 mm; petiole 1/3 to equaling blade; blade orbiculate to transversely elliptic, deeply palmately 3–5-lobed, 10–19 × 13–25 cm, base cordate, segments linear-lanceolate, margins remotely, unevenly serrate, apices acuminate, surfaces glabrous, nectary absent. |
Inflorescences | solitary flowers in axils of distal leaves. |
Pedicels | jointed distally, 3–14 cm, 1/3–1 3/4 petioles; involucellar bractlets 9–15, linear-subulate, 2.5–4 cm, not ciliate. |
Flowers | showy, horizontal or ascending; calyx divided 3/4 length, rotate, 3.5–6 cm, larger in and longer than fruit, lobes narrowly triangular, apices acute to acuminate, nectaries absent; corolla rotate, petals not overlapping, bright red, narrowly spatulate-obovate, (6–)7.5–10 × 2.5–5.5 cm, minutely hairy abaxially where exposed in bud; staminal column straight, exserted, red, pink to white basally, 6.5–7 cm, bearing filaments in distal 1/3, free portion of filaments not secund, 4–8 mm; pollen dull yellow to dull red; styles red, 5–9 mm; stigmas red. |
Capsules | brown, ovoid to globose, 2.8–3.5 cm, apex acute, apiculate, glabrous. |
Seeds | brown, reniform-globose, 2.5–3.8 mm, hairy, hairs often in lines, brownish to reddish. |
2n | = 38. |
Hibiscus coccineus |
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Phenology | Flowering late May–early Aug. |
Habitat | Riparian and other freshwater marshes, ditches, swamps |
Elevation | 0–40 m (0–100 ft) |
Distribution |
AL; AR; FL; GA; LA; MS; NC; TX; VA
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Discussion | Except for the Florida records and two very old ones from Georgia, the distribution of Hibiscus coccineus given here is based on relatively recent reports and almost certainly represents escapes from cultivation rather than a natural distribution. A rare, white-flowered form is known from southern Florida and is now in the horticultural trade. Petal color in Hibiscus coccineus has been shown to be under the control of a simple diallelic locus in which red is completely dominant over white (L. A. Gettys 2012). In 1871, A. W. Chapman found plants of Hibiscus coccineus in eastern Florida that bore distinctive, shallowly-lobed leaves and his specimens form the basis for H. semilobatus. No extant populations of this variant have been rediscovered. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 6, p. 264. |
Parent taxa | |
Sibling taxa | |
Synonyms | H. semilobatus |
Name authority | Walter: Fl. Carol., 177. (1788) |
Web links |