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Key to families | Table of families and genera

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ONAGRACEAE EVENING-PRIMROSE FAMILY

Warren L. Wagner & Peter C. Hoch, family description, key to genera; treatment of genera by Warren L. Wagner, except as noted

Annual to perennial herb (to tree).
Leaf: cauline or basal, alternate, opposite, or whorled, generally simple and toothed (to pinnately compound); stipules 0 or generally deciduous.
Inflorescence: spike, raceme, panicle, or flowers 1 in axils; bracted.
Flower: generally bisexual, generally radial, often opening at either dawn or dusk; hypanthium generally prolonged beyond ovary (measured from ovary tip to sepal base); sepals 4(2–7); petals 4(2–7, rarely 0), often fading darker; stamens 2 × or = sepals in number, anthers 2-chambered, opening lengthwise, pollen interconnected by threads; ovary inferior, chambers generally as many as sepals (sometimes becoming 1), placentas axile or parietal, ovules 1–many per chamber, style 1, stigma 4-lobed (or lobes as many as sepals), club-shaped, spheric, or hemispheric.
Fruit: capsule, loculicidal (sometimes berry or indehiscent and nut-like).
Seed: sometimes winged or hair-tufted.
22 genera, ± 657 species: worldwide, especially w North America; many cultivated (Clarkia, Epilobium, Fuchsia, Oenothera). [Wagner et al. 2007 Syst Bot Monogr 83:1–240] Gaura moved to Oenothera. Fuchsia magellanica Lam. naturalized in n CA. —Scientific Editors: Robert Patterson, Bruce G. Baldwin.
Unabridged references: [Munz 1965 North America Fl II 5:1–278]

Key to Onagraceae

GAYOPHYTUM

Harlan Lewis

Annual.
Stem: generally erect, < 1 m, slender; hairs 0 to dense, rarely glandular.
Leaf: cauline, alternate (or ± opposite near base), petioled or not, narrow- lanceolate, entire.
Inflorescence: flowers axillary, pedicelled or not, opening at dawn.
Flower: hypanthium inconspicuous; sepals 4, staying fused in 2s or all coming free; petals 4, 0.5–8 mm, white, with 1–2 yellow or ± green spots at base, fading pink or red; stamens 8, those opposite sepals longer, pollen ± yellow; ovary chambers 2, stigma generally not exserted beyond anthers, generally touching them, generally ± spheric.
Fruit: capsule, ± cylindric or flat; valves 4, generally all coming free, generally equal.
Seed: few to many, generally all maturing, generally appressed to septum, alternate or ± opposite between chambers, in each chamber generally in 1 row and generally not overlapped, 0.5–2.3 mm, ovoid, glabrous or hairy, brown or gray mottled with brown; appendages 0.
± 9 species: w North America, 2 South America. (C. Gay, French author of Flora of Chile, 1800–1873) Self-fertile; taxa with petals < 3 mm self-pollinated.
Unabridged references: [Lewis & Szweykowski 1964 Brittonia 16:343–391]

Key to Gayophytum

G. heterozygum H. Lewis & Szweyk.
NATIVE

Stem: < 80 cm; branches generally 0 at base, forked distally.
Leaf: 1.5–6 cm, much reduced distally on stem.
Inflorescence: 1st flower generally 10–20 nodes distal to base.
Flower: petals generally 2–3 mm; larger stamens 2–4 mm, pollen ± 50% aborted; ovary hairy, stigma exserted beyond anthers, hemispheric or not.
Fruit: 6–15 mm, > pedicel, very irregular, lumpy.
Seed: 2–10 maturing, ± 50% aborted, irregularly alternate, glabrous to densely puberulent.
2n=14. Open montane forest; 500–3000 m. Klamath Ranges, High North Coast Ranges, High Cascade Range, High Sierra Nevada, Tehachapi Mountain Area, Outer South Coast Ranges, Transverse Ranges, Peninsular Ranges, Warner Mountains; to Washington, Nevada. Generally self-pollinated; stable hybrid, probably between Gayophytum eriospermum, Gayophytum oligospermum. Jun–Oct [Online Interchange]
Unabridged note: The following (and possibly other) accessions, if verified, would represent elevations down to 183 m.

Previous taxon: Gayophytum eriospermum
Next taxon: Gayophytum humile

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Citation for the whole project: Jepson Flora Project (eds.) [year] Jepson eFlora, http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/IJM.html [accessed on month, day, year]
Citation for an individual treatment: [Author of taxon treatment] [year]. [Taxon name] in Jepson Flora Project (eds.) Jepson eFlora, [URL for treatment]. Accessed on [month, day, year].

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Bioregions in which taxon occursRed area (if present) is the part of the bioregion lying between the upper and lower elevation limits of the taxon;
markers link to CCH specimen records. If the markers are obscured, reload the page [or change window size and reload]. Yellow markers indicate records that may have georeferencing or identification issues.
map of distribution 1

Chart based on elevation range in Manual and elevations and coordinates of CCH records.
Data provided by the participants of the Consortium of California Herbaria.
Note: About half of the CCH records include both elevation and coordinates.
Map made in collaboration with Scott Loarie. Data provided by the participants of the Consortium of California Herbaria.
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CCH collections by month

Duplicates counted once; synonyms included.
Species do not include records of infraspecific taxa.
Blue line denotes Manual flowering time.