Common Name: PHLOX FAMILY Habit: Annual, perennial herb, shrub, vine. Leaf: simple or compound, cauline (or most basal), alternate or opposite; stipules 0. Inflorescence: cymes, heads, clusters, or flower 1; bracts in involucres or not. Flower: sepals generally 5, fused at base, translucent membrane generally connecting lobes, torn by fruit; corolla generally 5-lobed, radial or bilateral, salverform to bell-shaped, throat often well defined; stamens generally 5, epipetalous, attached at >= 1 level, filaments of >= 1 length, pollen white, yellow, blue, or red; ovary superior, chambers generally 3, style 1, stigmas generally 3. Fruit: capsule. Seed: 1--many, when wetted swelling or not, gelatinous or not. Genera In Family: 26 genera, 314 species: America, northern Europe, northern Asia; some cultivated (Cantua, Cobaea (cup-and-saucer vine), Collomia, Gilia, Ipomopsis, Linanthus, Phlox). Note:Leptodactylon moved to Linanthus. eFlora Treatment Author: Robert W. Patterson, family description, key to genera, except as noted Scientific Editor: Robert W. Patterson, Thomas J. Rosatti.
Habit: Annual. Stem: decumbent to erect, glabrous, hairy, glandular, or tufted-woolly-hairy. Leaf: simple, 1--3-pinnate-lobed or -dissected, generally alternate, margins entire, toothed, or lobed, tips acute, acuminate, or mucronate; basal generally in rosette; cauline generally reduced. Inflorescence: flowers 1--many in bract axils. Flower: calyx membranous between lobes, membranes splitting or expanding in fruit; corolla > calyx, lobes generally ovate, acute or acuminate. Fruit: spheric to ovoid; chambers 3; valves separating from top, to base and detaching or not to base and staying attached to receptacle. Seed: 3--many, yellow to brown, gelatinous when wet. Etymology: (Filippo L. Gilii, Italian naturalist, 1756--1821) Note: Stamens, styles said to be exserted protrude beyond fused part of corolla, that is, beyond corolla throat. Other taxa in TJM (1993) moved to Aliciella, Lathrocasis, Linanthus, Navarretia, Saltugilia. Unabridged Note:Gilia can be challenging to identify. Several small-flowered species are only cryptically different from one another and many traits overlap. In order to successfully use the key, it is important to note pattern and distribution of flower color at the time of collection, as it may fade upon drying. Depauperate specimens may be particularly difficult if not impossible to identify using ordinary means. Descriptions of flowers follows previous authors (Day 1993; Grant & Grant 1956) in subdividing fused part of corolla into tube (basal part with parallel sides) and throat (flared part distal to tube). It is important to note that in some cases these definitions do not refer to homologous parts of the corolla. eFlora Treatment Author: J. Mark Porter
Stem: branches generally several, spreading from below, glabrous or tufted-woolly-hairy or glandular at base. Leaf: basal generally in cluster or rosette, tufted-woolly-hairy on upper surface or in axils or +- glabrous, 1--2-pinnate-lobed, lobes generally linear, spreading, axis linear or strap-shaped. Inflorescence: +- clusters, open or not; pedicels unequal. Flower: calyx (2)3--5.8 mm, glandular or tufted-woolly-hairy; corolla (5)9--22 mm, tube purple, throat generally tapered, part or all purple, lobes bright pink-lavender, white at base; stamens unequal, exserted or longest +- exserted. Fruit: (3)3.5--8 mm, generally <= calyx, ovoid to obovoid. Seed: 9--42.
NATIVE Stem: erect or ascending, 3--32 cm, proximally tufted-woolly-hairy, distally glandular-hairy. Leaf: basal in rosette, margin entiredentate to 1-pinnate-lobed, tufted-woolly-hairy or (glabrous with age); proximal +- similar, crowded, lobes narrow, entire; distal reduced, few-lobed to entire, tufted-woolly-hairy or (+- glandular-hairy). Inflorescence: Open, erect to ascending; pedicels, unequal, 1--25 mm. Flower: calyx (2)3--5 mm, (3)4--6.5 mm in fruit, glandular-hair (thinly hairy), lobes in membrane width +- = lobesmembranes; corolla (5)9--21 mm, tube 6--13 mm, dark purple, long-exserted from calyx, funnel-shaped; throat 1--4 mm, narrow-funnel-shaped, proximally purple, distally white to pale yellow or purple with white to pale yellow spots; lobes +- oblong to obovate, pink to dark purple (+- white at base); stamens slightly to evidentnoticeably exserted from throat, style included to exserted just beyond anthers; pollen white to blue. Fruit: (3)4--6 mm, +- = or exceeding fruiting calyx. Seed: +- 1.5 mm, oblong, smooth, light brown. Ecology: Serpentine or sandstone outcrops, chaparral, Sargent cypress forest; Elevation: 686--1220 m. Bioregional Distribution: SCoRO (Santa Lucia Range). Flowering Time: Apr--May Note: Jepson eFlora Author: J. Mark Porter Index of California Plant Names (ICPN; linked via the Jepson Online Interchange) Previous taxon: Gilia tenuiflora subsp. arenaria Next taxon: Gilia tenuiflora subsp. hoffmannii
Citation for this treatment: J. Mark Porter 2023, Gilia tenuiflora subsp. docmilleri, in Jepson Flora Project (eds.) Jepson eFlora, Revision 12, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=8614, accessed on October 09, 2024.
Citation for the whole project: Jepson Flora Project (eds.) 2024, Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/, accessed on October 09, 2024.
No expert verified images found for Gilia tenuiflora subsp. docmilleri.
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