Common Name: EVENING-PRIMROSE FAMILY Habit: 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. Genera In Family: 22 genera, +- 657 species: worldwide, especially western North America; many cultivated (Clarkia, Epilobium, Fuchsia, Oenothera). Note:Gaura moved to Oenothera. Fuchsia magellanica Lam. naturalized in northern California. eFlora Treatment Author: Warren L. Wagner & Peter C. Hoch, family description, key to genera, treatment of genera by Warren L. Wagner, except as noted Scientific Editor: Robert W. Patterson, Bruce G. Baldwin.
Habit: Annual from taproot. Leaf: basal and/or cauline, alternate, simple to 2-pinnate. Inflorescence: spike. Flower: opening at dusk; sepals 4, reflexed singly or in pairs; petals 4, generally white, pink, or rarely red, without spots or ultraviolet reflective area, fading red; longer stamens opposite sepals, anthers attached at middle, pollen grains 3-angled; stigma hemispheric, generally > anthers and cross-pollinated or +- = anthers and self-pollinated. Fruit: straight to coiled, sessile. Seed: in 1 row per chamber, obovoid to oblanceoloid, minutely pitted, sometimes those near base of fruit coarsely papillate. Etymology: (Greek: desert + Oenothera) Note: Incl in Camissonia in TJM (1993). eFlora Treatment Author: Warren L. Wagner Reference: [Wagner et al. 2007 Syst Bot Monogr 83:1--240] Unabridged Reference: Raven 1969 Contr US Natl Herb 37:161--396
Habit: Plant generally +- red; rosette generally 0 (to well-developed); hairs minutely strigose and spreading, some glandular, especially in inflorescence. Stem: erect, peeling. Leaf: lanceolate to narrowly elliptic or narrowly ovate, sparsely minutely dentate or serrate; proximal oblanceolate or 0. Inflorescence: nodding; flowers generally 0 at proximal nodes. Flower: hypanthium 4--8 mm; sepals (2.7)4--8 mm; petals 3--7.5 mm, generally white (red). Fruit: 8--35 mm, 1--3.8 mm wide, cylindric, tapered to tip, +- curved outward to strongly wavy and twisted, persistent, tardily dehiscent. Seed: 1.4--2.1 mm, generally of 2 kinds, minutely pitted in rows, pale brown and coarsely papillate, dark brown. Chromosomes: 2n=14. Note: Cross-pollinated.
Citation for this treatment: Warren L. Wagner 2012, Eremothera boothii subsp. desertorum, in Jepson Flora Project (eds.) Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=89264, accessed on December 02, 2024.
Citation for the whole project: Jepson Flora Project (eds.) 2024, Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/, accessed on December 02, 2024.
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Duplicates counted once; synonyms included.
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