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Monardella villosa subsp. villosa


Higher Taxonomy
Family: Lamiaceae (Labiatae)View DescriptionDichotomous Key
Common Name: MINT FAMILY
Habit: Annual to shrub [tree, vine], glabrous to hairy, generally aromatic. Stem: generally erect, generally 4-angled. Leaf: generally simple to deeply lobed, generally opposite, generally gland-dotted. Inflorescence: generally cymes, generally many in dense axillary clusters surrounding stem, generally separated by evident internodes or collectively crowded, spike- or panicle-like, occasionally head-like or raceme, subtended by leaves or bracts; flowers sessile or pedicelled. Flower: generally bisexual; calyx generally 5-lobed, radial to bilateral; corolla generally bilateral, 1--2-lipped, upper lip entire or 2-lobed, +- flat to hood-like, occasionally 0, lower lip generally 3-lobed; stamens generally 4, epipetalous, generally exserted, paired, pairs generally unequal, occasionally 2, staminodes 2 or 0; ovary superior, generally 4-lobed to base chambers 2, ovules 2 per chamber, style 1, generally arising from center at junction of lobes, stigmas generally 2. Fruit: generally 4 nutlets, generally ovoid to oblong, smooth.
Genera In Family: +- 230 genera, 7200 species: worldwide. Many cultivated for herbs, oils (Lavandula, lavender; Mentha, mint; Rosmarinus, rosemary; Thymus, thyme), some cultivated as ornamental (in California Cedronella, Leonotis, Monarda, Phlomis). Note: Moluccella laevis L., shell flower, historical waif in California. Satureja calamintha (L.) Scheele subsp. ascendens (Jordan) Briq. reported as alien but not naturalized. Salazaria moved to Scutellaria; California Hyptis moved to Condea, California Satureja moved to Clinopodium.
eFlora Treatment Author: Dieter H. Wilken & Margriet Wetherwax, family description, key to genera, except as noted
Scientific Editor: Douglas H. Goldman, Bruce G. Baldwin.
Genus: MonardellaView DescriptionDichotomous Key

Habit: Annual to shrub, +- gland-dotted, scented. Leaf: entire to serrate, margin flat or wavy; petioles 0 or present, often grading into blade. Inflorescence: flowers in compact clusters of >= 1 per main stem, these occasionally arrayed in panicles (rarely spikes); flowers 3--100 per cluster; bracts generally erect in a cup-like involucre or reflexed, reduced in size inward, leaf-like to membranous in texture, green or straw-colored to rose or purple, linear to ovate, acuminate to acute or obtuse. Flower: calyx 5-lobed; 4--25 mm; corolla white to purple or yellow to red, weakly bilateral, upper lip erect, 2-lobed, lower lip recurved, 3-lobed; stamens 4; style unequally 2-lobed.
Etymology: (Latin: small Monarda) Note: Complex; study needed; many taxa intergrade; flower cluster width and bract orientation given for pressed specimens. Leaf length including petiole, if present. M. Brunell authored Monardella follettii (in part), Monardella odoratissima (in part), Monardella palmeri, Monardella purpurea, Monardella sheltonii (in part), Monardella stebbinsii, Monardella villosa (in part).
eFlora Treatment Author: Andrew C. Sanders, Mark A. Elvin & Mark S. Brunell
Reference: Elvin & Sanders 2009 Novon 19:315--343; Epling 1925 Ann Missouri Bot Gard 12:1--106; Jepson 1943 Fl California 431--444
Unabridged Reference: Abrams 1951 Ill Fl Pac Sts V III:648--660
Species: Monardella villosaView Description 


Common Name: COYOTE-MINT
Habit: Subshrub, matted to erect, open, rhizomed; hairs generally > 0.5 mm, appressed to spreading, sparse to dense, soft, wavy, or woolly, glandular and not, branched or not. Leaf: 10--30 mm (including petiole, 5--10 mm), length < 1--3.3 × width, lanceolate to ovate or widely triangular-ovate, serrate or crenate (entire), base truncate to obtuse or tapered; abaxially glandular-hairy, woolly or not. Inflorescence: flower clusters generally 1--6(10) per main stem, 10--40 mm wide; bracts 10--30 mm, reflexed; bracts generally leaf-like in texture, color, hairiness (or innermost of middle series +- scarious proximally), innermost linear to elliptic-ovate. Flower: calyx tube hairy, glandular, hairs on lobes generally similar to hairs on tube (or stiff-spreading); corolla 10--20 mm, white or pink to purple, lobes obtuse.

Unabridged Note: Leaf length-to-width ratio > 3 in inland northern NCoRO (Humboldt Co.), <= 1 in southern NCo and CCo. Flower clusters occasionally 6--10 per main stem in KR, northern NCoR. If recognized taxonomically, plants of coastal foothills of Santa Lucia Range, from San Luis Obispo Co. northern and possibly to Santa Cruz Co., with purple scarious bracts, and ovate, glabrous to sparsely hairy leaves assignable to Monardella villosa var. subglabra Hoover. Literature reports of hybridization involving that entity, Monardella palmeri, and Monardella villosa subsp. obispoensis in the Alder Creek area of Monterey Co. have not been confirmed.
Monardella villosa Benth. subsp. villosa
NATIVE
Habit: Erect, < 50 cm; hairs simple or inconspicuously branched, +- dense, wavy, soft. Leaf: 10--22 mm, abaxially sparsely hairy to woolly, base tapered to obtuse. Inflorescence: flower cluster 10--30 mm wide; outer bracts 8--20 mm. Flower: corolla pink to purple.
Ecology: Rocky slopes, ephemeral drainages, oak woodland, chaparral, montane forest; Elevation: < 1300 m. Bioregional Distribution: NW, n CW. Flowering Time: May--Aug
Synonyms: Monardella antonina Hardham; Monardella antonina subsp. antonina Listed in CNPS Inventory; Monardella antonina subsp. benitensis (Hardham) Jokerst Listed in CNPS Inventory; Monardella reflexa Howell; Monardella siskiyouensis Hardham; Monardella villosa subsp. globosa (Greene) Jokerst; Monardella villosa subsp. subserrata (Greene) Epling
Unabridged Note: If recognized taxonomically: less hairy, more glandular plants with lanceolate to ovate leaves in southern Diablo Range (eastern Monterey, San Benito cos.) assignable to Monardella antonina Hardham, also in southern Fresno and southwestern Kings cos. (Cholame and Kettleman Hills area); large plants with leaves > 22 mm, heads <= 40 mm wide assignable to Monardella villosa subsp. globosa (likely a shade-form); hairier plants of KR (e Humboldt Co., northwestern Siskiyou Co.) with lanceolate to ovate innermost bracts assignable to Monardella siskiyouensis Hardham.
Jepson eFlora Author: Andrew C. Sanders, Mark A. Elvin & Mark S. Brunell
Reference: Elvin & Sanders 2009 Novon 19:315--343; Epling 1925 Ann Missouri Bot Gard 12:1--106; Jepson 1943 Fl California 431--444
Index of California Plant Names (ICPN; linked via the Jepson Online Interchange)

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Botanical illustration including Monardella villosa subsp. villosa

botanical illustration including Monardella villosa subsp. villosa

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Citation for this treatment: Andrew C. Sanders, Mark A. Elvin & Mark S. Brunell 2012, Monardella villosa subsp. villosa, in Jepson Flora Project (eds.) Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=51631, accessed on April 18, 2024.

Citation for the whole project: Jepson Flora Project (eds.) 2024, Jepson eFlora, https://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/, accessed on April 18, 2024.

Monardella villosa subsp. villosa
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©2009 Barry Breckling
Monardella villosa subsp. villosa
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©2011 Neal Kramer
Monardella villosa subsp. villosa
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©2009 Keir Morse
Monardella villosa subsp. villosa
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©2011 Chris Winchell
Monardella villosa subsp. villosa
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©2011 Chris Winchell

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Geographic subdivisions for Monardella villosa subsp. villosa:
NW, n CW.
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map of distribution 1
(Note: any qualifiers in the taxon distribution description, such as 'northern', 'southern', 'adjacent' etc., are not reflected in the map above, and in some cases indication of a taxon in a subdivision is based on a single collection or author-verified occurence).





 

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Duplicates counted once; synonyms included.
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Blue line denotes eFlora flowering time (fruiting time in some monocot genera).