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Eremothera gouldii (P.H.Raven) W.L.Wagner & Hoch  

No occurrences found

(redirected from: Camissonia gouldii Raven)
Family: Onagraceae
Diamond Valley suncup
[Camissonia gouldii Raven, moreOenothera gouldii (Raven) R.L. Welsh & N.D. Atwood]
Eremothera gouldii image
Megan Swan
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Duration: Annual Nativity: Native Lifeform: Forb/Herb General: Annual, 6-20 cm tall; stems simple or branched from near the base; herbage glandular-puberulent; taprooted. Leaves: Cauline, alternate, elliptic to nearly rhombic, 1-1.5 cm long, 0.5-1 cm wide, glandular-puberulent, margins toothed; petiole slender. Flowers: Usually solitary, rarely more than 1 blooming at a time on a stem, arising in the upper leaf axils; floral tube narrow in the lower half and expanding gradually above, 3-5 cm long, glabrous, sometimes pubescent, often fading to purplish or orange upon wilting; sepals 4, awl-shaped, 9-28 mm long, pale yellow-green, often purple-spotted; petals 4, obovate to rhomboidal, 10-30 mm long, yellow, turning purplish or reddish upon wilting; style exceeding the stamens, stigma disk-shaped to quadrangular; flowers April-September. Fruits: Capsule, 8-12 mm long, glandular-puberulent. Ecology: Volcanic soils, cinder flats, pinyon-juniper woodlands, occasionally in ponderosa pine communities; 1500-2300 m (5000-7500 ft); Cochise, Coconino, and Mohave counties; southwestern U.S. Notes: na Editor: Springer et al. 2008
Eremothera gouldii image
Megan Swan
Eremothera gouldii image
Megan Swan
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