Description
Family Onagraceae
Annual
or perennial
herbs, or shrubs
, rarely trees
to 30 m
tall, often with epidermal oil cells
, usually with internal phloem
. Leaves simple
, spirally arranged
, opposite, or occasionally whorled
, entire
or toothed
to pinnatifid
; stipules present and usually caducous
, or absent. Flowers perfect
and hermaphroditic
or occasionally unisexual
, actinomorphic
or zygomorphic, (2-) 4(-7) -merous, axillary
, in leafy spikes or racemes
or solitary, or occasionally in panicles, all but Ludwigia with distinct
floral tube
, nectariferous
within. Sepals green or colored
, valvate
. Petals as many as sepals or rarely absent, variously colored, imbricate or convolute and occasionally clawed. Stamens as many as sepals in one series or 2 × as many as sepals in 2 series [in Lopezia Cavanilles reduced to 2 or 1 plus 1 sterile
staminode]; anthers
versatile or basifixed
, dithecal
, sometimes cross-partitioned, opening by longitudinal
slits; pollen grains
almost always united
by viscin threads, shed as monads
, tetrads
, or polyads
. Ovary inferior, with as many carpels and locules as sepals, septa sometimes thin or absent at maturity; placentation axile
or parietal
, ovules 1 to many per locule, in 1 or several rows
or clustered, anatropous
, bitegmic; style
1; stigma with as many lobes
as sepals or clavate
to globose
. Fruit a loculicidal capsule or indehiscent nut or berry. Seeds small, smooth
or variously sculptured
, sometimes with a coma [or wing], with straight oily embryo, endosperm lacking.
Seventeen genera and ca.
650 species: widespread in temperate
and subtropical
areas, but best represented in W North America; six genera (two introduced
), 64 species (11 endemic, 11 introduced), and five natural hybrids (two endemic) in China.
Onagraceae are a well-defined, monophyletic family
in the order
Myrtales, with a sister relationship
to Lythraceae. Within the order Myrtales, the Onagraceae are distinguished by a number of features including (1) a distinctive 4-nucleate embryo sac; (2) abundant raphides
in vegetative cells
; (3) paracrystalline beaded pollen ektexine; and (4) pollen with viscin threads.
Some species of Oenothera are grown for the oil
in their seeds, which contains gamma linolenic acid (GLA), used for medicinal purposes. Several species of Onagraceae also are cultivated in China for their horticultural value, including species of Fuchsia Linnaeus (generally distinguished by having large, tubular
, red or orange flowers and fleshy
berries
) and Clarkia Pursh (distinguished by having stigmas with commissural
lobes with dry, unicellular papillae, and dry, elongate
capsules similar to those of Epilobium but lacking comas on the seeds) . The most commonly cultivated Fuchsia is F. ×hybrida Hort. and the related F. magellanica Lamarck in F. sect. Quelusia (Vandelli) Candolle from South America; F. triphylla Linnaeus, in F. sect. Fuchsia, from Hispaniola, is known from only one gathering in Fujian. Similarly, Clarkia amoena (Lehmann) A. Nelson & J. F. Macbride is widely cultivated in China, whereas C.
pulchella Pursh is known from only one gathering in Xizang; both species are native
to W North America. There are no naturalized
species of either Clarkia or Fuchsia in China.Jiarui Chen, Peter C. Hoch, Peter H. Raven, David E. Boufford & Warren L. Wagner "Onagraceae". in Flora of China Vol. 13 Page 274, 290, 400. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
Genus Epilobium
Herbs perennial
[or annual
, sometimes suffrutescent
], with leafy rosettes, stolons, soboles (shoots
), or turions (subterranean
globose
buds with fleshy
scales
) . Stems glabrous
to pubescent
, often with lines
of hairs
decurrent from margins
of petioles
. Leaves opposite, becoming alternate and bractlike in inflorescence; petiolate
or sessile; stipules absent; bracteoles absent. Inflorescences simple
or branched racemes
, panicles, spikes, or corymbs. Flowers 4-merous, often protandrous, with floral tube
, producing nectar at base
of style
. Petals pink to rose-purple or white [or rarely cream-colored or orange-red], obcordate
or obtrullate, notched
at apex. Stamens 8, in two unequal whorls; pollen yellow, shed in tetrads
. Style erect; stigma entire
or 4-lobed. Fruit an elongate
, slender capsule, 4-loculed, loculidical. Seeds many [or rarely only 4], generally with terminal
coma of silky
hairs [or coma rarely lacking]. 2n = [18, 20, 24, 26, 28, 30, 32,] 36, [38, 60].
About 165 species: montane
, boreal, and/or arctic
regions of Africa, Asia, Australasia, Europe, and North and South America, from sea level to 5000 m
, often in moist, disturbed
places: 33 species (nine endemic) in China.
The genus is divided
into seven sections
, all present in North America but only one, Epilobium sect. Epilobium, in China, where the species occur in most temperate
to montane habitats except extreme deserts or warm, subtropical
forests
.
Careful gathering of ripe
seeds and perennating
structures, usually at or just below the ground
surface, facilitate identification. The pattern
of vestiture
on stems, also extremely valuable for identification, is sometimes obscure
on specimens collected very late in the growing season
.Jiarui Chen, Peter C. Hoch & Peter H. Raven "Epilobium". in Flora of China Vol. 13 Page 400, 409, 411. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.
Taxonomy
- Domain:
Eukaryota
(
)
- Whittaker & Margulis,1978
- Kingdom:
Plantae
(
)
- Haeckel, 1866
- Plants
- Subkingdom:
Viridaeplantae
(
)
- Cavalier-Smith, 1981
- Phylum:
Magnoliophyta
(
)
- Sinnott, 1935 Ex Cavalier-Smith, 1998
- Flowering Plants
- Subphylum:
Euphyllophytina
(
)
- Infraphylum:
Radiatopses
(
)
- Kenrick & Crane, 1997
- Class:
Magnoliopsida
(
)
- Brongniart, 1843
- Dicotyledons
- Subclass:
Rosidae
(
)
- Takhtajan, 1967
- Superorder:
Myrtanae
(
)
- Takhtajan, 1967
- Order:
Myrtales
(
)
- Reichenbach, 1828
- Suborder:
Onagrineae
(
)
- Family:
Onagraceae
(
)
- Adans., 1763, Nom. Cons.
- Evening Primrose Family
- Genus:
Epilobium
(
)
- Willowherb
- Specific epithet:
canum
- (K. Presl) Raven
- Botanical name: - Epilobium canum mexicanum (K. Presl) Raven
- Specific epithet:
canum
- (K. Presl) Raven
- Genus:
Epilobium
(
- Family:
Onagraceae
(
- Suborder:
Onagrineae
(
- Order:
Myrtales
(
- Superorder:
Myrtanae
(
- Subclass:
Rosidae
(
- Class:
Magnoliopsida
(
- Infraphylum:
Radiatopses
(
- Subphylum:
Euphyllophytina
(
- Phylum:
Magnoliophyta
(
- Subkingdom:
Viridaeplantae
(
- Kingdom:
Plantae
(
Similar Species
Members of the genus Epilobium
There are approximately 1066 species in this genus. Here are just 100 of them:
E. peradnatum · E. rivulare · E. salcedoi · E. stenophyllum · E. wisconsinense · E. 'White Wonder Bells' · E. abortivum · E. acidulum · E. acinifolium · E. aconcaguinum · E. acradenum · E. acutum · E. adenocaulon · E. adenocaulon americanum · E. adenocaulon f. albiflorum · E. adenocaulon f. apricum · E. adenocaulon f. umbrosum · E. adenocaulon rubescens · E. adenocaulon subsp. americanum · E. adenocaulon subsp. rubescens · E. adenocaulon var. pseudocoloratum · E. adenocladon · E. adi · E. adnatum · E. adscendens · E. adscendens var. canescens · E. aequinoctiale · E. affine · E. affine var. fastigiatum · E. aggregatum · E. aitchisonii · E. alaskae · E. alatum · E. albiflorum · E. algidum · E. almaatense · E. alpestre · E. alpicola · E. alpinum · E. alpinum f. lactiflorum · E. alpinum var. behringianum · E. alpinun · E. alsinefolium · E. alsinefolium var. hornemanni · E. alsineifolium · E. alsinifolium (Water Plantain Willowherb) · E. alsinifolium parviflorum · E. alsinifolium subsp. parviflorum · E. alsinifolium x · E. alsinifolium x palustre · E. alsinoides · E. alsinoides subsp. atriplicifolium · E. alsinoides subsp. tenuipes · E. alsinoides tenuipes · E. alternans · E. altissimum · E. ambigens · E. ambiguum · E. amoenum · E. amphibolum · E. amplectens · E. amplexicaule · E. amurense · E. amurense cephalostigma · E. amurense f. leucanthum · E. amurense subsp. cephalostigma · E. anagalidifolium · E. anagallidifolium (Alpine Willow Herb) · E. anagallidifolium var. pseudo-scaposum · E. anatolicum · E. anceps · E. andicolum · E. andinum · E. anglicum · E. angulatum · E. angustifolium · E. angustifolium 'Monte Bianco' · E. angustifolium 'Stahl Rose' (Blackheart) · E. angustifolium 'Starl Rose' · E. angustifolium angustifolium (Blooming Sally) · E. angustifolium circumvagum · E. angustifolium f. albiflorum · E. angustifolium f. leucanthum · E. angustifolium f. macrophylla · E. angustifolium f. macrophyllum · E. angustifolium f. spectabile · E. angustifolium var. album (Blackheart) · E. angustifolium var. pleniflorum · E. angustifolium var. pygmaeum · E. angustissimum · E. angustum · E. antarcticum · E. antipodum · E. antonianum · E. apricum · E. aquaticum · E. arcticum (Arctic Willowherb) · E. arcuatum · E. arechavaletae · E. argentinum
Bibliography
- Chen Chiajui, Lu Shangzhi & Li Yibin. 2000. Onagraceae. In: Chen Chiajui, ed., Fl. Reipubl. Popularis Sin. 53(2): 27-133.
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Notes
Identifiers
- Biodiversity Heritage Library NamebankID: 8714931
- Global Biodiversity Information Facility Taxonkey: 13921214
- Globally Unique Identifier: urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:887186-1
- Zipcode Zoo Species Identifier: 3728313
