Plant: perennial herb; 3-8 dm tall, foliage glabrous or sparsely pubescent
Leaves: lanceolate to linear, the lower ones 3-9 cm long, 4-18 mm broad, the upper ones 3-7 cm long, 2-5 mm broad
INFLORESCENCE: a terminal, compound cyme
Flowers: calyx lobes subulate, glabrous, ciliate along the margins, or densely pubescent, 2-7 mm long; corolla tube 8-15(-17) mm long, broadest below the apex, moderately constricted at the orifice, the lobes (2-)4-7 mm long
Fruit: terete, 2-13 cm long. SEEDS cylindrical, corky, 6-10 mm long, 1.0-2.5 mm broad
Misc: Mostly along watercourses in desert grasslands and mesquite scrublands; 750-1500 m (2500-5000 ft); Mar-May
REFERENCES: McLaughlin, Steven, P. 1994. Apocynaceae. J. Ariz. - Nev. Acad. Sci. Volume 27, 164-168.
Duration: Perennial
Nativity: Native
Lifeform: Forb/Herb
General: Herbaceous perennial, from woody rootstock, 30-80 cm tall, foliage glabrous or sparsely pubescent; stems erect-ascending with many branches from the base.
Leaves: Alternate, cauline, lanceolate to linear, the lower leaves 3-9 cm long, 4-18 mm broad, the upper leaves reduced, 3-7 cm long, 2-5 mm broad.
Flowers: Inflorescence a terminal, compound cyme; calyx lobes 5, subulate, glabrous, ciliate along the margins, or densely pubescent, 2-7 mm long; corolla tube 8-15 mm long, the lobes 4-7 mm long, blue-white.
Fruits: A pair of elongated, terete capsules (follicles), 2-13 cm long; seeds cylindrical, corky, 6-10 mm long, 1-3 mm broad.
Ecology: Found mostly along watercourses in riparian forests, desert grasslands, mesquite scrublands and pinyon juniper woodlands; 2,500-5,000 ft (750-1500 m); flowers March-May.
Distribution: n, c and se AZ, c and s NM, sw TX, n MEX.
Notes: An occasional herb in washes, floodplains and riparian areas, look for the bunches of erect-ascending, dark green stems coming from a single base, milky sap, mostly linear dark-green leaves,flowers with a narrow blue-white tube widening abruptly to 5 white lobes and pods which often become white-tan and remain on the plant after releasing seeds.
Ethnobotany: No known uses although several species of Amsonia are ornamentals and others contain alkoloids.
Etymology: Amsonia is named for Charles Amson, American physician who lived in Virginia in 1760 and was a friend of prominent physician, botanist and plant collector John Clayton. Palmeri commemorates Edward Palmer, 1831-1911, physician and collector of large numbers of plants and animals of the southwest.
Synonyms: Amsonia hirtella, Amsonia hirtella var. pogonosepala, Amsonia pogonosepala, Amsonia standleyi
Editor: FSCoburn 2014, AHazelton 2015