Primula hendersonii (A. Gray) A.R. Mast & Reveal (redirected from: Dodecatheon hendersonii subsp. cruciatum)
Family: Primulaceae
[Dodecatheon hansenii (Greene) H.J. Thomp.,  more...]
Primula hendersonii image
Gary A. Monroe  

Plants (7-)10-50(-55) cm; scape glandular (at least distally) or glabrous. Caudices not obvious at anthesis; roots usually whitish; bulblets present or absent. Leaves 0.5-14(-16) × (1-)1.5-6(-7) cm; petiole slightly, if at all, winged; blade usually oblanceolate to elliptic or spatulate, sometimes ovate to nearly rounded, base somewhat decurrent into stem, abruptly tapering to petiole, margins entire, surfaces glabrous. Inflorescences 2-17-flowered; bracts narrowly to broadly lanceolate, 3-10(-15) mm, usually glabrous, sometimes glandular. Pedicels 2-7 cm, glandular or glabrous. Flowers: calyx green or greenish with reddish or purple speckles, 5-10 mm, glandular-puberulent or glabrous, tube 1.5-3 mm, lobes 4-5, 3-8 mm; corolla tube yellow or whitish with reddish to reddish purple, thick, wavy ring, lobes 4-5 (often on same plant), usually magenta to lavender, sometimes white, 6-25(-28) mm; filaments connate, tube dark maroon, 1-3.5 × 1-4 mm; anthers 2.5-6 mm; pollen sacs usually deep red to purple or maroon, sometimes yellow and often speckled with red or maroon, connective dark maroon to black, transversely rugose (infrequently seemingly longitudinally wrinkled); stigma not enlarged compared to style. Capsules green or greenish, sometimes speckled purple or reddish, operculate or valvate, cylindric-ovoid, 7-17(-19) × 4-7(-9) mm, glabrous or glandular-puberulent; walls thin, pliable. Seeds without membrane along edges. 2n = 44, 66, 88, 132.

Flowering winter-early summer. Grasslands or meadow communities, or oak and conifer woodlands, often in shady places; 0-1900(-2100) m; B.C.; Calif., Oreg., Wash.

Dodecatheon hendersonii occurs from southern Vancouver Island in the coastal ranges to west-central California (as far as San Benito County) and is disjunct into the San Bernardino Mountains in southern California. To the east, the species is found on the Siskiyou Mountains and in the Sierra Nevada of California to Tulare County. A Macoun (s.n., DAO) specimen supposedly gathered at Yale, British Columbia, may be misattributed (K. I. Beamish 1955); all other known localities are from Vancouver Island.

Inasmuch as bulblets and mature capsules are rarely collected, it is difficult to clearly distinguish between var. hendersonii and var. hansenii. The former may be broadly characterized as plants bearing bulblets at anthesis with sparsely glandular scapes, pedicels, and, sometimes, calyces. The calyx of var. hendersonii is usually greenish with purple or reddish speckles. The most distinctive characteristics of this phase are a filament tube that is 1-2.5 mm wide and acute anther apices. It is found mainly along the coast from British Columbia to southern Oregon and in scattered locations in coastal California, with disjunct populations in the foothills of the central Sierra Nevada, and in the mountains of southern California. Variety hansenii is glabrous, lacks bulblets, and the calyx typically is green; it usually is found inland in the Siskiyou Mountains and the Sierra Nevada and scattered populations occur in the coastal ranges of northern California. The filaments in var. hansenii are broader, being tubes 1.5-4 mm wide, and anther apices are obtuse. Capsules of var. hendersonii are usually operculate; those of var. hansenii appear to be consistently valvate. The 2n = 66 plants appear to be primarily individuals that produce little or no pollen.

Primula hendersonii image
Gary A. Monroe  
Primula hendersonii image
Gary A. Monroe  
Primula hendersonii image
Gary A. Monroe  
Primula hendersonii image
Gary A. Monroe  
Primula hendersonii image
Gary A. Monroe  
Primula hendersonii image
Zoya Akulova  
Primula hendersonii image
Barry Breckling  
Primula hendersonii image
Barry Breckling  
Primula hendersonii image
Barry Breckling  
Primula hendersonii image
Gary A. Monroe