Primula pauciflora var. monantha (Greene) A.R. Mast & Reveal (redirected from: Dodecatheon radicatum subsp. monanthum)
Family: Primulaceae
[Dodecatheon pauciflorum var. monanthum Greene ex R. Knuth,  more...]
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Plants glabrous. Leaves 3-10(-20) × 0.5-2(-2.7) cm; blade usually oblanceolate to spatulate or narrowly elliptic, rarely broadly elliptic. Pedicels glabrous. Flowers: calyx glabrous; corolla tube yellow with maroon, thin, wavy ring, lobes magenta to lavender, (5-)8-15(-18) mm; filament tube maroon to black, sometimes yellow at base, 1.5-2 mm; anthers (3.5-)4-6 mm; pollen sacs usually maroon, connective maroon.

Flowering spring-summer. Moist flats and slopes, meadows or grassy places, sagebrush, oak and conifer woodlands, sagebrush and mixed aspen and montane conifer communities; 400-3000 m; Calif., Oreg., Utah, Wash.

Variety monanthum is a spring-flowering plant in widely scattered areas (400-1800 m) in the Wallowa Valley, near Pendleton, the John Day Valley area, and Illinois River area in Oregon. The variety is found also in Del Norte County, California, and in Garfield County, Washington. The disjunct Utah populations flower in the summer and occur at 2000 to 3000 meters in the southern Wasatch Mountains, basically from Mount Nebo of eastern Juab County south to near Orderville, Kane County. The Utah phase requires more study; the maroon filament tube is almost certainly due to a shift in pollinators, and there is some question as to whether it is the same taxon as the Oregon plants.