Nuttallanthus canadensis (L.) D. A. Sutton (redirected from: Linaria canadensis)
Family: Plantaginaceae
[Linaria canadensis (L.) Chaz.]
Nuttallanthus canadensis image
Mary Keim  
From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam

Usually in dry and almost pure sand in fallow fields and on open dunes. Sometimes in fallow fields it grows in such abundance that the landscape is blue. This species should still be sought in Kosciusko, Lagrange, and Steuben Counties.

Slender annual or winter-annual from a short taproot, 1-5 dm, essentially glabrous throughout, producing a rosette of short, prostrate stems with assurgent tips, the lvs of which are mostly opposite or ternate and broader than those of the 1-several erect main stems, these with linear lvs 1-3.5 cm נ1-2.5 mm, all but sometimes the lowermost alternate; racemes nearly naked; cor rather light blue, the lower lip bearing 2 short white ridges that form a weakly developed palate barely closing the throat; fr 2-4 mm; seeds prismatic-angled; 2n=12. Mostly in sandy soil; Mass. and even Que. to Minn., s. to Fla. and Mex., and on the Pacific coast. Apr.-June. The common form in our range is var. canadensis, with the cor mostly 8-10 mm (exclusive of the 2-6 mm spur) and the seeds smooth or nearly so. The well marked var. texana (Scheele) Pennell, with larger fls (10-12 mm exclusive of the 5-9 mm spur) and densely tuberculate seeds, is more southern, barely reaching our range.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

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Nuttallanthus canadensis image
Mary Keim  
Nuttallanthus canadensis image
John Hilty  
Nuttallanthus canadensis image
John Hilty  
Nuttallanthus canadensis image
Barry Breckling