There are approximately 2001 species
of Phacelia native to North and South
America. They are annual or perennial herbs, usually hairy and or glandular. Plants
usually have basal leaves and alternate cauline leaves that, depending on the
species, range from simple to bipinnately compound. The inflorescence is
usually a one-sided cyme that starts off tightly coiled hence, one of the
common names “scorpion-weed”. The flowers are actinomorphic and pentamerous
consisting of five separate or fused sepals, five petals fused at the base, and
five stamen fused to the petals (Figure 1). The ovary is superior and usually
composed of two fused carpels which will later mature into a capsule with
numerous seeds. The genus is traditionally placed within the family Hydrophyllaceae but there has been a
recent trend to move it into the Boraginaceae.2
According
to Weakley’s, Flora of the Southern and Mid-Atlantic States, 3
there are eight native Phacelia species in the southeastern U.S., with six of
those species found within North Carolina.
TABLE 1:
Comparison of N.C. Species Taxonomic Treatment
Common Name(s)
|
Radford & Bell 4
(1968)
|
Weakley 3 (2015)
|
Fern-leaf or
Purple Phacelia
|
P. bipinnatifida Michaux
|
P. bipinnatifida Michaux
|
Eastern
Buttercup Phacelia
|
P. covillei S. Watson ex A. Gray
|
|
Appalachian
Phacelia
|
P. dubia (L.) Trelease
|
P dubia (L.) Trelease var. dubia
|
Fringed
Phacelia
|
P. fimbriata Michaux
|
P. fimbriata Michaux
|
Flatrock
Phacelia
|
P. maculata Wood
|
P. maculata Wood
|
Miami-Mist
|
P. purshii Buckley
|
P. purshii Buckley
|
Western
Buttercup Phacelia
|
P. rannunculacea (Nuttall) Constance
|
FRINGED PHACELIA SPECIES
There
are two species in N.C. with fimbriated petals; Phacelia fimbriata, and P.
purshii. Phacelia fimbriata is commonly called Fringed Phacelia or Blue
Ridge Phacelia. As the common name “Blue Ridge Phacelia “ implies, this species
is a Southern Appalachian endemic. It is
considered overall uncommon but, in some
areas it forms impressive displays of
flowers across the forest floor. Fringed Phacelia prefers rich moist
woodland slopes and alluvial woods. The 1.3 cm (.5 inches) wide flowers are white
or rarely a pale lilac with deeply fimbriated lobes. (Figures 2, 3, 5). The
lower leaves are often pinnately
compound and petioled while the upper leaves are pinnately lobed and sessile
(Figure 4, 5 ). Depending on the elevation and other factors look for blooms
during May through June. The photos below (Figures 2, 3, 5) were taken early May along the Blue Ridge Parkway near Grandfather Mountain at an elevation of 1219 meters (4000 ft.).
Figure 2: Phacelia fimbriata (Fringed Phacelia or Blue Ridge Phacelia) - notice the deeply fringed petals. |
Figure 3: Phacelia fimbriata (Fringed Phacelia) showing the typical white corolla color as opposed to light blue-purple seen in the similar P. purshii. |
Figure 4: Fringed Phacelia - notice the sessile, alternate cauline leaf with pinnate lobing. |
Figure 5: Phacelia fimbriata - USDA-NRCS
PLANTS Database / Britton, N.L., and A. Brown. 1913. An illustrated
flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British Possessions. 3
vols. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York. Vol. 3: 71.
Phacelia purshii or Miami Mist is our second species
with fimbriated petals (Figures 6, 7, 8, 9). Unfortunately, it is very similar morphologically to
Fringed Phacelia and the two species are often confused with each other. Table
two highlights some of the differences between Fringed Phacelia and Miami Mist.
Initially, it seems like it would be easy to distinguish between the two
species but, a closer look shows many areas of overlap such as habitat,
elevation, corolla color, plant size, and leaves. Luckily, a good 10x hand lens
may help solve the dilemma, look for appressed hairs on the stems of P. purshii and spreading hairs on P. fimbriata (Figure 10). Miami Mist usually blooms between May and June. The photos below were taken late April in the Porter Creek area in the Great Smoky Mountain National Park (Figures 6, 7, 8). The elevation at this site was around 710 meters (2300 ft).
TABLE 2: A Comparison and Contrast of Traits
Between Phacelia fimbriata and P. purshii 3, 4, 6, 7
TRAIT
|
FRINGED
PHACELIA
P. fimbriata
|
MIAMI
MIST
P. purshii
|
Distribution
|
Narrow distribution, a Southern
Appalachian endemic
found in Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, and Georgia
|
Widely
distributed from
Canada and most of the Eastern U.S.
|
Elevation
|
Grows mostly at higher elevations, usually elevations
> 1,200 m (4000 feet) |
Grows mostly at lower elevations, usually < 1,070 m (3500 feet) |
Habitat
|
Somewhat restricted - rich moist wooded slopes and
alluvial plains |
Found in a wider variety of
habitats - rich moist wooded slopes and alluvial plains, and disturbed areas
such as fields, roadsides and meadows |
Corolla Color
|
Corolla
mostly white,
rarely tinged with light blue or lilac, also fringes are deeply lobed
|
Corolla
mostly a pale to medium lavender
color, but may be white or dark lavender, fringes are not as deeply lobed
|
Number of flowers per inflorescence
|
~ 5-15
|
~ 10-25
|
Pubescence
|
Plant overall sparsely pubescent – glabrous, hairs on stems are spreading
|
Plant overall very pubescent and hairs are appressed (point upward)
|
Growth Habit
|
Plants overall smaller in size and
more procumbent
|
Plants overall larger in size and
more erect
|
Figure 6: Phacelia purshii - Miami Mist- notice the blue-lavender corolla color and fimbriated petals that are not as deeply lobed as P. fimbriata. |
Figure 7 : Phacelia purshii - Miami Mist |
Figure 8: Phacelia purshii - Miami Mist - notice the alternate pinnately lobed leaves and helicoid cymes. |
Figure 9: Phacelia
purshii - USDA-NRCS PLANTS Database / Britton, N.L., and A. Brown. 1913. An
illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British
Possessions. 3 vols. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York. Vol. 3: 70.
NON-FRINGED PHACELIA SPECIES
North
Carolina’s other four phacelia species are non-fringed. Probably the best known
of these four is Phacelia bipinnatifida
or Fernleaf Phacelia. It is very common in the mountains and uncommon to rare
in the upper piedmont. The plants like to grow in rich rocky cove forests. The
inflorescence is a helicoid cyme typical of the genus. The flowers are about
1.27 cm (.5 in.) across and the corolla color may be white to bluish-purple to
purple with white centers (Figures 1, 11, 12). The most common color I see is purple and
occasionally in large populations you will find a few plants with all white
flowers. The stamen are noticeably hairy and extend beyond the petals (Figure 13 ). Plants
have both basal and alternate cauline leaves that are pinnately lobed (3-5
lobes) and coarsely toothed. Leaves may or may not be mottled (Figures 14, 15 ). This latter
trait is one reason P.
bipinnatifida (Figure 16) is often confused with a close
relative Hydrophyllum virginianum, Virginia
or Appalachian Waterleaf (Figures 15, 17, 18). Table 3 shows some of the similarities and key
differences between the two species.
TABLE 3: A Comparison and Contrast of
Traits Between Phacelia bipinnatifida
and Hydrophyllum virginianum
TRAITS
|
Fernleaf Phacelia
Phacelia
bipinnatifida
|
Appalachian Waterleaf
Hydrophyllum
virginianum
|
Distribution in N.C.
|
Common in N.C. mountains and rare in the piedmont
|
Uncommon in N.C. mountains and rare in piedmont
|
Habitat
|
Rich, moist, often rocky woods and
streambanks
|
Rich, moist wooded slopes and alluvial woods
|
Flowers
|
The five petals can range in color from white - pale
lavender - deep blue-purple
Hairy filaments
Style divided to middle
|
The five petals range in color from white -
pink - light lavender
Hairy filaments
Style only divided at
tip
|
Leaves
|
Leaves alternate, simple, basal and cauline, pinnately
lobed (3-5 lobes), margins coarsely toothed, and leaves often mottled, leaves pubescent
|
Leaves alternate, simple, basal and cauline, pinnately lobed (5-7
lobes), margins coarsely toothed, and leaves often mottled, glabrous to sparsely pubescent
|
Bloom Time
|
April - May
|
May- June
|
Figure 16: Phacelia
bipinnatifida - USDA-NRCS PLANTS Database / Britton, N.L., and A.
Brown. 1913. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the
British Possessions. 3 vols. Charles Scribner's
Sons, New York. Vol. 3: 69.
Figure 17: Hydrophyllum
virginianum - notice the style is only divided at the tip.
Figure 18: One way to tell Phacelia species from Hydrophyllum is by the styles. In phacelia species the styles are divided approximately half the length of the style while in Hydrophyllum the styles are only divided at their tips. |
Phacelia maculata or Flatrock Phacelia superficially looks very similar to
P. pinnatifida but, several key features quickly distinguish
Flatrock Phacelia from Fernleaf Phacelia. One major feature, implied by the
common name “Flatrock Phacelia”, is the habitat of P. maculata. Flackrock Phacelia is a granitic community endemic. It
is only found in a few areas within the piedmont regions of four states (N.C.,
South Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama) and is considered rare to endangered
across its range.8 For N.C. it is only recorded in Cleveland County
and may be extirpated. Other differences between Fernleaf and Flatrock Phacelia
is that the latter has very prominent cilated margins on the sepals, the throat of the flower is not white (as in Fernleaf Phacelia), and ten
dark spots at the base of the petals (Figure 19).
Figure 19: Phacelia maculata (Flatrock Phacelia) - note the purple spots at the base of the petals. Photo by Will Stuart |
A third
non-fimbriated species is Phacelia
covillei or Eastern Buttercup Phacelia (Figures 20, 21, 23). In N.C. it is endangered
and only found in nine piedmont counties along the drainage basins of the Tar,
Cape Fear, and Roanoke Rivers. It grows along the floodplains and adjacent
river slopes. Notice from Table
one that Radford and Bell did not have this species occurring in N.C. This is because
it was once considered to be the same as Phacelia
rannunculaceae. and some botanists still do not recognize P. covillei as a separate species.9 Weakely3
warns that Eastern Buttercup Phacelia can be confused with P. rannunculaceae, Western Buttercup
Phacelia, and Nemophila aphylla (Figures 22, 24, 25), Smallflower Baby Blue Eyes. The former
species does not occur in N.C., so I will only focus on distinguishing Eastern Buttercup Phacelia
from Smallflower Baby Blue Eyes. Table 4 shows the similarities and differences between P. covillei and N. aphylla. A good place
to look for Eastern Buttercup Phacelia is
Raven Rock State Park early in the spring (March-April).
TABLE 4: A Comparison and Contrast of Traits
Between Phacelia covillei and Nemophila aphylla
TRAITS
|
Phacelia
covillei
Eastern Buttercup Phacelia
|
Nemophila aphylla
Smallflower
Baby Blue Eyes
|
Distribution
in N.C.
|
Rare in
piedmont
|
Uncommon
in Piedmont and coastal plain
|
Habitat
|
Wooded floodplains
and slopes
|
Rich moist
woods, wet disturbed areas, wooded floodplains and alluvial forests
|
Flowers
|
Corolla is
pale blue to lavender
Corolla
tubular to campanulate
Flowers are very small < 1 cm
Multiple flowers (2-6) in terminal
cymes
|
Corolla is
white to light blue
Campanulate
Flowers
are very small < 1 cm
Flowers
are solitary on pedicels opposite the leaves
Sepals
have small reflexed bracts
|
Leaves
|
Leaves
alternate and pinnately lobed
|
Leaves
alternate and pinnately lobed
|
Bloom Time
|
April
|
March -
May
|
Figure 20: Phacelia covillei or Eastern Buttercup Phacelia - note the campanulate corolla. Photo by Keith Board (http://getyourbotanyon.blogspot.com/2009/05/phacelia-covillei-phacelia-ranunculacea.html) |
Figure 21 : Phacelia covillei or Eastern Buttercup Phacelia - Photo by Keith Board (http://getyourbotanyon.blogspot.com/2009/05/phacelia-covillei-phacelia-ranunculacea.html) |
Figure 22: Phacelia covellei (Eastern Buttercup Phacelia) and Nemophila aphylla (Smallflower Baby Blue Eyes), are often difficult to tell apart from each other. But one key difference its found on the sepals. Nemophila has unique reflexed bracts associated with its sepals. Bracts are lacking on the sepals of Phacelia covellei. |
Figure 23: Phacelia covillei - - An Illustrated Flora of the Northern
United States, Canada and the British Possessions: From Newfoundland to the
Parallel of the Southern Boundary of Virginia, and from the Atlantic Ocean
Westward to the 102d Meridian, Volume 3.
Figure 24: Nemophila aphylla (Smallflower Baby Blue Eyes) - Photo taken by Patrick Alexander March 21, 2008 |
Figure 25: Nemophila
aphylla - USDA-NRCS PLANTS Database / Britton, N.L., and A. Brown. 1913. An
illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British
Possessions. 3 vols. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York. Vol. 3: 67.
The last
Phacelia species in N.C. is Phacelia
dubia var. dubia, commonly called Appalachian
Phacelia, or Small Flower Scorpion Weed (Figures 26, 27, 28). It is common in the mountains and piedmont and rare along the coastal
plain. Appalachian Phacelia can grow is a wide range of habitats including forests,
wooded floodplains, granitic outcrops, and disturbed areas such as fields and
roadsides. The 8-11mm (.31 - .43 in) flowers are white to pale
blue with yellowish-green centers. This species is easy to identify. The unfringed petals separate it from P. fimbriata and P. purshii. The larger bowl-shaped flowers set it apart from P. covelii, and the light blue corolla with yellowish-green center distinguishes it from P. bipinnatifida and P. maculata. The photos below were taken in late April along the Blue Ridge Parkway north of Asheville (Figures 26, 27).
Figure 26: Phacelia dubia var. dubia, or Appalachian Phacelia - note the pale blue flowers with yellowish-green centers. |
Figure 27: Figure 24: Phacelia dubia var. dubia, or Appalachian Phacelia |
Figure 28: Phacelia dubia - USDA-NRCS PLANTS Database / Britton, N.L., and A.
Brown. 1913. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the
British Possessions. 3 vols. Charles Scribner's
Sons, New York. Vol. 3: 69.
I hope my readers have enjoyed this article. and that it has inspired them to go out and explore our amazing native plants!
“Wildness is the preservation of the World.”
RESOURCES:
1. “The Plant List - A Working List for All
Plant Species.” Home - The Plant List, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
and Missouri Botanical Garden, Sept. 2013, www.theplantlist.org/1.1/about/.
2. “Jepson Herbarium: Jepson Flora Project:
Jepson EFlora: Phacelia Distans.” Guide Page for Fucus Gardneri Silva,
ucjeps.berkeley.edu/eflora/eflora_display.php?tid=37450.
3. Weakley, Alan S. Flora of the Southern and Mid-Atlantic States. Chapel Hill, NC: U of North Carolina Herbarium, North Carolina Botanical Garden, U of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 2015. Print.
4. Radford, Albert Ernest, Harry E. Ahles, and Clyde Ritchie Bell. Manual of the Vascular Flora of the Carolinas. Chapel Hill, NC: U of North Carolina Press, 1983. Print.
5. United States, Congress, Department of
Natural and Cultural Resources, et al. “Natural Heritage Program List of Rare
Plant Species of North Carolina 2016.” Natural Heritage Program List of
Rare Plant Species of North Carolina 2016.
6. Glass, Pamela Michele,
"Evidence of Ecological Speciation in Phacelia." (2007). Electronic Theses
and Dissertations. Paper 2143. h p://dc.etsu.edu/etd/2143
7. Chester, W. & Wofford, Eugene & Shaw, Joey & Estes, Dwayne & Webb, H.. Guide to the Vascular Plants of Tennessee. Knoxville: The University of Tennessee Press, 2015. Project MUSE.
7. Chester, W. & Wofford, Eugene & Shaw, Joey & Estes, Dwayne & Webb, H.. Guide to the Vascular Plants of Tennessee. Knoxville: The University of Tennessee Press, 2015. Project MUSE.
8. Jerry M. Baskin
and Carol C. Baskin, GERMINATION ECOLOGY OF PHACELIA DUBIA VAR. DUBIA
IN TENNESSEE GLADES, American Journal of Botany, 58, 1, (98-104), (1971).
9.
Sewell, M., and M. A. Vincent. 2006. Biosystematics of the Phacelia
ranunculacea complex (Hydrophyllaceae). Castanea 71: 192–209.
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