Clarkia purpurea subsp. quadrivulnera(Dougl. ex Lindl.) H.F. & M.E. Lewis
Family: Onagraceae
winecup clarkia
[Clarkia quadrivulnera (Dougl. ex Lindl.) A. Nels. & J.F. Macbr., moreGodetia bingensis , Godetia purpurea var. parviflora (S. Wats.) C.L. Hitchc., Godetia quadrivulnera (Dougl. ex Lindl.) Spach, Godetia quadrivulnera var. davyi Jeps., Godetia quadrivulnera var. hallii Jeps., Godetia quadrivulnera var. rubrissima Jeps., Godetia quadrivulnera var. vacensis Jepson, Oenothera decumbens Douglas ex Hook.]
Duration: Annual Nativity: Native Lifeform: Forb/Herb General: Erect annual 10-80 cm tall with simple or ascendingly branched stems. Leaves: Blades sessile or short-pedicelled, lanceolate to spatulate, 2-8 mm wide, 1-5 cm long, acute to rounded at apex, sparsely puberulent to glabrate, slightly paler beneath than above. Flowers: Hypanthium 2-6 mm high, bearing a ring of hairs one third up from base; sepals lanceolate, 5-10 mm long, usually free and reflexed in anthesis, sometimes more or less united at tips; petals lavender to purple, often with a dark purple spot at base when light-colored, rounded or truncate and usually somewhat erose at apex, 5-20 mm long, clawless; shorter stamens one third to one half as long as others; anthers 2-4 mm long. Fruits: Capsule 2-3 mm thick, 1-3.5 cm long, 8-ribbed, sparsely to densely strigose-puberulent. Ecology: Found in open and often grassy or shrubby hillsides and flats below 5,000 ft (1524 m); flowers April-May. Notes: There are several other subspecies outside of Arizona. Ssp. quadrivulnera is all that has been collected in Arizona. Ethnobotany: One subspecies was used as pinole and eye medicine, while another the seeds were dried and pulverized for food. Etymology: Clarkia is named for William Clark (1770-1838) of Lewis and Clark fame, while purpurea means purple. Synonyms: Clarkia quadrivulnera, Godetia pupurea var. parviflora, Godetia quadrivulnera, Godetia quadrivulnera var. vacensis Editor: SBuckley, 2010