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Erythranthe

Erythranthe, the monkey-flowers and musk-flowers, is a diverse plant genus with more than 120 members (as of 2022) in the family Phrymaceae. Erythranthe was originally described as a separate genus, then generally regarded as a section within the genus Mimulus, and recently returned to generic rank. Mimulus sect. Diplacus was segregated from Mimulus as a separate genus at the same time. Mimulus remains as a small genus of eastern North America and the Southern Hemisphere. Molecular data show Erythranthe and Diplacus to be distinct evolutionary lines that are distinct from Mimulus as strictly defined, although this nomenclature is controversial.[3][4]

Erythranthe
E. peregrina in Scotland
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Phrymaceae
Genus: Erythranthe
(L.) G. L. Nesom
Type species
Erythranthe cardinalis (Douglas ex Benth.) Spach ≡Mimulus cardinalis Douglas ex Bentham[1] 1835[2]
Synonyms[1]

Mimulus sect. Erythranthe (Spach) Greene, Bull. Calif. Acad. Sci. 1: 108. 1885

Member species are usually annuals or herbaceous perennials. Flowers are red, pink, or yellow, often in various combinations. A large number of the Erythranthe species grow in moist to wet soils with some growing even in shallow water. They are not very drought resistant, but many of the species now classified as Diplacus are. Species are found at elevations from oceanside to high mountains as well as a wide variety of climates, though most prefer wet areas such as riverbanks.

The largest concentration of species is in western North America, but species are found elsewhere in the United States and Canada, as well as from Mexico to Chile and eastern Asia. Pollination is mostly by either bees or hummingbirds. Member species are widely cultivated and are subject to several pests and diseases. Several species are listed as threatened by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

Description edit

Erythranthe is a highly diverse genus with the characteristics unifying the various species being axile placentation and long pedicels.[5] Other characteristics of species can vary widely, especially between the sections,[6] and even within some sections.[7] Some species of Erythranthe are annuals and some are perennials.[8] Flowers are red, pink, purple, or yellow, often in various combinations and shades of those colors.[9][10] Some species produce copious amounts of aromatic compounds, giving them a musky odor (hence "musk-flowers").[11] Erythranthe is used as food by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species, such as the mouse moth (Amphipyra tragopoginis), as a main part of their diet.[12]

Within the section Erythranthe, stems and leaves range from glabrous to hirsute, and are generally glandular. Leaves can be oblong, elliptical, or oval, with small tooths. Fruiting pedicels are longer than calyces. Calyces have sharp, definite angles and flat sides. Corollas are deciduous, relatively large (tube-throat 8–42 mm (0.3–1.7 in) long), and strongly red to purplish, magentarose, pink, or white, rarely yellow.[6]

Erythranthe guttata is the most widespread of the genus Erythranthe and its characteristics are fairly representative of the genus. E. guttata is 5–80 cm (2–31 in) tall with disproportionately large 5–20 mm (0.2–0.8 in) long, tubular flowers. Leaves are opposite and oval, 1–10 cm (0.4–3.9 in) long.[13] The species as strictly defined is perennial and spreads with stolons or rhizomes. The stem may be erect or recumbent. In the latter form, roots may develop at lower leaf nodes. Sometimes dwarfed, it may be hairless or have some hairs. Leaves are opposite, round to oval, usually coarsely and irregularly toothed or lobed. The bright yellow flowers are born on a raceme, most often with five or more flowers. The calyx has five lobes that are much shorter than the flower. Each flower has bilateral symmetry and has two lips. The upper lip usually has two lobes; the lower, three. The lower lip may have one large to many small red to reddish brown spots. The opening to the flower is hairy.[14][15] The fruit is a two-valved capsule 1 cm (0.4 in) long, containing many seeds.[16]

Erythranthe alsinoides is similar to several species found in the Pacific Northwest. It is an annual herb that blooms from April–June with a preference for shady and moist dense habitats. The plant is hairy to slightly hairy and grows from 0.5–3 dm (2–12 in) tall. The stems are often reddish. The leaves are opposite and have a few prominent upper veins. Blades are 0.5–2.5 cm (0.2–1.0 in) long. The petiole is about the same length. The flowers are yellow with reddish-brown spots, usually on the lower lip, and the upper and lower lips have fused, growing 8–14 cm (3.1–5.5 in). Each flower is attached by a pedicel. The fruits are capsules.[17]

Etymology and taxonomy edit

The derivation of Erythranthe is from Greek ἐρυθρός ("erythros"), red, with ἄνθος ("anthos"), flower.[18] They are called monkey-flowers because some species have flowers shaped like a monkey's face.[19] The widely used generic name, Latin mimus meaning "mimic actor", from the Greek mimos meaning "imitator" also alludes to the fancied monkey resemblance. The stem of Erythranthe can be either smooth or hairy, and this is known in a few species to be a trait determined by a simple allelic difference.[20] At least E. lewisii is known to possess "flypaper-type" traps and is apparently protocarnivorous, supplementing its nutrients with small insects.[21] Variations in color largely reflect concentrations of anthocyanins.[22][23][24] The species that are subshrubs with woody stems were originally placed in the section Diplacus, and this was subsequently made a separate genus. Diplacus is clearly derived from within Mimulus, broadly defined, and was not usually considered to be a separate genus.[25]

The French botanist Édouard Spach established Erythranthe as a separate genus with just the type species Erythranthe cardinalis. In 1885, American botanist Edward Lee Greene classified Erythranthe as a section of Mimulus while adding E. lewisii and E. parishii.[6] In the 2012 restructuring of Mimulus by Barker et al., based largely upon DNA evidence, seven species were left in Mimulus as strictly defined; Erythranthe was greatly enlarged to include 111 species, based upon axile placentation and long pedicels,[5] 46 placed into Diplacus (species with parietal placentation and sessile flowers),[5] two placed in Uvedalia, and one each placed in Elacholoma, Mimetanthe, and Thyridia.[22][25][26][27][28][29] All of the American genera are still referred to as "monkey-flowers".[30]

Views on the evolutionary position of the monkey-flower species have changed. It was long considered to be in the family Scrophulariaceae, but is now placed in Phyrmaceae, primarily on the basis of DNA evidence.[25][26] The genus Phryma (comprising only a single species), for which the family is named, is considerably different in morphology from all of the monkey-flowers.[31]

Attempts at crossing species, whether from different sections or within the same section, of Erythranthe are not always successful.[6][32] E. peregrina is an example of a successful naturally occurring hybrid that not only arose independently in two different locations, but is also a rare example of evolutionary recent allopolyploidization, complete chromosomal inheritance.[32][33]

Charles Darwin's 1876 study of inbreeding depression and self-fertility in South American species was a progenitor for the study of Erythranthe biology. The genus has become a model system "for studies of evolutionary and ecological functional genomics ... [as it] ... contains a wide array of phenotypic, ecological and genomic diversity."[8] Species under intense genomic study are mostly among the section Simiolus (E. guttata and relatives) and the section Erythranthe (including E. lewisii, E. cardinalis, E. parishii, and others).[7][34] The genome sequence of E. guttata was released in late spring, 2007.[26]

Many issues remain in Erythranthe taxonomy. E. guttata is highly complex, with many variations apparently reflecting differences in geographic environment and elevation.[34] Molecular geneticists regard the species broadly as including both perennial and annual populations, but there is rationale for treating this complex as several distinct species (perennials are E. guttata, E. grandis, and E. corallina; annuals are E. microphylla and others). The perennials and annuals differ as groups from each other by an inversion sequence on chromosome 8. Evidence tentatively indicates that the perennials evolved from annual ancestors, although some evidence has been interpreted to indicate that E. nasuta evolved from E. guttata in central California between 500,000 and 200,000 years ago and since then become primarily a self-pollinator. Relationships among the apparently closely related E. tilingii, E. minor, and E. caespitosa are not clearly understood. Some currently recognized species may be just variants of other species: E. arenicola, E. brachystylis, E. regni. Chromosomal issues may affect the classification of some species: E. corallina, E. guttata, E. nasuta, E. tilingii, and E. utahensis.[35]

Species edit

Species alphabetically edit

 
E. alsinoides in Oregon
 
E. cardinalis in southern California
 
E. carsonensis in Nevada
 
E filicaulis in Sierra Nevada
 
E. guttata in Skagit County, Washington
 
E. lewisii in Mount Rainer National Park
 
E. primuloides in Washington
 
E. shevockii
 
E. floribunda in southern California

As of April 2022, Plants of the World Online accepted the following species and hybrids:

  • Erythranthe acutidens (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe alsinoides (Douglas ex Benth.) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – chickweed monkey-flower (British Columbia to northern California)
  • Erythranthe ampliata (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe androsacea (Curran ex Greene) N.S.Fraga – rockjasmine monkey-flower (California)
  • Erythranthe arenaria (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe arenicola (Pennell) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe arvensis (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe austrolatidens G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe barbata (Greene) N.S.Fraga
  • Erythranthe bhutanica (Yamazaki) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
  • Erythranthe bicolor (Hartw. ex Benth.) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – yellow and white monkey-flower (California)
  • Erythranthe bodinieri (Vaniot) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
  • Erythranthe brachystylis (Edwin) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe bracteosa (P.C.Tsoong) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
  • Erythranthe breviflora (Piper) G.L.Nesom – (British Columbia to California to Wyoming)
  • Erythranthe brevinasuta G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe breweri (Greene) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – Brewer's monkey-flower (British Columbia to California to Colorado)
  • Erythranthe bridgesii (Benth.) G.L.Nesom – (South America)
  • Erythranthe caespitosa (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe calcicola N.S.Fraga
  • Erythranthe calciphila (Gentry) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe cardinalis (Douglas ex Benth.) Spach – scarlet monkey-flower (southwestern United States and Baja California)
  • Erythranthe carsonensis N.S.Fraga – Carson Valley monkey-flower (California and Nevada)
  • Erythranthe charlestonensis G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe chinatiensis G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe cinnabarina G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe corallina (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe cordata (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe cuprea (Dombrain) G.L.NesomFlor de cobre (Eng: copper flower) (central and southern Chile)
  • Erythranthe decora (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe dentata (Nutt. ex Benth.) G.L.Nesom – toothleaf monkey-flower, coastal monkey-flower (British Columbia to northern California)[36]
  • Erythranthe dentiloba (B.L.Rob. & Fernald) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe depressa (Phil.) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe diffusa (A.L.Grant) N.S.Fraga
  • Erythranthe diminuens G.L.Nesom – (Sonora, Mexico)[37]
  • Erythranthe discolor (A.L.Grant) N.S.Fraga
  • Erythranthe eastwoodiae (Rydb.) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga
  • Erythranthe erubescens G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe exigua (A.Gray) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – San Bernardino Mountains monkey-flower (southern California, Baja California)
  • Erythranthe filicaulis (S.Watson) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – slender-stemmed monkey-flower (California)
  • Erythranthe filicifolia (Sexton, K.G.Ferris & Schoenig) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe flammea G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe floribunda (Douglas ex Lindl.) G.L.Nesom – manyflowered monkey-flower (western Canada, Pacific Coast, Rocky Mountains, northern Mexico)
  • Erythranthe gemmipara (W.A.Weber) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – Rocky Mountain monkey-flower (Colorado)
  • Erythranthe geniculata (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe geyeri (Torr.) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe glabrata (Kunth) G.L.Nesom – roundleaf monkey-flower (widespread in North America, Mesoamerica and South America)
  • Erythranthe glaucescens (Greene) G.L.Nesom – shieldbract monkey-flower (California)
  • Erythranthe gracilipes (B.L.Rob.) N.S.Fraga – slenderstalk monkey-flower (California)
  • Erythranthe grandis (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe grayi (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe guttata (Fisch. ex DC.) G.L.Nesom – common large monkey-flower, common monkey-flower, stream monkey-flower, seep monkey-flower (AK, AZ, CA, CO, CT, DE, ID, MI, MT, ND, NE, NM, NV, NY, OR, PA, SD, UT, WA, WY; Canada: BC, Yukon; Mexico to Guatemala; naturalized in Britain)
  • Erythranthe hallii (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe hardhamiae N.S.Fraga
  • Erythranthe howaldiae G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe hymenophylla (Meinke) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe inamoena (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe inconspicua (A.Gray) G.L.Nesom – (syns. Mimulus acutidens and M. grayi)[38]
  • Erythranthe inflata (Miq.) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
  • Erythranthe inflatula (Suksd.) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe jungermannioides (Suksd.) G.L.Nesom[39]
  • Erythranthe karakormiana (Yamazaki) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
  • Erythranthe laciniata (A.Gray) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe lagunensis G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe latidens (Greene) G.L.Nesom – broadtooth monkey-flower (southern California, Baja California)
  • Erythranthe lewisii (Pursh) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – great purple monkey-flower, Lewis' monkey-flower (Alaska to California to Colorado)
  • Erythranthe linearifolia (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga
  • Erythranthe lutea (L.) G.L.Nesom – yellow monkey-flower, monkey musk, blotched monkey-flower, and blood-drop-emlets (North and South America, naturalized in Britain)
  • Erythranthe madrensis (Seem.) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe marmorata (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe michiganensis (Pennell) G.L.Nesom – Michigan monkey-flower (Michigan)[40] [41]
  • Erythranthe microphylla (Benth.) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe minima (C.Bohlen) J.M.Watson & A.R.Flores– (Michoacan, Mexico)[42]
  • Erythranthe minor (A. Nelson) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe montioides (A.Gray) N.S.Fraga – montia-like monkey-flower (California, Nevada)
  • Erythranthe moschata (Douglas ex Lindl.) G.L.Nesom – (North and South America, naturalized in Britain and Finland)
  • Erythranthe naiandina (J.M.Watson & C.Bohlen) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe nasuta (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe nelsonii (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – In 2014 Nesom lists as a synonym of Erythranthe verbenacea[6]
  • Erythranthe nepalensis (Benth.) G.L.Nesom (Asia)
  • Erythranthe norrisii (Heckard & Shevock) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe nudata (Curran ex Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe orizabae (Benth.) G.L.Nesom – (Mexico)[36]
  • Erythranthe pallens (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe palmeri (A.Gray) N.S.Fraga – Palmer's monkey-flower (central California south to Baja California)
  • Erythranthe pardalis (Pennell) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe parishii (Greene) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – Parish's monkey-flower (southern California, western Nevada, Baja California)
  • Erythranthe parvula (Wooton & Standl.) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe patula (Pennell) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe pennellii (Gentry) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe percaulis G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe platyphylla (Franch.) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
  • Erythranthe plotocalyx G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe primuloides (Benth.) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – primrose monkey-flower (WA, OR, CA, ID, NV, UT, AZ, MT, NM)
  • Erythranthe procera (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
  • Erythranthe ptilota G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe pulsiferae (A.Gray) G.L.Nesom – candelabrum monkey-flower (Washington to northern California)
  • Erythranthe purpurea (A.L.Grant) N.S.Fraga – little purple monkey-flower (southern California, Baja California)
  • Erythranthe regni G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe rhodopetra N.S.Fraga
  • Erythranthe rubella (A.Gray) N.S.Fraga – little redstem monkey-flower (CA, NV, UT, WY, CO, NM, TX)
  • Erythranthe rupestris (Greene) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga
  • Erythranthe scouleri (Hook.) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe serpentinicola D.J.Keil
  • Erythranthe sessilifolia (Maxim.) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
  • Erythranthe shevockii (Heckard & Bacig.) N.S.Fraga – Kelso Creek monkey-flower (Kern County, California)
  • Erythranthe sierrae N.S.Fraga
  • Erythranthe sinoalba G.L.Nesom – (Asia)[36]
  • Erythranthe sookensis B.G. Benedict – newly discovered 2012, originally named M. sookensis (British Columbia to northern California)[43]
  • Erythranthe stolonifera (Novopokr.) G.L.Nesom – (Russia)[44]
  • Erythranthe suksdorfii (A.Gray) N.S.Fraga – Suksdorf's monkey-flower and miniature monkey-flower (Washington, Oregon, California, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico)
  • Erythranthe szechuanensis (Pai) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
  • Erythranthe taylorii G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe tenella (Bunge) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
  • Erythranthe thermalis (A. Nelson) G.L.Nesom – (Yellowstone National Park)
  • Erythranthe tibetica (P.C.Tsoong & H.P.Yang) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
  • Erythranthe tilingii (Regel) G.L.Nesom – large mountain monkey-flower, Tiling's monkey-flower (Alaska to New Mexico)
  • Erythranthe trinitiensis G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe unimaculata (Pennell) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe utahensis (Pennell) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe verbenacea (Greene) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga
  • Erythranthe veronicifolia (Greene) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe visibilis G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe washingtonensis (Gand.) G.L.Nesom
  • Erythranthe willisii G.L.Nesom

Hybrids:

  • Erythranthe × burnetii (S.Arn.) Silverside
  • Erythranthe × hybrida (Voss) Silverside
  • Erythranthe × maculosa (T.Moore) Mabb.
  • Erythranthe × robertsii (Silverside) G.L.Nesom, syn. Erythranthe peregrina (M. Vallejo-Marin) G.L.Nesom – newly discovered 2012, originally named M. peregrinus (Scotland)[32]

Species sectionally edit

 
E. alsinoides in Oregon
 
E. cuprea
 
E. dentatus
 
E. lutea
 
E. rubella on Fossil Ridge, Blue Diamond Hill, Nevada
 
E. suksdorfii in Butte County, Idaho
 
E. tilingii

In a 2014 paper, G. L. Nesom and N. S. Fraga placed Erythranthe members into the following 12 sections (unless listed below as "newly discovered").[45] Names accepted as of April 2022 are from Plants of the World Online.

  • Erythranthe sect. Simiolus
Erythranthe arenicola (Pennell) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe arvensis (Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe brachystylis (Edwin) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe brevinasuta G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe caespitosa (Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe calciphila (Gentry) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe charlestonensis G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe chinatiensis G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe corallina (Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe cordata (Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe decora (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe diminuens G.L.Nesom – newly discovered in 2017 and added to this list (Sonora, Mexico)[37]
Erythranthe dentiloba (B.L.Rob. & Fernald) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe filicifolia (Sexton, K.G.Ferris & Schoenig) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe geyeri (Torr.) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe glabrata (Kunth) G.L.Nesom – roundleaf monkey-flower (widespread in North America, Mesoamerica and South America)
Erythranthe glaucescens (Greene) G.L.Nesom – shieldbract monkey-flower (California)
Erythranthe grandis (Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe guttata (Fisch. ex DC.) G.L.Nesom – common large monkey-flower, common monkey-flower, stream monkey-flower, seep monkey-flower (AK, AZ, CA, CO, CT, DE, ID, MI, MT, ND, NE, NM, NV, NY, OR, PA, SD, UT, WA, WY; Canada: BC, Yukon; Mexico to Guatemala; naturalized in Britain)
Erythranthe hallii (Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe inamoena (Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe laciniata (A.Gray) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe lagunensis G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe madrensis (Seem.) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe marmorata (Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe michiganensis (Pennell) G.L.Nesom – Michigan monkey-flower (Michigan)
Erythranthe microphylla (Benth.) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe minima (C.Bohlen) J.M.Watson & A.R.Flores – (Michoacan, Mexico)[42]
Erythranthe minor (A. Nelson) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe nasuta (Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe nudata (Curran ex Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe pallens (Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe pardalis (Pennell) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe parvula (Wooton & Standl.) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe pennellii (Gentry) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe percaulis G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe peregrina M. Vallejo-Marin, synonym of Erythranthe × robertsii – newly discovered 2012, originally named M. peregrinus (Scotland)[32]
Erythranthe regni G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe scouleri (Hook.) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe sookensis B.G. Benedict – originally named M. sookensis (British Columbia to northern California)[43]
Erythranthe thermalis (A. Nelson) G.L.Nesom – (Yellowstone National Park)
Erythranthe tilingii (Regel) G.L.Nesom – large mountain monkey-flower, Tiling's monkey-flower (Alaska to New Mexico)
Erythranthe unimaculata (Pennell) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe utahensis (Pennell) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe visibilis G.L.Nesom
  • (South America)
Erythranthe acaulis (Phil.) G.L.Nesom, synonym of Erythranthe depressa var. depressa
Erythranthe andicola (Kunth) G.L.Nesom, synonym of Erythranthe glabrata
Erythranthe cuprea (Dombrain) G.L.NesomFlor de cobre (Eng: copper flower) (central and southern Chile)
Erythranthe depressa (Phil.) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe lacerata (Pennell) G.L.Nesom, synonym of Erythranthe lutea var. lutea
Erythranthe lutea (L.) G.L.Nesom – yellow monkey-flower, monkey musk, blotched monkey-flower, and blood-drop-emlets (North and South America, naturalized in Britain)
Erythranthe naiandina (J.M.Watson & C.Bohlen) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe parviflora (Lindl.) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe pilosiuscula (Kunth) G.L.Nesom, synonym of Erythranthe glabrata
  • Erythranthe sect. Erythranthe
Erythranthe cardinalis (Douglas ex Benth.) Spach – scarlet monkey-flower (southwestern United States and Baja California)
Erythranthe cinnabarina G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe eastwoodiae (Rydb.) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga
Erythranthe erubescens G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe flammea
Erythranthe lewisii (Pursh) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – great purple monkey-flower, Lewis' monkey-flower (Alaska to California to Colorado)
Erythranthe nelsonii (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – In 2014 Nesom lists as a synonym of Erythranthe verbenacea[6]
Erythranthe parishii (Greene) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – Parish's monkey-flower (southern California, western Nevada, Baja California)
Erythranthe rupestris (Greene) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga
Erythranthe verbenacea (Greene) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga
  • Erythranthe sect. Mimulosma
Erythranthe ampliata (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe arenaria (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe austrolatidens G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe breviflora (Piper) G.L.Nesom – (British Columbia to California to Wyoming)
Erythranthe floribunda (Douglas ex Lindl.) G.L.Nesom – manyflowered monkey-flower (western Canada, Pacific Coast, Rocky Mountains, northern Mexico)
Erythranthe geniculata (Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe hymenophylla (Meinke) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe inflatula (Suksd.) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe inodora (Greene) G.L.Nesom, synonym of Erythranthe moschata
Erythranthe jungermannioides (Suksd.) G.L.Nesom[39]
Erythranthe latidens (Greene) G.L.Nesom – broadtooth monkey-flower (southern California, Baja California)
Erythranthe moniliformis (Greene) G.L.Nesom, synonym of Erythranthe moschata
Erythranthe moschata (Douglas ex Lindl.) G.L.Nesom – (North and South America, naturalized in Britain and Finland)
Erythranthe norrisii (Heckard & Shevock) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe patula (Pennell) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe pulsiferae (A.Gray) G.L.Nesom – candelabrum monkey-flower (Washington to northern California)
Erythranthe taylorii G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe trinitiensis G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe washingtonensis (Gand.) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe stolonifera (Novopokr.) G.L.Nesom – (Russia)[44]
  • Erythranthe sect. Achlyopitheca
Erythranthe acutidens (Greene) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe grayi (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom
Erythranthe inconspicua (A.Gray) G.L.Nesom – (syns. Mimulus acutidens and M. grayi)[38]
  • Erythranthe sect. Paradantha
Erythranthe androsacea (Curran ex Greene) N.S.Fraga – rockjasmine monkey-flower (California)
Erythranthe barbata (Greene) N.S.Fraga
Erythranthe calcicola N.S.Fraga
Erythranthe carsonensis N.S.Fraga – Carson Valley monkey-flower (California and Nevada)
Erythranthe diffusa (A.L.Grant) N.S.Fraga
Erythranthe discolor (A.L.Grant) N.S.Fraga
Erythranthe gracilipes (B.L.Rob.) N.S.Fraga – slenderstalk monkey-flower (California)
Erythranthe hardhamiae N.S.Fraga
Erythranthe montioides (A.Gray) N.S.Fraga – montia-like monkey-flower (California, Nevada)
Erythranthe palmeri (A.Gray) N.S.Fraga – Palmer's monkey-flower (central California south to Baja California)
Erythranthe purpurea (A.L.Grant) N.S.Fraga – little purple monkey-flower (southern California, Baja California)
Erythranthe rhodopetra N.S.Fraga
Erythranthe rubella (A.Gray) N.S.Fraga – little redstem monkey-flower (CA, NV, UT, WY, CO, NM, TX)
Erythranthe shevockii (Heckard & Bacig.) N.S.Fraga – Kelso Creek monkey-flower (Kern County, California)
Erythranthe sierrae N.S.Fraga
Erythranthe suksdorfii (A.Gray) N.S.Fraga – Suksdorf's monkey-flower and miniature monkey-flower (Washington, Oregon, California, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico)
  • Erythranthe sect. Monantha
Erythranthe linearifolia (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga
Erythranthe primuloides (Benth.) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – primrose monkey-flower (WA, OR, CA, ID, NV, UT, AZ, MT, NM)
  • Erythranthe sect. Monimanthe
Erythranthe bicolor (Hartw. ex Benth.) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – yellow and white monkey-flower (California)
Erythranthe breweri (Greene) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – Brewer's monkey-flower (British Columbia to California to Colorado)
Erythranthe filicaulis (S.Watson) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – slender-stemmed monkey-flower (California)
  • Erythranthe sect. Alsinimimulus
Erythranthe alsinoides (Douglas ex Benth.) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – chickweed monkey-flower (British Columbia to northern California)
  • Erythranthe sect. Simigemma
Erythranthe gemmipara (W.A.Weber) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – Rocky Mountain monkey-flower (Colorado)
  • Erythranthe sect. Exigua
Erythranthe exigua (A.Gray) G.L.Nesom & N.S.Fraga – San Bernardino Mountains monkey-flower (southern California, Baja California)
  • Erythranthe sect. Sinopitheca
Erythranthe bracteosa (P.C.Tsoong) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
Erythranthe bridgesii (Benth.) G.L.Nesom – (South America)
Erythranthe platyphylla (Franch.) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
Erythranthe sessilifolia (Maxim.) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
Erythranthe tibetica (P.C.Tsoong & H.P.Yang) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
  • Erythranthe sect. Mimulasia
Erythranthe dentata (Nutt. ex Benth.) G.L.Nesom – toothleaf monkey-flower, coastal monkey-flower (British Columbia to northern California)[36]
Erythranthe orizabae (Benth.) G.L.Nesom – (Mexico)[36]
Erythranthe bhutanica (Yamazaki) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
Erythranthe bodinieri (Vaniot) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
Erythranthe inflata (Miq.) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
Erythranthe karakormiana (Yamazaki) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
Erythranthe nepalensis (Benth.) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
Erythranthe procera (A.L.Grant) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
Erythranthe sinoalba G.L.Nesom – (Asia)[36]
Erythranthe szechuanensis (Pai) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)
Erythranthe tenella (Bunge) G.L.Nesom – (Asia)

Reproductive biology edit

Before recognition of E. cinnabarina as a species, E. lewisii was interpreted to be the sister of E. cardinalis. It is now clear that E. cinnabarina and E. cardinalis are sister species and that E. lewisii and E. erubescens are sister species. In the hypothesized phylogeny, the 'cinnabarina/cardinalis' pair is sister to the 'lewisii/erubescens' pair.[6]

Erythranthe lewisii is a model system for studying pollinator-based reproductive isolation. E. lewisii is pollinated by bees, primarily Bombus and Osmia, which feed on its nectar and transfer its pollen. Although it is fully interfertile with its sister species E. cardinalis, the two do not interbreed in the wild, a difference ascribed primarily to pollinator differences; E. cardinalis is pollinated by hummingbirds, especially Calypte anna and Selasphorus rufus.[6][46] It was previously reported that evidence strongly linking pollination preference to color differences between the species, but this has been disproven.[47][48] E. erubescens is mostly pollinated by Bombus balteatus, B. centralis, B. flavifrons, and B. vosnesenskii.[6]

Erythranthe parishii is also closely related to E. lewisii, but it has evolved in a different direction as a self-pollinated species with small flowers.[49]

E. eastwoodiae, E. nelsonii, E. rupestris, and E. verbenacea are also pollinated by hummingbirds. These four species as well as E. cardinalis and E. nelsonii produce bisexual flowers and are self-compatible.[50] This approximate ratio of insect vs hummingbird pollination holds true for the rest of the genus. There have been two separate transformations to hummingbird pollination. Pollination changes are highly affected by changes in flower morphology.[46][51] E. cardinalis and its sister species E. cinnabarina likely evolved via allopatric speciation.[6]

Erythranthe guttata is pollinated by bees, such as Bombus impatiens. Inbreeding reduces flower quantity and size and pollen quality and quantity. E. guttata also displays a high degree of self-pollination.[52][53] Erythranthe nasuta evolved from E. guttata in central California between 200,000 and 500,000 years ago and since then has become primarily a self-pollinator.[54][55]

Distribution and habitat edit

Over 80% of Erythranthe species are found in western North America,[26] especially California, Oregon, and Washington.[56] Genus members are also found in Baja California, Alaska, British Columbia, Nevada, Utah, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, and to a lesser extent the midwestern states, northeastern states, Canada, and Latin America.[6][57] Members of this genus are found in eastern Asia; several species of which have a high degree of similarity with some of the species found in North and South America.[36]

A large number of the species grow in moist to wet soils with some growing even in shallow water.[58] They are not very drought resistant, but the species now classified as Diplacus are.[59][60] Some species grow in dry areas, others in wet habitats, such as members of the section Simiolus, which are hydrophilic. Both overall plant size and corolla size vary greatly throughout the genus.[7] A minimum of 25 of the species are listed as threatened by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.[56][61] Species are found at elevations from oceanside to high mountains as well as a wide variety of climates, though most prefer wet areas such as riverbanks.[7]

Pests and diseases edit

Diplacus, Erythranthe, and Mimulus are subject to a very similar set of pests and diseases. The pests these genera are susceptible to include: gall midges, golden mealybugs, thrips, and seed bugs.[62] Diseases they are susceptible to include: crown gall, aster yellows phytoplasma, impatiens necrotic spot virus (INSV), leaf spots, powdery mildew — especially Erysiphe brunneopunctata and Erysiphe cichoracearum, botrytis blight, pythium root rot, rusts, cucumber mosaic virus (CMV),[63] as well as mineral and nutrient deficiencies.[62][64]

Human culture edit

Horticulture edit

In horticulture, several species, cultivars and hybrids are used.[65] Because of their wide range and many variations, the most important are those derived from E. gutatta and E. lutea.[34] E. cuprea alone has at least 10 cultivars and hybrids.[66][67]

Culinary uses edit

Erythranthe species tend to concentrate sodium chloride and other salts absorbed from the soils in which they grow in their leaves and stem tissues. Native Americans and early travelers in the American West used this plant as a salt substitute to season wild game. The entire plant is edible, but reported to be very salty and bitter unless well cooked. The juice from the leaves was used as a poultice for mild skin irritations and burns.[68] Leaves can be used in salads and soups; flowers taste best before blooming.[69][unreliable source?] E. lutea has been used for cooking in Peru.[70]

Alternative medical use edit

Erythranthe has been listed as one of the 38 plants that are used to prepare Bach flower remedies,[71] a kind of alternative medicine promoted for its effect on health. However, according to Cancer Research UK, "there is no scientific evidence to prove that flower remedies can control, cure or prevent any type of disease, including cancer".[72][73]

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External links edit

erythranthe, monkey, flowers, musk, flowers, diverse, plant, genus, with, more, than, members, 2022, family, phrymaceae, originally, described, separate, genus, then, generally, regarded, section, within, genus, mimulus, recently, returned, generic, rank, mimu. Erythranthe the monkey flowers and musk flowers is a diverse plant genus with more than 120 members as of 2022 in the family Phrymaceae Erythranthe was originally described as a separate genus then generally regarded as a section within the genus Mimulus and recently returned to generic rank Mimulus sect Diplacus was segregated from Mimulus as a separate genus at the same time Mimulus remains as a small genus of eastern North America and the Southern Hemisphere Molecular data show Erythranthe and Diplacus to be distinct evolutionary lines that are distinct from Mimulus as strictly defined although this nomenclature is controversial 3 4 ErythrantheE peregrina in ScotlandScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade AsteridsOrder LamialesFamily PhrymaceaeGenus Erythranthe L G L NesomType speciesErythranthe cardinalis Douglas ex Benth Spach Mimulus cardinalis Douglas ex Bentham 1 1835 2 Synonyms 1 Mimulus sect Erythranthe Spach Greene Bull Calif Acad Sci 1 108 1885Member species are usually annuals or herbaceous perennials Flowers are red pink or yellow often in various combinations A large number of the Erythranthe species grow in moist to wet soils with some growing even in shallow water They are not very drought resistant but many of the species now classified as Diplacus are Species are found at elevations from oceanside to high mountains as well as a wide variety of climates though most prefer wet areas such as riverbanks The largest concentration of species is in western North America but species are found elsewhere in the United States and Canada as well as from Mexico to Chile and eastern Asia Pollination is mostly by either bees or hummingbirds Member species are widely cultivated and are subject to several pests and diseases Several species are listed as threatened by the International Union for Conservation of Nature Contents 1 Description 2 Etymology and taxonomy 2 1 Species 2 1 1 Species alphabetically 2 1 2 Species sectionally 3 Reproductive biology 4 Distribution and habitat 5 Pests and diseases 6 Human culture 6 1 Horticulture 6 2 Culinary uses 6 3 Alternative medical use 7 References 8 External linksDescription editErythranthe is a highly diverse genus with the characteristics unifying the various species being axile placentation and long pedicels 5 Other characteristics of species can vary widely especially between the sections 6 and even within some sections 7 Some species of Erythranthe are annuals and some are perennials 8 Flowers are red pink purple or yellow often in various combinations and shades of those colors 9 10 Some species produce copious amounts of aromatic compounds giving them a musky odor hence musk flowers 11 Erythranthe is used as food by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species such as the mouse moth Amphipyra tragopoginis as a main part of their diet 12 Within the section Erythranthe stems and leaves range from glabrous to hirsute and are generally glandular Leaves can be oblong elliptical or oval with small tooths Fruiting pedicels are longer than calyces Calyces have sharp definite angles and flat sides Corollas are deciduous relatively large tube throat 8 42 mm 0 3 1 7 in long and strongly red to purplish magentarose pink or white rarely yellow 6 Erythranthe guttata is the most widespread of the genus Erythranthe and its characteristics are fairly representative of the genus E guttata is 5 80 cm 2 31 in tall with disproportionately large 5 20 mm 0 2 0 8 in long tubular flowers Leaves are opposite and oval 1 10 cm 0 4 3 9 in long 13 The species as strictly defined is perennial and spreads with stolons or rhizomes The stem may be erect or recumbent In the latter form roots may develop at lower leaf nodes Sometimes dwarfed it may be hairless or have some hairs Leaves are opposite round to oval usually coarsely and irregularly toothed or lobed The bright yellow flowers are born on a raceme most often with five or more flowers The calyx has five lobes that are much shorter than the flower Each flower has bilateral symmetry and has two lips The upper lip usually has two lobes the lower three The lower lip may have one large to many small red to reddish brown spots The opening to the flower is hairy 14 15 The fruit is a two valved capsule 1 cm 0 4 in long containing many seeds 16 Erythranthe alsinoides is similar to several species found in the Pacific Northwest It is an annual herb that blooms from April June with a preference for shady and moist dense habitats The plant is hairy to slightly hairy and grows from 0 5 3 dm 2 12 in tall The stems are often reddish The leaves are opposite and have a few prominent upper veins Blades are 0 5 2 5 cm 0 2 1 0 in long The petiole is about the same length The flowers are yellow with reddish brown spots usually on the lower lip and the upper and lower lips have fused growing 8 14 cm 3 1 5 5 in Each flower is attached by a pedicel The fruits are capsules 17 Etymology and taxonomy editThe derivation of Erythranthe is from Greek ἐry8ros erythros red with ἄn8os anthos flower 18 They are called monkey flowers because some species have flowers shaped like a monkey s face 19 The widely used generic name Latin mimus meaning mimic actor from the Greek mimos meaning imitator also alludes to the fancied monkey resemblance The stem of Erythranthe can be either smooth or hairy and this is known in a few species to be a trait determined by a simple allelic difference 20 At least E lewisii is known to possess flypaper type traps and is apparently protocarnivorous supplementing its nutrients with small insects 21 Variations in color largely reflect concentrations of anthocyanins 22 23 24 The species that are subshrubs with woody stems were originally placed in the section Diplacus and this was subsequently made a separate genus Diplacus is clearly derived from within Mimulus broadly defined and was not usually considered to be a separate genus 25 The French botanist Edouard Spach established Erythranthe as a separate genus with just the type species Erythranthe cardinalis In 1885 American botanist Edward Lee Greene classified Erythranthe as a section of Mimulus while adding E lewisii and E parishii 6 In the 2012 restructuring of Mimulus by Barker et al based largely upon DNA evidence seven species were left in Mimulus as strictly defined Erythranthe was greatly enlarged to include 111 species based upon axile placentation and long pedicels 5 46 placed into Diplacus species with parietal placentation and sessile flowers 5 two placed in Uvedalia and one each placed in Elacholoma Mimetanthe and Thyridia 22 25 26 27 28 29 All of the American genera are still referred to as monkey flowers 30 Views on the evolutionary position of the monkey flower species have changed It was long considered to be in the family Scrophulariaceae but is now placed in Phyrmaceae primarily on the basis of DNA evidence 25 26 The genus Phryma comprising only a single species for which the family is named is considerably different in morphology from all of the monkey flowers 31 Attempts at crossing species whether from different sections or within the same section of Erythranthe are not always successful 6 32 E peregrina is an example of a successful naturally occurring hybrid that not only arose independently in two different locations but is also a rare example of evolutionary recent allopolyploidization complete chromosomal inheritance 32 33 Charles Darwin s 1876 study of inbreeding depression and self fertility in South American species was a progenitor for the study of Erythranthe biology The genus has become a model system for studies of evolutionary and ecological functional genomics as it contains a wide array of phenotypic ecological and genomic diversity 8 Species under intense genomic study are mostly among the section Simiolus E guttata and relatives and the section Erythranthe including E lewisii E cardinalis E parishii and others 7 34 The genome sequence of E guttata was released in late spring 2007 26 Many issues remain in Erythranthe taxonomy E guttata is highly complex with many variations apparently reflecting differences in geographic environment and elevation 34 Molecular geneticists regard the species broadly as including both perennial and annual populations but there is rationale for treating this complex as several distinct species perennials are E guttata E grandis and E corallina annuals are E microphylla and others The perennials and annuals differ as groups from each other by an inversion sequence on chromosome 8 Evidence tentatively indicates that the perennials evolved from annual ancestors although some evidence has been interpreted to indicate that E nasuta evolved from E guttata in central California between 500 000 and 200 000 years ago and since then become primarily a self pollinator Relationships among the apparently closely related E tilingii E minor and E caespitosa are not clearly understood Some currently recognized species may be just variants of other species E arenicola E brachystylis E regni Chromosomal issues may affect the classification of some species E corallina E guttata E nasuta E tilingii and E utahensis 35 Species edit Species alphabetically edit nbsp E alsinoides in Oregon nbsp E cardinalis in southern California nbsp E carsonensis in Nevada nbsp E filicaulis in Sierra Nevada nbsp E guttata in Skagit County Washington nbsp E lewisii in Mount Rainer National Park nbsp E primuloides in Washington nbsp E shevockii nbsp E floribunda in southern CaliforniaAs of April 2022 update Plants of the World Online accepted the following species and hybrids Erythranthe acutidens Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe alsinoides Douglas ex Benth G L Nesom amp N S Fraga chickweed monkey flower British Columbia to northern California Erythranthe ampliata A L Grant G L Nesom Erythranthe androsacea Curran ex Greene N S Fraga rockjasmine monkey flower California Erythranthe arenaria A L Grant G L Nesom Erythranthe arenicola Pennell G L Nesom Erythranthe arvensis Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe austrolatidens G L Nesom Erythranthe barbata Greene N S Fraga Erythranthe bhutanica Yamazaki G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe bicolor Hartw ex Benth G L Nesom amp N S Fraga yellow and white monkey flower California Erythranthe bodinieri Vaniot G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe brachystylis Edwin G L Nesom Erythranthe bracteosa P C Tsoong G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe breviflora Piper G L Nesom British Columbia to California to Wyoming Erythranthe brevinasuta G L Nesom Erythranthe breweri Greene G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Brewer s monkey flower British Columbia to California to Colorado Erythranthe bridgesii Benth G L Nesom South America Erythranthe caespitosa Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe calcicola N S Fraga Erythranthe calciphila Gentry G L Nesom Erythranthe cardinalis Douglas ex Benth Spach scarlet monkey flower southwestern United States and Baja California Erythranthe carsonensis N S Fraga Carson Valley monkey flower California and Nevada Erythranthe charlestonensis G L Nesom Erythranthe chinatiensis G L Nesom Erythranthe cinnabarina G L Nesom Erythranthe corallina Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe cordata Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe cuprea Dombrain G L Nesom Flor de cobre Eng copper flower central and southern Chile Erythranthe decora A L Grant G L Nesom Erythranthe dentata Nutt ex Benth G L Nesom toothleaf monkey flower coastal monkey flower British Columbia to northern California 36 Erythranthe dentiloba B L Rob amp Fernald G L Nesom Erythranthe depressa Phil G L Nesom Erythranthe diffusa A L Grant N S Fraga Erythranthe diminuens G L Nesom Sonora Mexico 37 Erythranthe discolor A L Grant N S Fraga Erythranthe eastwoodiae Rydb G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Erythranthe erubescens G L Nesom Erythranthe exigua A Gray G L Nesom amp N S Fraga San Bernardino Mountains monkey flower southern California Baja California Erythranthe filicaulis S Watson G L Nesom amp N S Fraga slender stemmed monkey flower California Erythranthe filicifolia Sexton K G Ferris amp Schoenig G L Nesom Erythranthe flammea G L Nesom Erythranthe floribunda Douglas ex Lindl G L Nesom manyflowered monkey flower western Canada Pacific Coast Rocky Mountains northern Mexico Erythranthe gemmipara W A Weber G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Rocky Mountain monkey flower Colorado Erythranthe geniculata Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe geyeri Torr G L Nesom Erythranthe glabrata Kunth G L Nesom roundleaf monkey flower widespread in North America Mesoamerica and South America Erythranthe glaucescens Greene G L Nesom shieldbract monkey flower California Erythranthe gracilipes B L Rob N S Fraga slenderstalk monkey flower California Erythranthe grandis Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe grayi A L Grant G L Nesom Erythranthe guttata Fisch ex DC G L Nesom common large monkey flower common monkey flower stream monkey flower seep monkey flower AK AZ CA CO CT DE ID MI MT ND NE NM NV NY OR PA SD UT WA WY Canada BC Yukon Mexico to Guatemala naturalized in Britain Erythranthe hallii Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe hardhamiae N S Fraga Erythranthe howaldiae G L Nesom Erythranthe hymenophylla Meinke G L Nesom Erythranthe inamoena Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe inconspicua A Gray G L Nesom syns Mimulus acutidens and M grayi 38 Erythranthe inflata Miq G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe inflatula Suksd G L Nesom Erythranthe jungermannioides Suksd G L Nesom 39 Erythranthe karakormiana Yamazaki G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe laciniata A Gray G L Nesom Erythranthe lagunensis G L Nesom Erythranthe latidens Greene G L Nesom broadtooth monkey flower southern California Baja California Erythranthe lewisii Pursh G L Nesom amp N S Fraga great purple monkey flower Lewis monkey flower Alaska to California to Colorado Erythranthe linearifolia A L Grant G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Erythranthe lutea L G L Nesom yellow monkey flower monkey musk blotched monkey flower and blood drop emlets North and South America naturalized in Britain Erythranthe madrensis Seem G L Nesom Erythranthe marmorata Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe michiganensis Pennell G L Nesom Michigan monkey flower Michigan 40 41 Erythranthe microphylla Benth G L Nesom Erythranthe minima C Bohlen J M Watson amp A R Flores Michoacan Mexico 42 Erythranthe minor A Nelson G L Nesom Erythranthe montioides A Gray N S Fraga montia like monkey flower California Nevada Erythranthe moschata Douglas ex Lindl G L Nesom North and South America naturalized in Britain and Finland Erythranthe naiandina J M Watson amp C Bohlen G L Nesom Erythranthe nasuta Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe nelsonii A L Grant G L Nesom amp N S Fraga In 2014 Nesom lists as a synonym of Erythranthe verbenacea 6 Erythranthe nepalensis Benth G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe norrisii Heckard amp Shevock G L Nesom Erythranthe nudata Curran ex Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe orizabae Benth G L Nesom Mexico 36 Erythranthe pallens Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe palmeri A Gray N S Fraga Palmer s monkey flower central California south to Baja California Erythranthe pardalis Pennell G L Nesom Erythranthe parishii Greene G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Parish s monkey flower southern California western Nevada Baja California Erythranthe parvula Wooton amp Standl G L Nesom Erythranthe patula Pennell G L Nesom Erythranthe pennellii Gentry G L Nesom Erythranthe percaulis G L Nesom Erythranthe platyphylla Franch G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe plotocalyx G L Nesom Erythranthe primuloides Benth G L Nesom amp N S Fraga primrose monkey flower WA OR CA ID NV UT AZ MT NM Erythranthe procera A L Grant G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe ptilota G L Nesom Erythranthe pulsiferae A Gray G L Nesom candelabrum monkey flower Washington to northern California Erythranthe purpurea A L Grant N S Fraga little purple monkey flower southern California Baja California Erythranthe regni G L Nesom Erythranthe rhodopetra N S Fraga Erythranthe rubella A Gray N S Fraga little redstem monkey flower CA NV UT WY CO NM TX Erythranthe rupestris Greene G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Erythranthe scouleri Hook G L Nesom Erythranthe serpentinicola D J Keil Erythranthe sessilifolia Maxim G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe shevockii Heckard amp Bacig N S Fraga Kelso Creek monkey flower Kern County California Erythranthe sierrae N S Fraga Erythranthe sinoalba G L Nesom Asia 36 Erythranthe sookensis B G Benedict newly discovered 2012 originally named M sookensis British Columbia to northern California 43 Erythranthe stolonifera Novopokr G L Nesom Russia 44 Erythranthe suksdorfii A Gray N S Fraga Suksdorf s monkey flower and miniature monkey flower Washington Oregon California Idaho Montana Wyoming Colorado Nevada Utah Arizona New Mexico Erythranthe szechuanensis Pai G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe taylorii G L Nesom Erythranthe tenella Bunge G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe thermalis A Nelson G L Nesom Yellowstone National Park Erythranthe tibetica P C Tsoong amp H P Yang G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe tilingii Regel G L Nesom large mountain monkey flower Tiling s monkey flower Alaska to New Mexico Erythranthe trinitiensis G L Nesom Erythranthe unimaculata Pennell G L Nesom Erythranthe utahensis Pennell G L Nesom Erythranthe verbenacea Greene G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Erythranthe veronicifolia Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe visibilis G L Nesom Erythranthe washingtonensis Gand G L Nesom Erythranthe willisii G L NesomHybrids Erythranthe burnetii S Arn Silverside Erythranthe hybrida Voss Silverside Erythranthe maculosa T Moore Mabb Erythranthe robertsii Silverside G L Nesom syn Erythranthe peregrina M Vallejo Marin G L Nesom newly discovered 2012 originally named M peregrinus Scotland 32 Species sectionally edit nbsp E alsinoides in Oregon nbsp E cuprea nbsp E dentatus nbsp E lutea nbsp E rubella on Fossil Ridge Blue Diamond Hill Nevada nbsp E suksdorfii in Butte County Idaho nbsp E tilingiiIn a 2014 paper G L Nesom and N S Fraga placed Erythranthe members into the following 12 sections unless listed below as newly discovered 45 Names accepted as of April 2022 update are from Plants of the World Online Erythranthe sect SimiolusErythranthe arenicola Pennell G L Nesom Erythranthe arvensis Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe brachystylis Edwin G L Nesom Erythranthe brevinasuta G L Nesom Erythranthe caespitosa Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe calciphila Gentry G L Nesom Erythranthe charlestonensis G L Nesom Erythranthe chinatiensis G L Nesom Erythranthe corallina Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe cordata Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe decora A L Grant G L Nesom Erythranthe diminuens G L Nesom newly discovered in 2017 and added to this list Sonora Mexico 37 Erythranthe dentiloba B L Rob amp Fernald G L Nesom Erythranthe filicifolia Sexton K G Ferris amp Schoenig G L Nesom Erythranthe geyeri Torr G L Nesom Erythranthe glabrata Kunth G L Nesom roundleaf monkey flower widespread in North America Mesoamerica and South America Erythranthe glaucescens Greene G L Nesom shieldbract monkey flower California Erythranthe grandis Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe guttata Fisch ex DC G L Nesom common large monkey flower common monkey flower stream monkey flower seep monkey flower AK AZ CA CO CT DE ID MI MT ND NE NM NV NY OR PA SD UT WA WY Canada BC Yukon Mexico to Guatemala naturalized in Britain Erythranthe hallii Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe inamoena Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe laciniata A Gray G L Nesom Erythranthe lagunensis G L Nesom Erythranthe madrensis Seem G L Nesom Erythranthe marmorata Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe michiganensis Pennell G L Nesom Michigan monkey flower Michigan Erythranthe microphylla Benth G L Nesom Erythranthe minima C Bohlen J M Watson amp A R Flores Michoacan Mexico 42 Erythranthe minor A Nelson G L Nesom Erythranthe nasuta Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe nudata Curran ex Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe pallens Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe pardalis Pennell G L Nesom Erythranthe parvula Wooton amp Standl G L Nesom Erythranthe pennellii Gentry G L Nesom Erythranthe percaulis G L Nesom Erythranthe peregrina M Vallejo Marin synonym of Erythranthe robertsii newly discovered 2012 originally named M peregrinus Scotland 32 Erythranthe regni G L Nesom Erythranthe scouleri Hook G L Nesom Erythranthe sookensis B G Benedict originally named M sookensis British Columbia to northern California 43 Erythranthe thermalis A Nelson G L Nesom Yellowstone National Park Erythranthe tilingii Regel G L Nesom large mountain monkey flower Tiling s monkey flower Alaska to New Mexico Erythranthe unimaculata Pennell G L Nesom Erythranthe utahensis Pennell G L Nesom Erythranthe visibilis G L Nesom South America Erythranthe acaulis Phil G L Nesom synonym of Erythranthe depressa var depressa Erythranthe andicola Kunth G L Nesom synonym of Erythranthe glabrata Erythranthe cuprea Dombrain G L Nesom Flor de cobre Eng copper flower central and southern Chile Erythranthe depressa Phil G L Nesom Erythranthe lacerata Pennell G L Nesom synonym of Erythranthe lutea var lutea Erythranthe lutea L G L Nesom yellow monkey flower monkey musk blotched monkey flower and blood drop emlets North and South America naturalized in Britain Erythranthe naiandina J M Watson amp C Bohlen G L Nesom Erythranthe parviflora Lindl G L Nesom Erythranthe pilosiuscula Kunth G L Nesom synonym of Erythranthe glabrataErythranthe sect ErythrantheErythranthe cardinalis Douglas ex Benth Spach scarlet monkey flower southwestern United States and Baja California Erythranthe cinnabarina G L Nesom Erythranthe eastwoodiae Rydb G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Erythranthe erubescens G L Nesom Erythranthe flammea Erythranthe lewisii Pursh G L Nesom amp N S Fraga great purple monkey flower Lewis monkey flower Alaska to California to Colorado Erythranthe nelsonii A L Grant G L Nesom amp N S Fraga In 2014 Nesom lists as a synonym of Erythranthe verbenacea 6 Erythranthe parishii Greene G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Parish s monkey flower southern California western Nevada Baja California Erythranthe rupestris Greene G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Erythranthe verbenacea Greene G L Nesom amp N S FragaErythranthe sect MimulosmaErythranthe ampliata A L Grant G L Nesom Erythranthe arenaria A L Grant G L Nesom Erythranthe austrolatidens G L Nesom Erythranthe breviflora Piper G L Nesom British Columbia to California to Wyoming Erythranthe floribunda Douglas ex Lindl G L Nesom manyflowered monkey flower western Canada Pacific Coast Rocky Mountains northern Mexico Erythranthe geniculata Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe hymenophylla Meinke G L Nesom Erythranthe inflatula Suksd G L Nesom Erythranthe inodora Greene G L Nesom synonym of Erythranthe moschata Erythranthe jungermannioides Suksd G L Nesom 39 Erythranthe latidens Greene G L Nesom broadtooth monkey flower southern California Baja California Erythranthe moniliformis Greene G L Nesom synonym of Erythranthe moschata Erythranthe moschata Douglas ex Lindl G L Nesom North and South America naturalized in Britain and Finland Erythranthe norrisii Heckard amp Shevock G L Nesom Erythranthe patula Pennell G L Nesom Erythranthe pulsiferae A Gray G L Nesom candelabrum monkey flower Washington to northern California Erythranthe taylorii G L Nesom Erythranthe trinitiensis G L Nesom Erythranthe washingtonensis Gand G L Nesom Erythranthe stolonifera Novopokr G L Nesom Russia 44 Erythranthe sect AchlyopithecaErythranthe acutidens Greene G L Nesom Erythranthe grayi A L Grant G L Nesom Erythranthe inconspicua A Gray G L Nesom syns Mimulus acutidens and M grayi 38 Erythranthe sect ParadanthaErythranthe androsacea Curran ex Greene N S Fraga rockjasmine monkey flower California Erythranthe barbata Greene N S Fraga Erythranthe calcicola N S Fraga Erythranthe carsonensis N S Fraga Carson Valley monkey flower California and Nevada Erythranthe diffusa A L Grant N S Fraga Erythranthe discolor A L Grant N S Fraga Erythranthe gracilipes B L Rob N S Fraga slenderstalk monkey flower California Erythranthe hardhamiae N S Fraga Erythranthe montioides A Gray N S Fraga montia like monkey flower California Nevada Erythranthe palmeri A Gray N S Fraga Palmer s monkey flower central California south to Baja California Erythranthe purpurea A L Grant N S Fraga little purple monkey flower southern California Baja California Erythranthe rhodopetra N S Fraga Erythranthe rubella A Gray N S Fraga little redstem monkey flower CA NV UT WY CO NM TX Erythranthe shevockii Heckard amp Bacig N S Fraga Kelso Creek monkey flower Kern County California Erythranthe sierrae N S Fraga Erythranthe suksdorfii A Gray N S Fraga Suksdorf s monkey flower and miniature monkey flower Washington Oregon California Idaho Montana Wyoming Colorado Nevada Utah Arizona New Mexico Erythranthe sect MonanthaErythranthe linearifolia A L Grant G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Erythranthe primuloides Benth G L Nesom amp N S Fraga primrose monkey flower WA OR CA ID NV UT AZ MT NM Erythranthe sect MonimantheErythranthe bicolor Hartw ex Benth G L Nesom amp N S Fraga yellow and white monkey flower California Erythranthe breweri Greene G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Brewer s monkey flower British Columbia to California to Colorado Erythranthe filicaulis S Watson G L Nesom amp N S Fraga slender stemmed monkey flower California Erythranthe sect AlsinimimulusErythranthe alsinoides Douglas ex Benth G L Nesom amp N S Fraga chickweed monkey flower British Columbia to northern California Erythranthe sect SimigemmaErythranthe gemmipara W A Weber G L Nesom amp N S Fraga Rocky Mountain monkey flower Colorado Erythranthe sect ExiguaErythranthe exigua A Gray G L Nesom amp N S Fraga San Bernardino Mountains monkey flower southern California Baja California Erythranthe sect SinopithecaErythranthe bracteosa P C Tsoong G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe bridgesii Benth G L Nesom South America Erythranthe platyphylla Franch G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe sessilifolia Maxim G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe tibetica P C Tsoong amp H P Yang G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe sect MimulasiaErythranthe dentata Nutt ex Benth G L Nesom toothleaf monkey flower coastal monkey flower British Columbia to northern California 36 Erythranthe orizabae Benth G L Nesom Mexico 36 Erythranthe bhutanica Yamazaki G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe bodinieri Vaniot G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe inflata Miq G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe karakormiana Yamazaki G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe nepalensis Benth G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe procera A L Grant G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe sinoalba G L Nesom Asia 36 Erythranthe szechuanensis Pai G L Nesom Asia Erythranthe tenella Bunge G L Nesom Asia Reproductive biology editBefore recognition of E cinnabarina as a species E lewisii was interpreted to be the sister of E cardinalis It is now clear that E cinnabarina and E cardinalis are sister species and that E lewisii and E erubescens are sister species In the hypothesized phylogeny the cinnabarina cardinalis pair is sister to the lewisii erubescens pair 6 Erythranthe lewisii is a model system for studying pollinator based reproductive isolation E lewisii is pollinated by bees primarily Bombus and Osmia which feed on its nectar and transfer its pollen Although it is fully interfertile with its sister species E cardinalis the two do not interbreed in the wild a difference ascribed primarily to pollinator differences E cardinalis is pollinated by hummingbirds especially Calypte anna and Selasphorus rufus 6 46 It was previously reported that evidence strongly linking pollination preference to color differences between the species but this has been disproven 47 48 E erubescens is mostly pollinated by Bombus balteatus B centralis B flavifrons and B vosnesenskii 6 Erythranthe parishii is also closely related to E lewisii but it has evolved in a different direction as a self pollinated species with small flowers 49 E eastwoodiae E nelsonii E rupestris and E verbenacea are also pollinated by hummingbirds These four species as well as E cardinalis and E nelsonii produce bisexual flowers and are self compatible 50 This approximate ratio of insect vs hummingbird pollination holds true for the rest of the genus There have been two separate transformations to hummingbird pollination Pollination changes are highly affected by changes in flower morphology 46 51 E cardinalis and its sister species E cinnabarina likely evolved via allopatric speciation 6 Erythranthe guttata is pollinated by bees such as Bombus impatiens Inbreeding reduces flower quantity and size and pollen quality and quantity E guttata also displays a high degree of self pollination 52 53 Erythranthe nasuta evolved from E guttata in central California between 200 000 and 500 000 years ago and since then has become primarily a self pollinator 54 55 Distribution and habitat editOver 80 of Erythranthe species are found in western North America 26 especially California Oregon and Washington 56 Genus members are also found in Baja California Alaska British Columbia Nevada Utah Idaho Montana Wyoming Colorado Arizona New Mexico and to a lesser extent the midwestern states northeastern states Canada and Latin America 6 57 Members of this genus are found in eastern Asia several species of which have a high degree of similarity with some of the species found in North and South America 36 A large number of the species grow in moist to wet soils with some growing even in shallow water 58 They are not very drought resistant but the species now classified as Diplacus are 59 60 Some species grow in dry areas others in wet habitats such as members of the section Simiolus which are hydrophilic Both overall plant size and corolla size vary greatly throughout the genus 7 A minimum of 25 of the species are listed as threatened by the International Union for Conservation of Nature 56 61 Species are found at elevations from oceanside to high mountains as well as a wide variety of climates though most prefer wet areas such as riverbanks 7 Pests and diseases editFurther information List of Erythranthe monkey flower diseases Diplacus Erythranthe and Mimulus are subject to a very similar set of pests and diseases The pests these genera are susceptible to include gall midges golden mealybugs thrips and seed bugs 62 Diseases they are susceptible to include crown gall aster yellows phytoplasma impatiens necrotic spot virus INSV leaf spots powdery mildew especially Erysiphe brunneopunctata and Erysiphe cichoracearum botrytis blight pythium root rot rusts cucumber mosaic virus CMV 63 as well as mineral and nutrient deficiencies 62 64 Human culture editHorticulture edit In horticulture several species cultivars and hybrids are used 65 Because of their wide range and many variations the most important are those derived from E gutatta and E lutea 34 E cuprea alone has at least 10 cultivars and hybrids 66 67 Culinary uses edit Erythranthe species tend to concentrate sodium chloride and other salts absorbed from the soils in which they grow in their leaves and stem tissues Native Americans and early travelers in the American West used this plant as a salt substitute to season wild game The entire plant is edible but reported to be very salty and bitter unless well cooked The juice from the leaves was used as a poultice for mild skin irritations and burns 68 Leaves can be used in salads and soups flowers taste best before blooming 69 unreliable source E lutea has been used for cooking in Peru 70 Alternative medical use edit Erythranthe has been listed as one of the 38 plants that are used to prepare Bach flower remedies 71 a kind of alternative medicine promoted for its effect on health However according to Cancer Research UK there is no scientific evidence to prove that flower remedies can control cure or prevent any type of disease including cancer 72 73 References edit a b Farr E R G Zijlstra eds Index Nominum Genericorum Plantarum 1996 Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 4 February 2017 The International Plant Names Index The International Plant Names Index Retrieved 4 February 2016 Lowry David B Sobel James M Angert Amy L Ashman Tia Lynn Baker Robert L Blackman Benjamin K Brandvain Yaniv Byers Kelsey J R P Cooley Arielle M Coughlan Jennifer M Dudash Michele R 2019 The case for the continued use of the genus name Mimulus for all monkeyflowers Taxon 68 4 617 623 doi 10 1002 tax 12122 ISSN 1996 8175 S2CID 208584689 Nesom Guy L Fraga Naomi S Barker William R Beardsley Paul M Tank David C Baldwin Bruce G Olmstead Richard G 2019 Response to The case for the continued use of the genus name Mimulus for all monkeyflowers Taxon 68 4 624 627 doi 10 1002 tax 12124 ISSN 1996 8175 S2CID 209602606 a b c Nesom Guy L 2014 Using Name in the Genus Mimulus PDF guynesom net Retrieved 20 February 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k Nesom Guy L 2014 Taxonomy of Erythranthe Sect Erythranthe Phrymaceae PDF Phytoneuron 31 1 41 ISSN 2153 733X a b c d Nesom G L 2012 Taxonomy of Erythranthe sect Simiola Phrymaceae in the USA and Mexico PDF Phytoneuron 40 1 123 ISSN 2153 733X a b Wu C A Lowry D B Cooley A M Wright K M Lee Y W Willis J H 2008 Mimulus is an emerging model system for the integration of ecological and genomic studies Heredity 100 2 220 230 doi 10 1038 sj hdy 6801018 ISSN 0018 067X PMID 17551519 Pojar Jim MacKinnon Andy 2004 Plants of the Pacific Northwest Coast Washington Oregon British Columbia amp Alaska Edmonton Lone Pine Publishing p 264 ISBN 978 1 55105 530 5 Turner Mark Gustafson Phyllis 2006 Wildflowers of the Pacific Northwest Portland OR Timber Press p 244 ISBN 978 0 88192 745 0 Byers Kelsey J R P Bradshaw H D Jr Riffell Jeffrey A 2009 Genetic divergence causes parallel evolution of flower color in Chilean Mimulus Journal of Experimental Biology 217 4 614 623 doi 10 1242 jeb 092213 PMC 3922836 PMID 24198269 Butterflies and Their Larval Foodplants University of California Irvine Retrieved 4 February 2017 Klinkenberg Brian ed 2014 E Flora BC Electronic Atlas of the Plants of British Columbia Mimulus guttatus Lab for Advanced Spatial Analysis Department of Geography University of British Columbia Vancouver Retrieved 25 February 2017 Giblin David 2015 Erythranthe guttata Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture University of Washington Retrieved 25 February 2017 Jepson eFlora Taxon page Mimulus guttatus Jepson Herbarium University of California Berkeley 2015 Retrieved 25 February 2017 Champion Paul Hofstra Deborah 21 August 2013 Erythranthe guttata New Zealand Plant Conservation Network NZ Plant Protection Society Retrieved 27 April 2017 Erythranthe alsinoides Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture University of Washington 2017 Retrieved 28 April 2017 Canadian Wildflowers Erythranthe tilingii Fleurs Sauvage Archived from the original on 13 February 2017 Retrieved 12 February 2017 Coombes Allen J 1985 Dictionary of Plant Names Port Jervis NY Lubrecht amp Cramer LTD p 119 ISBN 978 0 600 35770 4 Rogers Deborah L Montalvo Arlee M 2004 Genetically appropriate choices for plant materials to maintain biological diversity PDF University of California Report to the USDA Forest Service Rocky Mountain Region Lakewood CO Retrieved 4 February 2017 Solomon Eldra Pearl Berg Linda R Martin Diana W 2011 Biology 8 ed Stamford CT Thomson Brooks Cole pp 772 775 ISBN 978 0 538 74125 5 a b Cooley Arielle M Willis John H 2009 Genetic divergence causes parallel evolution of flower color in Chilean Mimulus New Phytologist 183 3 729 739 doi 10 1111 j 1469 8137 2009 02858 x PMID 19453433 Streisfeld Matthew A Rausher Mark D March 2011 Population Genetics Pleiotropy and the Preferential Fixation of Mutations During Adaptive Evolution Evolution 65 3 629 642 doi 10 1111 j 1558 5646 2010 01165 x JSTOR 29782952 PMID 21054357 S2CID 33188741 Cooley Arielle M Carvallo G Willis John H February 2008 Is Floral Diversification Associated with Pollinator Divergence Flower Shape Flower Colour and Pollinator Preference in Chilean Mimulus Annals of Botany 101 5 641 650 doi 10 1093 aob mcn014 PMC 2710177 PMID 18272528 a b c Beardsley P M Schoenig Steve E Whittall Justen B Olmstead Richard G 2004 Patterns of Evolution in Western North American Mimulus Phrymaceae American Journal of Botany 91 3 474 4890 doi 10 3732 ajb 91 3 474 JSTOR 4123743 PMID 21653403 a b c d Barker W L Bill et al 2012 A Taxonomic Conspectus of Phyrmaceae A Narrowed Circumscription for MIMULUS New and Resurrected Genera and New Names and Combinations PDF Phytoneuron 39 1 60 ISSN 2153 733X Vallejo Marin Mario Buggs Richard J Cooley Arielle M Puzey Joshua R 2015 Speciation by genome duplication Repeated origins and genomic composition of the recently formed allopolyploid species Mimulus peregrinus Evolution 69 6 1487 1500 doi 10 1111 evo 12678 PMC 5033005 PMID 25929999 Beardsley P M Yen Alan Olmstead R G 2003 AFLP Phylogeny of Mimulus Section Erythranthe and the Evolution of Hummingbird Pollination Evolution 57 6 1397 1410 doi 10 1554 02 086 JSTOR 3448862 PMID 12894947 S2CID 198154155 Beardsley P M Olmstead R G 2002 Redefining Phrymaceae the placement of Mimulus tribe Mimuleae and Phryma American Journal of Botany 89 7 1093 1102 doi 10 3732 ajb 89 7 1093 JSTOR 4122195 PMID 21665709 Schoenig Steve 2013 Monkeyflowers in Flux University of California Berkeley Jepson Herbarium Retrieved 18 February 2017 Olmstead R G 2003 Whatever happened to the Scrophulariaceae PDF Fremontia 30 2 13 22 a b c d Vallejo Marin Mario 2012 Mimulus peregrinus Phrymaceae A new British allopolyploid species PhytoKeys 14 1 14 doi 10 3897 phytokeys 14 3305 PMC 3492922 PMID 23170069 Vallejo Marin Mario Buggs Richard J A Cooley Arielle M Puzey Joshua R 2015 Speciation by genome duplication Repeated origins and genomic composition of the recently formed allopolyploid species Mimulus peregrinus Evolution 69 6 1487 1500 doi 10 1111 evo 12678 PMC 5033005 PMID 25929999 a b c Fishman Lila Kelly Alan J Morgan Emily Willis John H 2001 A Genetic Map in the Mimulus guttatus Species Complex Reveals Transmission Ratio Distortion due to Heterospecific Interactions Genetics 159 4 1701 1716 doi 10 1093 genetics 159 4 1701 PMC 1461909 PMID 11779808 Nesom Guy L 28 December 2016 Conspicuous Problems and Interesting Directions in Monkeyflower Sect Simiolus Taxonomy PDF Mimulus Taxonomy Retrieved 25 Feb 2017 a b c d e f g Nesom G L 2011 A New Species of Erythranthe Phrymaceae From China PDF Phytoneuron 7 1 5 ISSN 2153 733X a b Nesom G L 2017 Erythranthe diminuens Phrymaceae a new species of sect Simiolus from Sonora PDF Phytoneuron 7 1 5 ISSN 2153 733X a b Nesom G L 2012 Taxonomic summary of Erythranthe sect Achlyopitheca Phrymaceae PDF Phytoneuron 42 1 4 ISSN 2153 733X a b Erythranthe jungermannioides Suksd G L Nesom PDF Washington Department of Natural Resources Retrieved 25 February 2017 McWhirter Sheri 2023 07 29 The rarest wildflower in Michigan thrives on Beaver Island mlive Retrieved 2023 08 06 Mimulus michiganensis Michigan monkey flower Michigan Natural Features Inventory Michigan Natural Features Inventory Retrieved 2023 08 06 a b Perez Emmanuel Zamudio Sergio 2011 A new species of Mimulus L section Simiolus Phrymaceae in the northeastern part of Michoacan state Mexico Acta Botanica Mexicana 97 1 31 37 a b Nesom Guy L 2013 The Taxonomic Status of Mimulus sookensis Phrymaceae and Comments on Related Aspects of Biology in Species of Erythranthe PDF Phytoneuron 69 1 18 ISSN 2153 733X a b Nesom G L 2012 Taxonomy of Erythranthe sect Mimulosma Phrymaceae PDF Phytoneuron 41 1 36 ISSN 2153 733X Nesom G L Fraga N S 2014 Distribution Maps Erythranthe PDF Mimulus Taxonomy Retrieved 14 February 2017 a b Schemske Douglas W Bradshaw Jr H D 1999 Pollinator preference and the evolution of floral traits in monkeyflowers Mimulus Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA 96 21 11910 11915 Bibcode 1999PNAS 9611910S doi 10 1073 pnas 96 21 11910 PMC 18386 PMID 10518550 Schemske Douglas W Bradshaw Jr H D 2003 Allele substitution at a flower colour locus produces a pollinator shift in monkeyflowers Nature 426 6963 176 178 Bibcode 2003Natur 426 176B doi 10 1038 nature02106 PMID 14614505 S2CID 4350778 Errata On the Relative Importance of Floral Color Shape and Nectar Rewards in Attracting Pollinators to Mimulus The Great Basin Naturalist 56 31 282 1996 JSTOR 41712949 Fishman L Beardsley P M Stathos A Williams C F Hill J P 2015 The genetic architecture of traits associated with the evolution of self pollination in Mimulus New Phytologist 205 2 907 917 doi 10 1111 nph 13091 PMID 25306861 Sutherland Steven D Vickery Robert K 1993 On the Relative Importance of Floral Color Shape and Nectar Rewards In Attracting Pollinators to Mimulus The Great Basin Naturalist 53 2 107 117 JSTOR 41712764 Beardsley Paul M Yen Alan Olmstead Richard G 1993 AFLP Phylogeny of Mimulus Section Erythranthe and the Evolution of Hummingbird Pollination Evolution 57 6 1397 1410 doi 10 1111 j 0014 3820 2003 tb00347 x JSTOR 3448862 PMID 12894947 Carr David E Roulston T ai H Hart Haley 2014 Inbreeding in Mimulus guttatus Reduces Visitation by Bumble Bee Pollinators PLOS ONE 9 7 e101463 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 9j1463C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0101463 PMC 4103763 PMID 25036035 Ritland Kermit 1989 Correlated Matings in the Partial Selfer Mimulus guttatus Evolution 43 4 848 859 doi 10 1111 j 1558 5646 1989 tb05182 x PMID 28564194 S2CID 6227723 Brandvain Yaniv Kenney Amanda M Flagel Lex Coop Graham Sweigert Andrea L 2014 Speciation and Introgression between Mimulus nasutus and Mimulus guttatus PLOS Genetics 10 6 e1004410 doi 10 1371 journal pgen 1004410 PMC 4072524 PMID 24967630 Dole Jefferey A 1992 Reproductive Assurance Mechanisms in Three Taxa of the Mimulus guttatus Complex Scrophulariaceae American Journal of Botany 79 6 650 659 doi 10 1002 j 1537 2197 1992 tb14607 x JSTOR 2444881 a b Fraga Naomi S 2012 A Revision of Erythranthe montioides and Erythranthe palmeri PHRYMACEAE With Descriptions of Five New Species From California and Nevada USA Aliso A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany 30 1 49 68 Nesom Guy L 2013 New Distribution Records for Erythranthe Phrymaceae PDF Phytoneuron 67 1 15 ISSN 2153 733X Mimulus luteus Blood drop emlets Online Atlas of the British amp Irish Flora 1998 Retrieved 4 February 2017 California Monkey flowers Las Pilitas Nursery Retrieved 19 February 2017 Wallace Pam Monkeyflower is a Drought Tolerant Addition to Your Landscape PDF University of California Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources Retrieved 19 February 2017 Walter Kerry Scott Gillett Harriet J 1998 1997 IUCN Red List of Threatened Plants Cambridge World Conservation Union pp 557 558 ISBN 978 2 8317 0328 2 a b Monkey flower Diplacus Mimulus spp Family Scrophulariaceae Figwort Family University of California Integrated Plant Management Retrieved 18 January 2017 Eubanks Micky D Carr David E Murphy John F 2005 Effects of Virus Infection of Mimulus guttatus Phrymaceae on Host Plant Quality for Meadow Spittlebugs Philaenus spumarius Hemiptera Cercopidae Environmental Entomology 34 4 891 898 doi 10 1603 0046 225X 34 4 891 Daughtrey Margery 2000 Diseases of Mimulus Monkey Flower Mimulus hybridus hort ex Siebert amp Voss American Phytopathological Society Retrieved 19 February 2017 McIndoe Andy Hobbs Kevin 2005 The Horticulture Gardener s Guides Perennials Boston Horticulture Publications p 126 ISBN 978 1 55870 764 1 Bryant T A April 2008 ContentSelect Monkeyflowers bees but no birds Annals of Botany 101 5 v vi doi 10 1093 aob mcn037 JSTOR 43575860 PMC 2710183 Mimulus cupreus Alpine Garden Society Retrieved 12 February 2017 Tilford Gregory L 1997 Edible and Medicinal Plants of the West Missoula MT Mountain Press Publishing Company pp 98 99 ISBN 978 0 87842 359 0 52 Wild Plants You Can Eat Waking Times 3 August 2013 Retrieved 19 February 2017 Loudon John Claudius 1830 Loudon s Hortus Britannicus London Longman Rees Orme Brown and Green p 528 mimulus culinary use D S Vohra 1 June 2004 Bach Flower Remedies A Comprehensive Study B Jain Publishers p 3 ISBN 978 81 7021 271 3 Retrieved 2 September 2013 Flower remedies Cancer Research UK 2017 08 30 Retrieved 4 February 2017 Mimulus Blood drop emlets Bach Flower Remedies Retrieved 4 February 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Erythranthe Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Erythranthe amp oldid 1170350728, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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