All Species Plantae

Erythranthe grandis (Greene) G.L.Nesom is a plant in the Phrymaceae family, order Lamiales, kingdom Plantae. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Erythranthe grandis (Greene) G.L.Nesom (Erythranthe grandis (Greene) G.L.Nesom)
Plantae

Erythranthe grandis (Greene) G.L.Nesom

Erythranthe grandis (Greene) G.L.Nesom

Erythranthe grandis is a coastal perennial relative of Erythranthe guttata found from southern California to southern Washington.

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Family
Genus
Erythranthe
Order
Lamiales
Class
Magnoliopsida
⚠️ Toxicity Note

Insufficient toxicity evidence; avoid direct contact and ingestion.

About Erythranthe grandis (Greene) G.L.Nesom

Taxonomic Relation

Erythranthe grandis is a coastal perennial plant species closely related to Erythranthe guttata.

Pre-Flowering Growth Habit

Before flowering and throughout the winter months, it often grows with a spreading prostrate habit and produces many lateral stolon branches.

Flowering Period

Peak flowering for this species typically occurs from May through August, which is later than the flowering period of nearby inland populations of E. guttata.

Inflorescence Morphology

In some populations, flowering inflorescences can grow quite elongated.

Latitudinal Height Variation

Plant height decreases with increasing latitude, forming very compact plants in northern regions and highly elongated plants in southern regions.

Leaf Characteristics

Compared to E. guttata, the leaves of E. grandis are typically thicker and often look waxier, especially when the plant grows directly adjacent to the ocean. Leaf margins of E. grandis are generally rounded to dentate.

Stem Morphology

Its stems are typically thicker than those of most E. guttata populations, and they are hollow.

Calyx Trichome Features

The calyxes of E. grandis usually have trichomes, some of which are glandular and some are crinkly.

Calyx Coloration

In populations growing from far Northern California into central Oregon, some have red spotting on their calyxes.

Historical Taxonomic Naming

Many biological researchers still refer to this species as a coastal perennial ecotype of Mimulus guttatus, because it is completely inter-fertile with other inland annual and perennial populations.

Molecular Genetic Distinction

Molecular genetic analyses have shown that E. grandis populations form a distinct cluster separate from nearby inland E. guttata populations.

Current Taxonomic Status

Although E. grandis has recently been classified as a full species, it can also be considered a coastal perennial ecotype of E. guttata.

Salt Tolerance Trait

This species has evolved a higher level of salt tolerance than related inland E. guttata populations.

Geographic Range

Its range extends along coastal areas from southern California to Cape Disappointment in southern Washington State.

Habitat

It is generally found in coastal seeps, cliffs, dunes, marshes, roadside ditches, or headlands with high soil moisture.

Morphological Comparison to Inland E. guttata

Erythranthe grandis has distinctly different morphology from inland annual populations of E. guttata. However, some inland perennial populations of E. guttata do resemble E. grandis.

Chromosomal Inversion Control of Traits

Most trait differences between perennial and annual populations are primarily controlled by a chromosomal inversion that is shared by E. grandis and perennial E. guttata; annual E. guttata generally carries the opposite orientation of this inversion.

Perennial Life History Drivers

All E. grandis populations are perennial, and they maintain this life history because lower ocean-side temperatures and coastal summer fog preserve soil moisture and reduce transpiration during the summer dry season.

Herbivore Resistance Trait

E. grandis has higher levels of herbivore defensive compounds and higher salt tolerance than inland annual populations of E. guttata.

Adaptive Drivers of Resistance Traits

These higher levels of herbivore resistance and salt tolerance are likely the result of more herbivores in coastal habitats and the effect of oceanic salt spray on above-ground plant tissues.

Photo: (c) Curren Frasch, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Curren Frasch · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Plantae Tracheophyta Magnoliopsida Lamiales Phrymaceae Erythranthe

More from Phrymaceae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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