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Support the Flora of the Southeastern US

2024 has been a banner year for making the best flora we can imagine. We've created:
With financial support from people like you, we are aiming even higher in 2025. Together we can accomplish all this: Vote on our 2025 priorities
  • Add Global Conservation Ranks (GRanks) vote
  • Professional graphic keys (polyclaves) to individual families/genera vote
  • 2 new FloraQuest apps: Florida & Mid-South vote
  • Image overlays highlighting diagnostic characters with arrows vote
  • iNaturalist integration in FloraQuest vote
Write-in vote: vote
We've set a goal of recruiting 200 ongoing supporters to donate $15 or more each month in 2025. Please help us reach this goal and make next year's flora even better:

Click the number at the start of a key lead to highlight both that lead and its corresponding lead. Click again to show only the two highlighted leads. Click a third time to return to the full key with the selected leads still highlighted.

Key to Phemeranthus

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1 Petals yellow or orange (to reddish or pinkish); flowers axillary, usually solitary (or in 2-3 flowered cymules)
1 Petals pink or purple; flowers in a diffuse cyme borne on a scapelike peduncle.
  2 Seeds rough and wrinkled; [local, midwestern]
  2 Seeds smooth to slightly rough and not wrinkled; [collectively widespread].
    3 Stamens 4-8; flowers open in late afternoon
    3 Stamens 12-80 (-90); flowers variously open from early to late afternoon.
      4 Stamens (40-) 50-80 (-90); [of granite and sandstone from SC southward]
      4 Stamens 12-42; [collectively widespread].
        5 Style 2-3.5 mm long, shorter than or about the same length as the stamens; stamens 12-30; flowers open from 3 to 7 p.m. (Daylight Savings Time)
        5 Style 3.8-7+ mm long; stamens 25-45; flowers open from about 1 to 7 p.m. (Daylight Savings Time).
          6 Sepals 4-6 mm long; petals 10-15 mm long
          6 Sepals 3-4 mm long; petals 8-10 mm long.
             7 Stigma distinctly 3-lobed; mature seeds covered with a dull gray coating; flowers opening 3 to 7 p.m. (Daylight Savings Time); [of calcareous rock outcrops from Tennessee south and westward]
             7 Stigma subcapitate; mature seeds brown-black and lustrous; flowers open from about 1 to 7 p.m. (Daylight Savings Time); [of mafic rocks in ne. NC and se. VA]