Commelina Linnaeus. Common name: Dayflower.
A genus of about 170 species, herbs, cosmopolitan. The key is adapted in part from Brashier (1966), Faden (1993), and Tucker (1989).
ID notes: Commelina has bilateral flowers, with 2 large petals (usually blue or white, but peach-colored in one species) and 1 smaller petal (often paler, and sometimes translucent). The flowers emerge from a folded spathe (very different than the leaves) which is heart-shaped if opened and spread. Only Tinantia (restricted to TX) is similar in these features; it differs in having 6 rather then 3) fertile stamens, and the filaments being bearded with hairs (rather than glabrous).
References: Brashier (1966); Faden (1993); Faden (1998) In Kubitzki (1998b); Faden (2000b) In Flora of North America Editorial Committee (2000); Tucker (1989). Show full citations.
Hover over a shape, letter, icon, or arrow on the map for definition or see the legend. Data for arrows not developed for genera and families which may have species only occurring outside the flora area.
© Bruce A. Sorrie | Commelina communis | Original Image ⭷
© Alan M. Cressler | Commelina diffusa | Original Image ⭷
© Nathan Aaron CC-BY | Original Image ⭷Feedback
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