Penstemon australis Small. Common name: Southern Beardtongue, Sandhill Beardtongue. Phenology: May-Jul; Jul-Aug. Habitat: Longleaf pine sandhills, pine flatwoods, dry hammocks, dry sandy roadsides, woodland margins. Distribution: Se. VA south to c. peninsular FL, west to s. and wc. AL, primarily on the Coastal Plain, but not uncommon westward into the Piedmont and lower Mountains, and extending in the interior into c. TN.
Origin/Endemic status: Endemic
Synonymy ⓘ: = Fl6, FNA17, K4, S, Clements, Baskin, & Baskin (1998), Estes (2012), Pennell (1935); = Penstemon australis Small ssp. australis — Bennett (1963); < Penstemon australis Small — C, F, G, RAB, Va, W, WH3; Penstemon australis Small — (basionym)
Links to other floras: = Penstemon australis - FNA17
Wetland Indicator Status:
- Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain: FACU
- Eastern Mountains and Piedmont: FACU
Heliophily ⓘ: 7
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Horticultural Information
Intro | Stems | Leaves | Inforescence | Flowers | Fruits | Comments | Height | plant sale text | bloom table text | description | stems | leaves | inflorescence | flowers | fruits | comments | cultural notes | germination code | native range |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Erect perennial of sandhills, flatwoods, dry hammocks and dry sandy roadsides. | Stems 1-several (not branched above the base), reddish-purple, usually hairy. | Leaves opposite, sessile, lance-shaped, to 4 in. long, somewhat thick-firm, vaguely coarsely toothed, smooth to minutely hairy. | Flowers in a moderately compact, terminal panicle, with branches angled upward; pink to lavender-purple; to 1 in. long; bilaterally symmetric; tubular and with 2 lips, the upper 2-lobed and slightly shorter than the lower, which is 3 lobed. Corolla throat white with purple lines and a barely protruding yellow-bearded "tongue." Flower parts--corolla, calyx, stalks and inflorescence branches--are often covered with glandular hairs. | Identification of Penstemon species is difficult due to variations in flower characters such as color, patterning, relative length of parts, and degree of constriction/dilation of the corolla tube. | 8-28 in. | Erect perennial of sandhills, flatwoods, dry hammocks and dry sandy roadsides. | Stems 1-several (not branched above the base), reddish-purple, usually hairy. | Leaves opposite, sessile, lance-shaped, to 4 in. long, somewhat thick-firm, vaguely coarsely toothed, smooth to minutely hairy. | Flowers in a moderately compact, terminal panicle, with branches angled upward; pink to lavender-purple; to 1 in. long; bilaterally symmetric; tubular and with 2 lips, the upper 2-lobed and slightly shorter than the lower, which is 3 lobed. Corolla throat white with purple lines and a barely protruding yellow-bearded "tongue." Flower parts--corolla, calyx, stalks and inflorescence branches--are often covered with glandular hairs. | Identification of Penstemon species is difficult due to variations in flower characters such as color, patterning, relative length of parts, and degree of constriction/dilation of the corolla tube. | southeastern United States |
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