Jim Lloyd Posted May 28, 2018 Share Posted May 28, 2018 Found this growing by the side of the road with many others like a weed, but not sure I have seen it before. My bike water bottle served as a useful flower carrier to get it home. I think maybe Minulus guttatus ? - a non-native species to UK iphone pics: D3200, UG1 2mm + BG40 2mm photax 35mm f/3.5, sunlight indoors Link to comment
Jim Lloyd Posted May 29, 2018 Author Share Posted May 29, 2018 Interesting Wikipedia entry - https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erythranthe_guttata And http://www.nonnativespecies.org/factsheet/factsheet.cfm?speciesId=2231 First recorded in wild in U.K. 1824. - used to be quite rare but has been increasingly rapidly over past few years Link to comment
nfoto Posted May 29, 2018 Share Posted May 29, 2018 Yes, the determination seems correct. Soon you won't need us botanist here on UVP :D I found this species growing actually up into the Arctic Norway on the coast. Thus it is a pretty robust flower not just pretty to look at. Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted May 29, 2018 Share Posted May 29, 2018 There are Mimulus species also growing in the southwestern deserts of the US. Has Mimulus as a species been renamed to Erythranthre?? It is sometimes difficult to keep up with botanical name changes. Link to comment
Bill De Jager Posted June 1, 2018 Share Posted June 1, 2018 Has Mimulus as a species been renamed to Erythranthre?? It is sometimes difficult to keep up with botanical name changes. Wikepedia says so, along with a fair number of hits on a search. Our local standard reference http://ucjeps.berkel...y.php?tid=33619 says not. This is an issue of particular concern in California because we have so many species here, both in Erythranthre and Diplacus (also recently re-separated from Mimulus). It's funny that almost immediately in my earliest botanical learnings I had to subsume Diplacus under Mimulus, and now it seems that it's separate again! E. guttatus is our most common species in the genus, but the most charming ones IMO are the tiny spring annuals forming carpets of color in the pine forests up in the mountains. Link to comment
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