Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness

Presented in Association with the
Western New Mexico University Department of Natural Sciences

Mimulus rubellus Gray
(Red Stem Monkeyflower)

Family: Plantaginaceae, formerly Scrophulariaceae

Status: Native

Synonyms:
Mimulus gratioloides Rydberg

Mimulus rubellus is a diminutive annual herb with white and pink flowers with pink spots within the corolla tube. The corolla lobes are notched. The sessile leaves have one or two pairs of teeth or are entire. The calyx and herbage is stipitate glandular with sand and dirt readily sticking. Although this species is apparently more common in the mountains (as supported by specimens from the Pinos Altos area in the Dale A. Zimmerman Herbarium,) it can also found in the leaf cover under mesquite in the lower elevation arid areas after a moist winter.
Please click on an image for a larger file.



Mimulus rubellus, photo Russ Kleinman & Richard Felger, Burro Mtns., Engineer Canyon, March 17, 2010



Mimulus rubellus, closeup, photo Russ Kleinman & Richard Felger, Burro Mtns., Engineer Canyon, March 17, 2010



Mimulus rubellus, 1x field macro of flower, photo Russ Kleinman & Richard Felger, Burro Mtns., Engineer Canyon, March 17, 2010



Mimulus rubellus, specimen measurement, photo Russ Kleinman & Richard Felger, Burro Mtns., Engineer Canyon, March 17, 2010



Mimulus rubellus, closeup of leaf, photo Russ Kleinman & Richard Felger, Burro Mtns., Engineer Canyon, March 17, 2010


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