Scarlet Monkey-flower (Eastwood's Monkey-flower)
Mimulus eastwoodiae
Family: Scrophulariaceae - Figwort Family
Perennial herbs; stems 2.8 to 1.4' (7 to 43 cm) tall
Leaves: opposite; simple; toothed; fan shaped; lower leaves 0.2 to 0.8 (0.5 to 2 cm) long; upper leaves larger 0.8 to 2.8 (2 to 7 cm) long
Flowers: 5 united lobed scarlet/orange-red tubular petals (irregular flowers with upper lip 2 lobed, lower lip 3 lobed), 5 angled sepals; 4 stamens; showy flowers; bilaterally symmetrical; bisexual; flowers 1 to 1.8 (25 to 45 mm) long
Pollinators: other Mimulus species are pollinated by insects and hummingbirds
Fruits: 2 chambered capsule (dry fruit)
Blooms in Arches National Park: September, October
Habitat in Arches National Park: seeps and hanging gardens
Location seen: outside Arches National Park in hanging garden on Corona Arch trail
Other: The genus name, Mimulus, is from the Latin mimus meaning mimic referring to the flowers mimicking a monkey's face or possibly to the monkey-like resemblance of the plant hanging from alcove ceilings. The species name, eastwoodiae, honors Alice Eastwood (1859-1953), a curator of botany at the California Academy of Sciences.
The family is of important because of many ornamentals and cardiac glycosides can be derived from foxglove.
|