Description
Key Characters:
Growth Form:
Decumbent shrubs 3–5(–15) dm tall.
Stems:
Stems dark reddish brown, young growth red to pinkish brown, often rooting at the nodes, sparingly branched, branches covered with persistent stipules, leafy only toward apex.
Roots:
Leaves:
Leaves simple.
Alternate.
Blades oblong–obovate to oblong–elliptic, sometimes narrowly obovate or elliptic, 1.5–5 cm long, 0.8–2(–2.5) cm wide.
Apex rounded or truncate.
Base cuneate.
Upper surfaces densely silky strigose; lower surfaces densely silky strigose.
Margins entire except apex with 3–5(–7) or rarely more shallow teeth.
5–6(–8)-veined.
Petioles 0.7–1.5(–2) cm long.
Stipules subulate, 5–11 mm long, strigillose.
Flowers:
Flowers 3–6(–9) in compound cymes, these forming loose corymbose inflorescences that project beyond the leaves, axillary or terminal; peduncles and pedicels slender, pedicels subtended by narrow bracts.
Flowers bisexual (perfect), actinomorphic; pedicels 1.5–2.5 cm long.
Calyx of 5 sepals, oblong–lanceolate or narrowly lanceolate, 6–10 mm long, densely silky strigose, margins of inner sepals less densely so, distinct or sometimes connate at base, rarely forming a tube, apex mucronate.
Corolla of 5 petals, white, streaked with purple or purplish magenta or sometimes in smaller flowers pure white, narrowly obovate, ca. 8–15 mm long, distinct, nectary glands alternate with the petals.
Stamens (5)10; filaments ± connate at base, those alternate with the petals longer than others and with basal glands, staminal filaments ca.6–7 mm long, glands pubescent; anthers dithecal, opening by longitudinal slits.
Ovary superior or nearly so, 5-celled, carpels connate around a central column to form a compound ovary with as many cells, fertile portion a lobed ring at base of stylar column, placentation axile; ovules 2 per cell, anatropous to campylotropous, usually pendulous; styles 3–5, ca. 6–8 mm long, slender and beak-like, sometimes narrowed below apex; stigmas slender and dry, rarely capitate.
Fruit:
Septicidal and elastically dehiscent capsules separating into as many segments as carpels; a portion of the style splitting off from remainder of stylar column and forming an awn that recurves upward from the persistent central column; usually remaining attached to apex; sometimes the awn also becomes spirally coiled; awn usually hygroscopic; immature carpel bodies ca. 3 mm long; densely pubescent.
Seeds presumably 1 per cell; smooth or reticulate; endosperm usually scanty or absent; rarely copious and oily.
Ploidy:
Habitat:
Forming large patches in bogs.
Elevation Range:
1,670–1,680 m.