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Zinnia
Family: Asteraceae
Zinnia image
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Alan R. Smith in Flora of North America (vol. 21)
Annuals or subshrubs [perennials], 10-100(-200+) cm. Stems prostrate or erect. Leaves cauline; opposite or subopposite; sessile [petiolate]; blades (1-, 3-, or 5-nerved from bases) acerose, elliptic, lance-linear, lanceolate, linear, oblong, or ovate, bases rounded to cuneate, margins entire, faces hairy (often scabrous or scabrellous), usually gland-dotted. Heads usually radiate (rarely ± discoid in Z. anomala), borne singly. Involucres campanulate, cylindric, to hemispheric or broader, 5-25 mm diam. Phyllaries persistent, 12-30+ in 3-4+ series (orbiculate to obovate or oblong, unequal, often colored or dark-banded distally, outer shorter). Receptacles conic, paleate (paleae yellowish, often reddish to purplish distally, chartaceous to scarious, conduplicate, apices rounded to acute, sometimes fimbriate). Ray florets usually 5-21 (more in 'double' cultivars, sometimes 0 in Z. anomala), pistillate, fertile; corollas yellow, orange, red, maroon, purple, or white (laminae persistent, sessile or nearly so, becoming papery, sometimes much reduced). Disc florets 20-150+, bisexual, fertile; corollas usually yellow to reddish, sometimes purple-tinged, tubes much shorter than cylindric throats, lobes 5, lance-ovate (usually unequal, usually villous or velutinous adaxially). Cypselae 3-angled (ray) or flattened (disc; not winged); pappi 0, or persistent, of 1-3(-4) awns or toothlike scales. x = 12 (11, 10). A. M. Torres (1963) recognized subg. Diplothrix, comprising six species, including the three perennial species treated here, and subg. Zinnia, comprising 11 species, mostly annuals. This division is reflected in the first couplet of the key. Zinnia angustifolia Kunth (= Z. linearis Bentham), native to northern and western Mexico, is commonly grown as an ornamental in the United States and has been reported from Utah (S. L. Welsh et al. 1993); the record was likely from a cultivated source. The species also persists in gardens in California; it is not known outside of cultivation. It can be distinguished from other zinnias by the combination of annual habit, plants to 50 cm, leaf blades linear to narrowly elliptic (mostly 2-7 cm × 4-8 mm), involucres mostly hemispheric, usually much less than 1 cm high or wide, bright orange ray corollas (white-rayed and other color variants known in cultivation), and lobes of disc flowers glabrous or nearly so. Hybrids between Z. angustifolia and Z. violacea are known in the horticultural trade. The lack of articulation of the corolla tubes in the ray florets of Zinnia verticillata Andrews (= Z. peruviana) and the bilateral disposition of vascular bundles (continuous with vasculature of the ovary walls) in the ray florets led D. Don (1830) to conclude that true ray 'corollas' in Zinnia are lacking, being replaced instead by de novo petaloid structures that mimic ray corollas of other Compositae.

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Zinnia acerosa
Image of Zinnia acerosa
Zinnia americana
Image of Zinnia americana
Zinnia angustifolia
Image of Zinnia angustifolia
Zinnia anomala
Image of Zinnia anomala
Zinnia austrotexana
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not available
Zinnia bicolor
Image of Zinnia bicolor
Zinnia citrea
Image of Zinnia citrea
Zinnia flavicoma
Image of Zinnia flavicoma
Zinnia grandiflora
Image of Zinnia grandiflora
Zinnia greggii
Image of Zinnia greggii
Zinnia haageana
Image of Zinnia haageana
Zinnia juniperifolia
Image of Zinnia juniperifolia
Zinnia leucoglossa
Image of Zinnia leucoglossa
Zinnia linearis
Image of Zinnia linearis
Zinnia maritima
Image of Zinnia maritima
Zinnia marylandica
Image of Zinnia marylandica
Zinnia microglossa
Image of Zinnia microglossa
Zinnia oligantha
Image of Zinnia oligantha
Zinnia palmeri
Image of Zinnia palmeri
Zinnia peruviana
Image of Zinnia peruviana
Zinnia purpusii
Image of Zinnia purpusii
Zinnia tenella
Image of Zinnia tenella
Zinnia tenuis
Image of Zinnia tenuis
Zinnia venusta
Image of Zinnia venusta
Zinnia violacea
Image of Zinnia violacea
Zinnia zamudiana
Image of Zinnia zamudiana
Zinnia zinnioides
Image of Zinnia zinnioides
The National Science Foundation
Development supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)
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