Hibiscus clypeatus subsp. clypeatus

Treatment appears in FNA Volume 6. Treatment on page 267.

Shrubs or trees, 2–5 m. Stems: new growth ± stellate- and usually simple-hairy, line of fine, curved hairs absent or obscured. Leaves: stipules subulate, 3–18 mm; petiole of principal leaves 1/2 to equaling blade, finely hairy; blade ovate to orbiculate, angulate-lobate (maple- or grapelike) or less frequently unlobed, 10–22 × 9–23 cm, base deeply and narrowly cordate to truncate, margins remotely and shallowly denticulate or undulate, apex acute to acuminate, surfaces stellate-tomentose, more densely so abaxially, nectary absent from base of midvein abaxially. Inflorescences solitary flowers in axils of distal leaves, or subcorymbose by reduction of internodes and subtending leaves. Pedicels jointed at base or not at all, 3–10 cm (often conspicuously elongated), subequal to or exceeding petioles, finely densely hairy; involucellar bractlets 7–10, linear-subulate to narrowly triangular, often randomly curved (sickle-shaped), 1–3 cm, margins not ciliate, densely short stellate-hairy. Flowers horizontal; calyx divided 1/3 length, campanulate, 3–4.5 cm, somewhat larger in fruit, more densely hairy basally, lobes triangular, apices short-acuminate, nectaries absent; corolla funnelform to narrowly campanulate, somewhat bilateral, petals dull red or dull orange, 2 upper little or not at all recurved, 3 lower recurved or revolute, 4–5.5 × 1–2 cm, margins apically entire or repand, tomentose throughout abaxially; staminal column declinate to recurved, pale yellowish to dull orange, 2.8–4.2 cm, bearing filaments in apical 1/3–1/2, free portion of filaments secund, 4–8(–10) mm; pollen yellow to orange; styles dull red to dull orange, 3–6 mm; stigmas dull red to dull orange. Capsules dull orange, ovoid to obovoid, 2.5–5 cm, apex apiculate, hispid, densely underlain by minute, coarse stellate hairs, hairs orangish. Seeds brown, mottled, subglobose, 3.5–4 mm, glabrous. 2n = 20 (Mexico: Veracruz).


Phenology: Flowering Oct–Nov.
Habitat: Riparian woodlands, alluvial soil
Elevation: 30–50 m

Distribution

V6 484-distribution-map.jpg

Tex., ne, se Mexico, West Indies (Hispaniola, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Saint Croix), Central America (Belize, Guatemala).

Discussion

Subspecies clypeatus was collected for the first time in the flora area in 1994; it was not identified until 2009. It is known in the flora area only from near the Rio Grande in Hidalgo County and deserves state and federal protection. Hummingbird visits to H. clypeatus have been observed in Belize and Mexico (D. M. Bates, pers. comm.; J. C. Meerman 1993); bats are suspected as the primary agents for pollination (O. J. Blanchard 1976).

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
Orland J. Blanchard Jr. +
Linnaeus +
Tex. +, ne +, se Mexico +, West Indies (Hispaniola +, Jamaica +, Puerto Rico +, Saint Croix) +, Central America (Belize +  and Guatemala). +
30–50 m +
Riparian woodlands, alluvial soil +
Flowering Oct–Nov. +
Syst. Nat. ed. +
Hibiscus clypeatus subsp. clypeatus +
Hibiscus clypeatus +
subspecies +