Pale Beardtongue (Penstemon pallidus)
NATIVE, CRITICALLY IMPERILED (S1)-Growing in patches on a hillside (at the base of high ridges) by a dirt road clearing in a dense mixed hardwood/coniferous forest in NW Georgia (Gordon County), US. May 2018.
Stems, leaves (both sides), and flowers are ALL pubescent. Leaves appear glabrous at a distance, but a simple rub (or closeup view) proves otherwise! Very fuzzy! Some plants seem to exhibit more anther exertion than others. I had to scope/get a closer look at the hairs/pubescence (which were glandular for the most part with some occasional short eglandular ones).
The flowers of Penstemon pallidus are cross-pollinated by long-tongued bees, carpenter bees, and mason bees. Its foliage is also choice food for moths with in the following genera: Elaphria, Sympistis, and Caloptilia.
''Penstemon pallidus'', the pale beardtongue, is a flower native to the eastern United States. It has been introduced to Canada.

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