Silky Phacelia

Phacelia sericea

''Phacelia sericea'', the Silky Phacelia, Blue Alpine Phacelia, or Sky-pilot, is a showy perennial species of ''Phacelia'' endemic to western North America. Uncommon, it grows mainly at subalpine to alpine elevations in forest openings or above treeline among rocks and sand. ''Sericea'' comes from the Latin ''sericeus'', or silky, referring to the fine hairs on the leaves and stem.
Silky Phacelia These flowers are one of my top 10 flowers in Yellowstone! They are so unique and neat looking.  Phacelia sericea,Silky Phacelia

Appearance

''Phacelia sericea'' consists of several upright or ascending stems to 0.6 m from a tap-rooted, branched woody base. Its leaves are pinnatifid with cleft or entire segments. The basal leaves are somewhat larger than the upper cauline leaves and are more persistent and petiolate. The leaves and stems are generally covered with silvery silky hairs but are scarcely glandular.


The inflorescence consists of several short panicles, tightly packed, at the end of the stem, resembling a bottle-brush. The dark blue to purple bell-shaped corolla is 4-6 mm across. It is hairy inside and out but not glandular. The filaments are two to three times as long as the corolla and give the inflorescence a fuzzy appearance. The anthers are bright yellow or orange and the style is shortly cleft. The fruit consists of two-chambered capsules with 8 to 18 seeds.

A subalpine to alpine species of open well-drained slopes, usually above 1500 m elevation, it is found in the mountains of Vancouver Island, the southern British Columbia Pacific Ranges, the Rocky Mountains from Banff National Park to southern Colorado, Olympic National Park, the Cascade Range of Washington, the mountains of eastern Oregon and the northernmost counties of California, and the mountains of Idaho, Nevada and Utah. It generally blooms from near the end of May through the end of August.
Purple Fringe accents Wyoming alpine lake color with Wind River Peak  yellow (and purple) blooms on shore of Frye Lake in central Wyoming.  July 2010 Phacelia sericea,Silky Phacelia,yellow mountain flowers; purple mountain blooms

Naming

Two subspecies are recognized.
⤷ ''P. sericea'' ssp. ''ciliosa'' is distributed from Oregon and California east to Wyoming and Colorado.

⤷ ''P. sericea'' ssp. ''sericea'' is restricted to the Rocky Mountains, Alaska, British Columbia and Washington. The latter is smaller, more densely hairy, shorter, i.e., less than 0.3 m , with relatively narrow and blunt leaf segments.

Where the ranges overlap, ''P. sericea'' ssp. ''ciliosa'' occurs at a lower elevation than ssp. ''sericea''. These are listed as subspecies by the USDA PLANTS database and ITIS, and as varieties by Jepson and Hitchcock.
Color of the Mountians A very beautiful wildflower I found growing at the northern end of Yellowstone National Park. Geotagged,Phacelia sericea,United States,Wildflowers,Wyoming,Yellowstone National Park

Uses

''Phacelia sericea'' is listed by the Federal Highway Administration as a native species suitable for landscaping along roadsides in Colorado.

References:

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Status: Unknown
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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderBoraginales
FamilyBoraginaceae
GenusPhacelia
Species