Roseleaf Sage

Salvia involucrata

"Salvia involucrata" is a species of flowering plant in the sage family Lamiaceae. This herbaceous perennial is native to the Mexican states of Puebla, Tamaulipas, and Veracruz, growing in shady places such as the edge of forests. Its specific epithet "involucrata" refers to the prominent flower bracts, which are large and colorful.
Roseleaf Sage flower, Salvia involucrata  Australia,Fall,Geotagged,Salvia involucrata

Appearance

"Salvia involucrata" grows 5 ft or taller before it starts blooming in late summer. The plant's flowers and bracts are a reddish, beetroot color. The bracts occur in pairs which envelop three flowers each, falling away as the flowers expand. The plant's leaves are small, flat mid-green, slightly cordate-shaped. Unusually, the leaves' petioles and veins share the flowers' beetroot-reddish hue. Genetically, the species has eleven tetraploidal chromosomes.

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderLamiales
FamilyLamiaceae
GenusSalvia
SpeciesS. involucrata
Photographed in
Australia