trailing windmills, more...trailing windmills, windmills, trailing four-o'clock, trailing allionia, trailing four o'clock (es: guapile, hierba de la golpe, hierba de la hormiga)
Herbs, perennial, sometimes annual, sparingly glandular puberulent to spreading viscid-villous. Stems often reddish, 0.1-1.5 m. Leaves progressively reduced distally; distal leaves proportionately narrower than proximal; larger leaves: petiole 2-25 mm, equaling or shorter than blade; blade usually flat, sometimes undulate, 20-65 × 10-35 mm, base often oblique, obtuse, or round, margins entire or sinuate, apex acute, sometimes obtuse or round. Inflorescences: peduncle 3-25(-30) mm, involucres ovoid when mature, 4-6.5(-9) mm. Perianth deep pink to magenta, 5-15 mm. Fruits deeply convex, 2.9-4.7 × 1.5-2.8 mm; lateral ribs with 0-4 teeth, teeth usually broadly (rarely narrowly) triangular, never gland tipped, or edge of fruit wings entire or with only irregular undulations and incisions, concave side of fruit with 4-7 glands per row (glands rarely continuous or 2 rows glandless); stalks equaling or shorter than diameter of glandular head. Allionia incarnata was used by indigenous peoples to treat swellings, was added to baths to reduce fever, and also prepared as a decoction to treat diarrhea and kidney ailments (S. Cheatham et al. 1995, vol. 1). Occasionally fruits of A. incarnata are shallowly convex and resemble, in this respect, the fruits of A. choisyi.
Plant: Prostrate perennial forb herbage glandular pubescent Leaves: leaves opposite, unequal in pair, oblong to ovate, 1-2 cm Flowers: flowers, grouped in threes in axils, subtended by rose-purple bracts. Notes: flowers with one whorl, appearing petaloid, in tight involucre so appearing as one flower References: J.C. Hickman, ed. The Jepson Manual. A. Cronquist. An integrated system of classification of flowering plants. ASU specimens.