Mendocino coast paintbrush is a tap rooted perennial herb with few to many, decumbent to ascending branching stems arising 17-65 cm from a woody caudex. Generally covered with shaggy-bristly, nonÂglandular hairs that give the plant a gray-green hue. The somewhat fleshy leaves are 5-20 mm long, oblong to rounded, cupped, with 0-3 truncate-rounded lobes. Inflorescences are 5-20 cm long, with widely wedge shaped to widely obovate bracts, 15-20 mm wide, bright red to orange-red distally, and 0-3 lobes with truncate-rounded tips. Calyces, shaggy-hairy (some hairs may be glandular) and colored similarly to bracts, are 20-31 mm long with abaxial and adaxial clefts about 50% (8-12 mm) of calyx length and deeper than the lateral clefts of 10-15% (2-6 mm). Straight or slightly curved corollas are 30-45 mm long, with a 18-20 mm tube, and 15-25 mm exserted beak that is adaxially green or green-yellow and shaggy-puberulent; deep green lower lip is about 2 mm long.
Overview
- Species Common Name Mendocino coast paintbrush
- Species Scientific Name Castilleja mendocinensis
- Federal Listing Status Species of Concern
- State Listing Status Endangered