Iniciar Sesión Nueva Cuenta Mapa del Sitio
  • Inicio
  • Proyectos de Flora
    • Baja California
    • Baja California Sur
    • Chihuahua
    • Durango
    • Sinaloa
    • Sonora
    • Proyecto MABA
  • Herramientas de Búsqueda
    • Colecciones
    • Mapa
    • Browse Images
    • Listados Dinámicos
    • Claves dinámicas
  • Herbarios Participantes
    • BCMEX (Baja California)
    • HCIAD (Sinaloa)
    • HCIB (Baja California Sur)
    • CIIDIR (Durango)
    • USON (Sonora)
Aloysia gratissima (Gillies & Hook.) Troncoso  
Familia: Verbenaceae
canelilla, more...orégano de johnson, hierba dulce, vara dulce, jazmincillo, jazminillo, huele de noche (en: Whitebrush, aloysia, white brush, bee brush)
[Aloysia gratissima f. macrophylla Moldenke, moreAloysia ligustrina of authors, Aloysia lycioides var. paraguariensis Moldenke, Lippia ligustrina of authors, Lippia ligustrina var. schulzii]
Aloysia gratissima image
Patrick Alexander
  • SW Field Guide
  • Recursos
Kearney and Peebles 1969, Shreve and Wiggins 1964, Allred and Ivey 2012
Common Name: whitebrush Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Shrub General: Slender fragrant shrub 2-3 m tall; bark is pale and wood is yellow; stems slender, gray, 4-angled, canescent. Leaves: Opposite, often with a fascicle of smaller leaves in the axils, on short petioles 1-3 mm long; blades oblong to elliptic, 5-25 mm long, bases attenuate into the petioles, margins entire to denticulate, surfaces scabrous-strigose and dull-green above, strigillose beneath. Flowers: Small, whitish or bluish, and vanilla-scented, in open, leafy panicles composed of many slender, elongate spikes or spike-like racemes; corollas bilabiate and somewhat irregular; calyces 3 mm long, tubular-campanulate, deeply 4-lobed, and conspicuously villous. Fruits: Schizocarp of 2-4 nutlets Ecology: Found in rocky or gravelly hills, sandy or limestone soils, and arroyos, around 3,000-4,000 ft (1219 m); flowers April-September. Distribution: s AZ to w TX; south through MEX to S. Amer. Notes: This vanilla-scented shrub is uncommon in the US, hitting its northern limit in the extreme southern part of Arizona near the Ruby Road; in Dona Ana County on the southern border of New Mexico; and neighboring Texas. It is similar to the more common Aloysia wrightii with its slender graceful stems, small oval leaves, and many racemes of small flowers with hairy calyces; however, A. wrightii has gray-green leaves which are distinctly white-tomentose underneath and have regularly and obviously toothed margins. A. gratissima has olive-green leaves which can be a bit hairy underneath but are not densely white-tomentose, with mostly smooth margins which can have small, irregular teeth. Ethnobotany: Used topically to treat wounds in South America. Etymology: Aloysia is named in honor of Maria Louisa Teresa, 1751-1819, Princess of Parma and wife of King Carlos IV of Spain; gratissima means very pleasing. Synonyms: Aloysia lycioides, Verbena gratissima, Lippia lycioides Editor: LCrumbacher2012, AHazelton 2015
Aloysia gratissima
Abrir Mapa Interactivo
Aloysia gratissima image
Patrick Alexander
Aloysia gratissima image
Patrick Alexander
Aloysia gratissima image
Michael Chamberland
Aloysia gratissima image
Douglas Koppinger
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Douglas Koppinger
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Melissa Valenzuela-Y.
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Guillermo Molina-P.
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Aloysia gratissima image
Hacer Clic para Desplegar
100 Imágenes Iniciales
- - - - -
Ver Todas las Imágenes
Este sitio es resultado de la colaboración entre los herbarios del noroeste de México y El Consorcio de SEINet. Está administrado por el Herbario de la Universidad de Sonora