Palouse Prairie Foundation plant database (under development)
Genus species:      Common name:     Match: Full Partial
Plant Species: Castilleja hispida, harsh paintbrush


Kingdom: Plantae
Phylum: Magnoliophyta -- flowering plants
Class: Magnoliopsida -- dicots
Family: Scrophulariaceae -- figwort
Genus: Castilleja
Species: hispida
Variety:
Common Name: harsh paintbrush
Species Code: CAHI
Origin: Native to open grasslands and open forest of western North America from British Columbia south to California and east to Montana.
Rare: no


Form: forb, perennial from a woody caudex, erect or ascending, 20-60 cm tall, finely villous to hispid throughout, stems seldom branched.
Duration: perennial
Longevity: long
Habitat Type: prairie
Wetland Indicator Status: not listed


Leaves: alternate, lanceolate or wider, villous to hispid; lower leaves reduced, entire; upper leaves with 1-2 pairs of narrow lobes.
Mature height: 10-20 inches
Flowers: inflorescence elongating in fruit, bracts red, yellow, or orange with 3-5 lobes; calyx 15-30 mm, deeply lobed, the lobes again divided; corolla greenish, 2 lipped, 20-40 mm long.
Flower color: bracts are red, yellow, or orange, corolla is actually green
Bloom: April, May, June, July
Bloom starts on: mid April
Bloom ends on: bracts will retain some color until late July
Fruit: capsule
Vegetation type:
Characteristics:
Members of Castilleja are hemiparasites. They are capable of growing without a host but thrive when able to parasitize the roots of another plant. This probably also extends their ecological amplitude. They seem to have a wide range of host species, some more suitable than others.
Some British Columbia plants parasitize Symphoricarpos albus and Holodiscus discolor (Guppy 1997).
Highly variable species (Hitchcock et al 1969).
C. angustifolia var. hispida in St. John 1963, C. angustifolia in Piper & Beattie 1914.
350,000 seeds/lb (USDA NRCS PLANTS Database 2009).
n=24. Plants of the interior are tetraploid while diploids are found on the coast of Oregon (Heckard & Chuang 1977).
Flowers are perfect and relatively inconspicuous. The brightly colored bracts below the flower are showy and persistent.
Fruit is a capsule.
Non-mycorrhizal (Lesica & Antibus 1986).
Comments:


Sun requirement: full
Soil moisture: xeric to mesic
Precipitation: 10-19 inches (USDA NRCS PLANTS Database 2009).
Fire:
Hazards:


Sowing time: fall
Transplant time: spring
Stratification: extended cold moist
Seed yield: medium
Seed harvest: late June
Seed first harvest:
Seed cleaning: medium difficulty
Planting duration: medium
Seed insect problem: none noted
Seed shatter: medium
Seed size: small
Seed harvest date: late June
Seed comments: root parasite; needs host plant


Herbaria: Specimen data and digital resources from The Consortium of Pacific Northwest Herbaria
Key words: upland, parasitic
Alternate Genus:
Alternate Species: angustifolia
Alternate Variety:


Propagation:
Maguire and Overland (1959) reported no germination for a Castilleja sp. under any treatment applied. They did not stratify the seed.
C. hispida needs 60-90 days cold moist stratification, then grow at 21-25 oC during the day and 10-16 oC at night. Pair with a host at 4-6 weeks. Host should be low growing and non-aggressive (Luna 2005).
The coastal C. levisecta can be propagated vegetatively in the fall from crown shoots. Other Castilleja species also produce similar shoots (Guppy 2001).
Most species will germinate after 1-4 months of cold moist stratification (Guppy 1997).
Reproduces sexually by seed.


Notes:
The local native paintbrushes in general are tricky to germinate on a consistent basis and they need to be planted with a host, since they are parasitic on the roots of other plants. Seeds generally need 60-90 days of stratification. The paintbrushes should be great landscape plants, they hold their color for a long time (Skinner et al 2005).


References:
Adler, Lynn S. 2002. Host Effects on Herbivory and Pollination in a Hemiparasitic Plant. Ecology 83:2700-2710.

Adler, Lynn S. 2003. Host Species Affects Herbivory, Pollination, and Reproduction in Experiments with Parasitic Castilleja. Ecology 84:2083-2091.

Borland, Jim. 1994. Growing Indian Paintbrush. American Nurseryman 179(6):59-53. Mar. 15 1994.

Davis, Ray J. 1952. Flora of Idaho. Wm. C. Brown, Dubuque, Iowa. 827 pp.

Guppy, Art. 1997. Cultivation of Castilleja. BEN, Botanical Electronic News No 156. Online at http://www.ou.edu/cas/botany-micro/ben/ben156.html

Guppy, Art. 2001. Vegetative Propagation of Castilleja. BEN, Botanical Electronic News No 269. Online at http://www.ou.edu/cas/botany-micro/ben/ben269.html

Heckard, L.R. 1962. Root Parasitism in Castilleja. Botanical Gazette 124: 21-29.

Heckard, Lawrence R. and Tsani-Iang Chuano. 1977. Chromosome Numbers, Polyploidy, and Hybridization in Castilleja (Scrophulariaceae) of the Great Basin and Rocky Mountains. Brittonia 29: 159-172.

Hitchcock, C. Leo, Arthur Cronquist, Marion Ownbey, and J.W. Thompson. 1969. Vascular Plants of the Pacific Northwest. University of Washington Press. Seattle, WA. 5 vol.

Kaye, T.N. 2001. Restoration Research for Golden Paintbrush (Castilleja levisecta), a Threatened Species. Institute for Applied Ecology, Corvallis, Oregon. Online at http://www.appliedeco.org/Reports/Cale_research.PDF

Lesica, P. and R.K. Antibus. 1986. Mycorrhizal Status of Hemiparasitic Vascular Plants in Montana, U.S.A. Transactions of the British Mycological Society 86:341-343.

Luna, Tara. 2005. Propagation Protocol for Indian Paintbrush, Castilleja species. Native Plants Journal 6(1):62-68.

Maguire, James D. and Alvin Overland. 1959. Laboratory Germination of Seeds of Weedy and Native Plants. Washington State Agricultural Experiment Station Circular 349, Pullman, WA. 15 p.

Marvier, Michelle A., and David L. Smith. 1997. Conservation Implications of Host Use for Rare Parasitic Plants. Conservation Biology 11:839-848.

Matthies, Diethart. 1997. Parasite-host Interactions in Castilleja and Orthocarpus. Canadian Journal of Botany 75:1252-1260.

Piper, C.V., and R.K. Beattie. 1914. The Flora of Southeastern Washington and Adjacent Idaho. Lancaster, PA: Press of the New Era Printing Company. 296 pp.

St. John, Harold. 1963. Flora of Southeastern Washington and of Adjacent Idaho. 3rd edition. Outdoor Pictures. Escondido, CA.

Skinner, David M., Paul Warnick, Bill French, and Mary Fauci. 2005. Characteristics and Uses of Native Palouse Forbs in Landscaping. USDA NRCS Pullman Plant Materials Center and Palouse Prairie Foundation. Online at http://www.wsu.edu/pmc_nrcs/Docs/Forbs_for_Landscaping.pdf

USDA NRCS. 2009. The PLANTS Database (http://plants.usda.gov, 13 July 2009). National Plant Data Center, Baton Rouge, LA 70874-4490 USA.



Links:
Plant Profile from the USDA PLANTS Database
Species information from the University of Washington Herbarium