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Sidalcea oregana ssp. spicata — spicate checkerbloom or bog mallow, [7] widespread in meadows or streamsides of the Sierra and Cascades in California, below 10,000 ft (3,000 m). [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 8 ] Sidalcea oregana ssp. valida — Kenwood Marsh checkerbloom, known only from two marshes in Sonoma County, California , a federal, state, and CNPS ...
Sidalcea neomexicana is a species of flowering plant in the mallow family known by the common names salt spring checkerbloom, [1] Rocky Mountain checker-mallow, and New Mexico checker. Description [ edit ]
Sidalcea nelsoniana is a rare species of flowering plant in the mallow family known by the common names Nelson's checkerbloom [1] and Nelson's checkermallow. It is native to the Willamette Valley and Coast Range of Oregon and the southwestern corner of Washington in the United States. It is threatened by the destruction and degradation of its ...
Sidalcea is a genus (approx. 25 species [1] [2]) of the botanical family Malvaceae.It contains several species of flowering plants known generally as checkerblooms or checkermallows, or prairie mallows in the United Kingdom.
Sidalcea hendersonii is a species of flowering plant in the mallow family known by the common name Henderson's checker-mallow. It is native to the Pacific Northwest region of North America . It is named for Oregon botanist Dr. Louis Forniquet Henderson (1853–1942), who was a professor at the University of Oregon.
Sidalcea oregana var. calva, the Wenatchee Mountains checker-mallow, is a very rare flowering plant variety that occurs only in five locations in the Wenatchee Mountains of Chelan County, Washington, United States. The plant has been placed on the Endangered species list. As of 2004, the population of the species was 11,000 individual plants. [2]
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Before sowing, the soil is prepared carefully by plowing and the seeds are broadcast or dribbled behind the plow in the wet season. Twenty-four hours before seeding, the seeds must be pre-soaked for ten seconds in hot water (around 93 °C [11]) to overcome dormancy. [12] If the small seeds are mixed with sand, it makes it easier to sow them. [7]