Agalinis gattingeri, the roundstem false foxglove,[3] is an annual hemiparasitic forb[4] measuring between 10.5 and 60.5 cm in height.
It has pinkish, tubular flowers, blooming through late summer and fall, that are 7– 30 mm in length with numerous red spots and two yellow lines on the lower lip.
[5] In Minnesota it grows in hillside prairies in rocky and sandy soils that are dry, sunny and south facing.
[2] Populations are declining across much of the plant's range, especially in its northern portion, where Agalinis gattingeri is listed as threatened or endangered in many of the states and provinces in which it occurs.
[4] Prior to 2007, it was unknown in Manitoba, where there is a single known population,[7] and in Ontario it is restricted to nine sites in the southern portion of the province.