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kidney-leaf white violet

sweet blue violet

Habit Low, fragrant, creeping, soft-hairy perennial with stolons that root at the nodes.
Leaves

Leaves tufted, cordate and rounded, petiolate, enlarging in summer.

Flowers

Flowers blue-violet or white, rarely lilac, pink or yellow;

sepals blunt.

Fruits

Fruit a 3-valved capsule, ovary superior, placentation parietal.

Viola renifolia

Viola odorata

Flowering time June-August March-September
Habitat Peatlands, riparian zones, swamps, seeps, and damp thickets. Sheltered, disturbed areas in somewhat moist soil.
Distribution
Occurring east of the Cascades crest in the north-central to northeastern counties in Washington; Alaska to northern Washington, east to the Rocky Mountains, northern Great Plains, Great Lakes region, and northeastern North America
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Occurring on both sides of the Cascades crest in Washington; British Columbia to California, east to Idaho; also in eastern North America.
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Origin Native Introduced from Europe
Conservation status Not of concern Not of concern
Sibling taxa
V. adunca, V. arvensis, V. canadensis, V. flettii, V. glabella, V. howellii, V. lanceolata, V. langsdorffii, V. macloskeyi, V. nephrophylla, V. nuttallii, V. odorata, V. orbiculata, V. palustris, V. pluviae, V. purpurea, V. riviniana, V. selkirkii, V. sempervirens, V. sheltonii, V. sororia, V. tricolor, V. trinervata, V. ×wittrockiana
V. adunca, V. arvensis, V. canadensis, V. flettii, V. glabella, V. howellii, V. lanceolata, V. langsdorffii, V. macloskeyi, V. nephrophylla, V. nuttallii, V. orbiculata, V. palustris, V. pluviae, V. purpurea, V. renifolia, V. riviniana, V. selkirkii, V. sempervirens, V. sheltonii, V. sororia, V. tricolor, V. trinervata, V. ×wittrockiana
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