Viola renifolia |
Viola sheltonii |
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kidney-leaf white violet |
fan violet, Shelton's violet |
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Habit | Glabrous perennial from deep-seated rhizomes, the flowering stems 5-15 cm. tall. | |
Leaves | Leaf blades glaucous and somewhat purplish on the lower surface, 2-5 cm. long and broad, deeply cleft into 3 main lobes and dissected into ultimate linear segments; stipules small, membranous, comb-like. |
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Flowers | Flowers about 12 mm. long, yellow, the upper pair of petals brownish-backed, the lower three purplish-penciled, the lateral pair sparsely bearded; style head sparsely bearded. |
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Fruits | Fruit a 3-valved, puberulent capsule, ovary superior, placentation parietal. |
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Viola renifolia |
Viola sheltonii |
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Flowering time | June-August | April-June |
Habitat | Peatlands, riparian zones, swamps, seeps, and damp thickets. | Coniferous forest understory, often associated with moss-covered boulder fields with well-developed organic layer. |
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
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Occurring on both sides of the Cascades crest in Washington; Washington to California, east to Idaho; also in Colorado.
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Origin | Native | Native |
Conservation status | Not of concern | Not of concern |
Sibling taxa | ||
Web links |