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alpine chickweed, alpine mouse-ear chickweed, céraiste alpin

Photo is of parent taxon

céraiste laineux

Habit Plants perennial, mat-forming, rhizomatous. Plants perennial, tufted or mat-forming, taprooted or rhizomatous.
Stems

prostrate or ascending, tomentose (very rarely subglabrous), hairs white, translucent, long, soft, flexuous, some usually also short and glandular; flowering shoots ascending, 5–20 cm; small axillary tufts of leaves usually absent; nonflowering shoots ± prostrate, to 6 cm.

Flowering shoots

erect or decumbent, 6–10 cm.

Leaves

marcescent or not, sessile;

blade obovate or ovate to elliptic-oblanceolate, elliptic, or lanceolate, usually 10–18 × 5–7 mm, apex obtuse, pubescence as on stems.

flowering shoots with blade lance-elliptic to ovate or obovate, broad, apex obtuse, with tuft of silvery, ± tangled, long, woolly hairs, pubescent;

those at base and on sterile shoots often marcescent, blade obovate, apex obtuse, densely pubescent.

Inflorescences

open, (1–)2–4-flowered cymes;

bracts lanceolate, acute, margins narrow, scarious, glandular-pubescent.

usually 1-flowered, sometimes with simple cyme.

Pedicels

straight but often becoming angled at base and curved at apex, slender, 5–30 mm, often elongating to 3 or 4 times as long as sepals, pubescence usually dense, hairs both long, flexuous, multicellular, and short, glandular, viscid.

straight, usually short, 5–20 mm.

Flowers

sepals green, often violet tipped, narrowly elliptic-lanceolate, 7.5–10 mm, margins ± narrow, apex acute to obtuse, densely pubescent, hairs both long, eglandular and short, glandular;

petals 1–2 times as long as sepals, apex shallowly 2-fid;

stamens 10;

styles 5.

Capsules

cylindric, slightly curved, 12–16 mm, to 2 times as long as sepals;

teeth 10, erect, margins convolute.

Seeds

dark brown, 1–1.4 mm diam., acutely tuberculate;

testa not inflated.

Petals

2 times as long as sepals.

2n

= 72, 108.

= 72, 104 ± 2, 108.

Cerastium alpinum

Cerastium alpinum subsp. lanatum

Phenology Flowering spring.
Habitat Northern arctic tundra
Elevation 0-400 m (0-1300 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
MB; NT; NU; ON; QC; SK; Canada; Greenland; Europe (Iceland, Scandinavia)
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
NL; NT; NU; ON; QC; Greenland; Europe (Iceland, Russia, Scandinavia, mountains)
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Subspecies 3+ (2 in the flora).

The Cerastium alpinum group of species is a difficult complex of intergrading taxa. E. Hultén (1956) considered this complex to be the result of worldwide introgression among the various taxa. Members of this group in North America include C. aleuticum, C. alpinum, C. arcticum, C. beeringianum, C. bialynickii, C. fischerianum, C. regelii, and C. terrae-novae. Cerastium alpinum itself is distinguished from all other members of the complex by its lanate pubescence, which consists of long, silvery, translucent, multicellular, flexuous, often tangled hairs; the more or less square base of the calyx; the convex margins of the sepals; and, in well-grown plants, the long, slender, divaricate pedicels.

In western North America, Cerastium alpinum is replaced by C. beeringianum, which has long, straight, strigose, somewhat fuscous hairs, usually smaller flowers, and smaller seeds. The two species intergrade in eastern Canada; intermediate specimens were named C. alpinum var. strigosum Hultén.

Cerastium arcticum differs from C. alpinum, with which it often grows, in its straight, somewhat fuscous hairs; calyx which is round at the base; long, narrowly lanceolate sepals; large, straight, broad capsules; and broad, obtuse cauline leaves. Like C. alpinum, it usually has large flowers with the petals much longer than the sepals.

Many infraspecific taxa have been named in Cerastium alpinum but in North America it is much less variable than elsewhere. Two forms can be recognized at either the varietal or subspecific level.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Key
1. Leaf blades on flowering shoots narrowly elliptic or lance-elliptic to oblanceolate, apex ± acute, pubescence evenly distributed, not very dense; inflorescences usually (1-)2-4-flowered
subsp. alpinum
1. Leaf blades on flowering shoots lance-elliptic to ovate or obovate, apex obtuse, pubescence a tuft of longer, silvery, ± tangled hairs at apex; inflorescences usually 1-flowered
subsp. lanatum
Source FNA vol. 5, p. 77. FNA vol. 5, p. 78.
Parent taxa Caryophyllaceae > subfam. Alsinoideae > Cerastium Caryophyllaceae > subfam. Alsinoideae > Cerastium > Cerastium alpinum
Sibling taxa
C. aleuticum, C. arcticum, C. arvense, C. axillare, C. beeringianum, C. bialynickii, C. brachypetalum, C. brachypodum, C. cerastoides, C. dichotomum, C. diffusum, C. dubium, C. fastigiatum, C. fischerianum, C. fontanum, C. glomeratum, C. maximum, C. nutans, C. pumilum, C. regelii, C. semidecandrum, C. terrae-novae, C. texanum, C. tomentosum, C. velutinum, C. viride
C. alpinum subsp. alpinum
Subordinate taxa
C. alpinum subsp. alpinum, C. alpinum subsp. lanatum
Synonyms C. lanatum, C. alpinum var. lanatum, C. alpinum subsp. squalidum, C. squalidum
Name authority Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 1: 438. (1753) (Lamarck) Cesati: in C. Cattaneo, Not. Nat. Civ. Lombardia, 290. (1844)
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