Dicentra nevadensis |
Dicentra |
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Sierra bleeding heart, Tulare County bleeding heart |
bleeding-heart, dicentre |
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Habit | Plants perennial, scapose, variably glaucous, from elongate, stout rhizomes. | Herbs, annual or perennial, scapose or caulescent, from taproots, bulblets, tubers, or rhizomes. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | when present erect, simple or branching, hollow at maturity. |
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Leaves | (10-)15-25(-30) × (5-)8-12(-18) cm; blade with 3-4 orders of leaflets and lobes; penultimate lobes oblong, distal usually coarsely 3-toothed at apex, (3-)6-12(-20) × 1.5-4 mm. |
basal or cauline, compound; blade with 2-4 orders of leaflets and lobes, margins entire, crenate, or serrate; surfaces glabrous, sometimes glaucous. |
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Inflorescences | paniculate, 2-20-flowered, shorter than to exceeding leaves; bracts linear-lanceolate, 4-7(-10) × 1-1.5 mm, apex acuminate. |
axillary, extra-axillary, leaf-opposed, or terminal, unifloral or else multifloral and thyrsoid, paniculate, racemose, or corymbose. |
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Flowers | pendent; sepals ovate to acuminate-lanceolate, (3-)6-7(-12) × 1-3 mm; petals white to pale yellow or rose-tinted; outer petals 12-18 × 2-4 mm, reflexed portion 3-5 mm; inner petals 11-17 mm, blade 2.5-3.5 mm, claw linear-elliptic to linear-lanceolate, 6-9 × 1-2 mm, crest 1-2 mm diam., exceeding apex by 1-2 mm; filaments of each bundle connate from base to shortly below anthers except for a 2-6 mm portion of median filament just above base, distinct portion of median filament forming angular loop that projects into base of outer petal; nectariferous tissue borne along loop; style 4-7 mm; stigma rhomboid, 2-horned. |
bilaterally symmetric about each of 2 perpendicular planes; sepals caducous; corolla cordate to oblong in outline; petals coherent or connate only basally, not spongy; outer petals both swollen or spurred basally, usually keeled apically; inner petals with blade fiddle-, spoon-, or arrowhead-shaped, claw linear-oblong to oblanceolate; stamens with nectariferous tissue borne on median filament in each bundle and sometimes forming spur or loop that projects into swollen base of adjacent outer petal; ovary broadly ovoid or obovoid to narrowly cylindric; stigma persistent, with 2 lobes or apical horns, sometimes also with 2 lateral papillae. |
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Capsules | oblong, (10-)13-16(-20) × 4-5 mm. |
indehiscent or dehiscent and 2-valved. |
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Seeds | reniform, ca. 2 mm diam., finely reticulate, elaiosome present. |
few-many, elaiosome usually present. |
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x | = 8. |
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2n | = 16. |
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Dicentra nevadensis |
Dicentra |
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Phenology | Flowering early–late summer. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | High meadows, in gravelly soils | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 2100-3300 m (6900-10800 ft) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
Calif (Tulare County) |
Temperate North America and eastern Asia |
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Discussion | Of conservation concern. In Dicentra nevadensis the median filament of each stamen bundle bends out in an angular loop between the base and midpoint; in D. formosa the median filaments lack such loops. Also, the flowers of D. nevadensis are smaller and narrower than those of D. formosa. Pressed flowers of D. nevadensis often turn black, suggesting possible chemical differences, other than in alkaloids, from D. formosa. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Species 20 (9 in the flora). About 35 isoquinoline alkaloids have been isolated from Fumariaceae, and such compounds are present in the tissues of all species. Some of these alkaloids have been used medicinally, mostly in the past. The drug complex corydalis, which contains several alkaloids extracted from the bulblets of Dicentra canadensis and D. cucullaria, has been used as a healing agent in chronic skin diseases, as a tonic and diuretic, and in the treatment of syphilis. The alkaloid bulbocapnine, obtained from all parts of D. canadensis, has been used in the treatment of Ménière's disease and muscular tremors, and as a pre-anaesthetic. Cattle find D. cucullaria and D. canadensis distasteful and usually do not ingest the plants unless suitable forage is unavailable; when they do, however, the toxic alkaloid cucullarine brings about local anaesthesia, narcosis, convulsions, and death. A decoction from the rhizome of D. formosa has been used in the Pacific Northwest to expel intestinal worms (D. E. Moerman 1986). Dicentra spectabilis (Linnaeus) Lemaire is cultivated through much of the flora area. It was introduced in Europe only in the middle of the 19th century, but it has been cultivated for centuries in temperate China and Japan, where it is now so widespread that the limits of its natural distribution are obscure. It does not appear to be truly naturalized in North America, but it may be encountered as a transitory garden relict or escape. It differs from D. ochroleuca and D. chrysantha in having rose-purple to pink or sometimes white outer petals, pendent flowers, and reticulate seeds with elaiosomes. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 3. | FNA vol. 3. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | D. formosa subsp. nevadensis | Bikukulla, Bikukulla | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | Eastwood: Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci., ser. 4, 20: 143. (1931) | Bernhardi: Linnaea 8: 457, 468. 1833, name conserved | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Web links |