Heuchera americana var. hispida |
Heuchera americana |
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American alumroot, stiffly short-hair or hairy alum-root |
alumroot, American alum-root, common alum-root |
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Habit | Herbs acaulescent; caudex branched. | |||||||||
Flowering stems | leafy, 40–145 cm, glabrous or short stipitate-glandular. |
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Leaves | petiole glabrous or very short to long stipitate-glandular; blade (often variegated adaxially), broadly ovate to cordate, shallowly 5–9-lobed, 3.5–11 cm, base cordate to nearly truncate, lobes rounded or ovate, margins dentate, apex acute or obtuse, surfaces abaxially glabrous or short stipitate-glandular, adaxially glabrous or short stipitate-glandular. |
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Petioles | glabrous or very short stipitate-glandular. |
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Inflorescences | diffuse. |
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Flowers | hypanthium free 1.5–2 mm, campanulate; petals purple or pink, wider than sepals, margins fimbriate. |
hypanthium weakly bilaterally symmetric, free 0.6–2 mm, green, urceolate or campanulate, abruptly inflated distal to adnation to ovary, 3–7.2 mm, very short stipitate-glandular; sepals erect, green-tipped, equal, 1–2.4 mm, apex rounded; petals erect, greenish, white, pink, or purple, narrowly spatulate, unlobed, 0.9–4 mm, margins entire or finely dentate or fimbriate; stamens exserted 3–5 mm; styles exserted 2.6–6.4 mm, 4–7 mm, to 0.1 mm diam. |
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Capsules | ovoid, 4–10.5 mm, beaks divergent, not papillose. |
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Seeds | dark brown, ellipsoid, 0.6–0.9 mm. |
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2n | = 14. |
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Heuchera americana var. hispida |
Heuchera americana |
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Phenology | Flowering Apr–Jun. | |||||||||
Habitat | Rich woods often over base-saturated granite and gneiss, or in shallow rocky soil | |||||||||
Elevation | 200-1300 m (700-4300 ft) | |||||||||
Distribution |
MD; NC; VA; WV |
AL; AR; CT; DE; GA; IL; IN; KY; LA; MD; MI; MO; MS; NC; NJ; NY; OH; OK; PA; SC; TN; VA; WV; ON
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Discussion | Variety hispida occurs in the mountains and hills of western Maryland and Virginia, eastern West Virginia, and Surry County, North Carolina, where var. americana and Heuchera pubescens overlap; it is intermediate between var. americana and H. pubescens in floral characters. Variety hispida was confused with H. richardsonii for almost a century, beginning in 1849 when Gray reduced H. richardsonii to synonymy under H. hispida, after some seeds of H. richardsonii germinated among H. hispida plants in a labeled plot and later replaced them (C. O. Rosendahl et al. 1933). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Varieties 3 (3 in the flora). Heuchera americana is highly polymorphic and distributed over a large part of the eastern United States and Canada. Its variability is largely the result of its wide geographic range, the sporadic, semi-isolated distribution of populations, and interaction of differential adaptation and genetic drift made possible by its distribution pattern. Heuchera americana intergrades with both H. pubescens and H. richardsonii where they overlap; the intergrading form with H. pubescens is H. americana var. hispida, and with H. richardsonii it is H. americana var. hirsuticaulis. A breeding study between H. americana, H. pubescens, H. richardsonii, and other species demonstrated ease of artificial hybridization and fertility of offspring among H. americana, H. pubescens, and H. richardsonii (E. F. Wells 1979). Individuals of the three varieties do not form intermixed populations; populations tend to be geographically isolated from one another and to be relatively uniform, displaying somewhat narrow character variation within a population. The Cherokee Indians took Heuchera americana for dysentery and used the powdered root for malignant ulcers, bad sores, bowel complaints, piles, female problems, and sore mouth. The Chickasaw Indians used the root as an astringent and tonic (D. E. Moerman 1998). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 8, p. 95. | FNA vol. 8, p. 94. | ||||||||
Parent taxa | ||||||||||
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Subordinate taxa | ||||||||||
Synonyms | H. hispida | |||||||||
Name authority | (Pursh) E. F. Wells: Rhodora 81: 576. 1979 , | Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 1: 226. 1753 , | ||||||||
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