Ranunculus pedatifidus var. affinis |
|
---|---|
northern buttercup |
|
Roots | slender, 0.4-1.2 mm thick. |
Stems | erect, 6-33(-46) cm, pilose or glabrous, each with 1-7 flowers. |
Basal leaves | persistent, blades cordate or reniform in outline, pedately (5-)7(-9)-parted or -divided, 0.8-3.8 × 1-4.8 cm, segments undivided or again lobed or parted, base truncate to cordate, margins never toothed, apices of segments acute. |
Flowers | pedicels pilose; receptacle canescent; sepals 4-6 × 3-5 mm, abaxially pilose, hairs colorless; petals (0-)5-10, 7-10 × 5-9 mm; nectary scale glabrous. |
Heads of achenes | cylindric, 7-15 × 5-8 mm; achenes 1.8-2.4 × 1.6-1.8 mm, finely canescent or glabrous; beak lanceolate or subulate, curved, 0.5-1 mm. |
2n | = 32, 48. |
Ranunculus pedatifidus var. affinis |
|
Phenology | Flowering late spring–summer (Jun–Aug). |
Habitat | Dry rocky places on open arctic and alpine slopes and shores, moist grassland depressions, and open aspen woods |
Elevation | 0-3700 m (0-12100 ft) |
Distribution |
AK; AZ; CO; MT; UT; WY; AB; BC; MB; NF; NT; ON; QC; SK; YT; Greenland |
Discussion | Specimens of Ranunculus pedatifidus from southern Siberia, China, and central Asia, including the type specimen, are relatively small and slender, with all the main divisions of the leaf parted into narrow (1.5-2.5 mm wide) segments. American material, including the type of R. affinis, is more robust; the main divisions of the leaf are mostly undivided, and the ultimate segments are broader (2-4 mm). L. D. Benson (1954) referred all material from Asia and islands in the Bering Sea to var. pedatifidus. Other authors (P. N. Ovchinnikov 1970; E. Hultén 1968; A. I. Tolmatchew 1971), on the other hand, have limited typical R. pedatifidus to material from temperate Asia and have included material from northern Siberia in R. pedatifidus subsp. affinis. T. G. Tutin and J. R. Akeroyd (1993) included both R. pedatifidus and R. affinis in Flora Europaea, but, as noted below (under R. auricomus), Tutin and Akeroyd's descriptions do not match the American plants. Further comparisons of American and Eurasian material are needed. Glabrous-fruited forms have been called Ranunculus pedatifidus var. leiocarpus (Trautvetter) Fernald; the variety was first described from Asia. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 3. |
Parent taxa | |
Synonyms | R. affinis, R. eastwoodianus, R. pedatifidus subsp. affinis |
Name authority | (R. Brown) L. D. Benson: Amer. Midl. Naturalist 52: 355. (1954) |
Web links |