The green links below add additional plants to the comparison table. Blue links lead to other Web sites.
enable glossary links

Astoria violet, Canary violet, marsh violet, upland yellow violet, yellow montane violet

Photo is of parent taxon

upland yellow violet

Habit Plants perennial, caulescent, not stoloniferous, 5.5–36.5 cm. Plants (11–)14–36.5 cm.
Stems

1–3(–5), prostrate, decumbent, or erect, leafy proximally and distally, glabrous or puberulent, on caudex from usually vertical, subligneous rhizome.

Leaves

basal and cauline;

basal: 1–5;

stipules adnate to proximal 1/3 of petiole, forming 2 narrow, linear-lanceolate wings, margins entire, apex of each wing free, acute;

petiole 2.6–19.2 cm, glabrous or densely puberulent;

blade usually elliptic to ovate, sometimes oblong-lanceolate to ± orbiculate, 1.7–14(–17) × 0.8–5.3(–6.7) cm, base attenuate to ± truncate or subcordate, often oblique, margins usually crenate, serrulate, or serrate, sometimes entire, ciliate or eciliate, apex acute to obtuse, surfaces glabrous or densely puberulent;

cauline similar to basal except: stipules lanceolate to ovate, margins entire or toothed, with or without gland-tipped projections, apex acute to acuminate;

petiole 1.3–16.2 cm, glabrous or puberulent;

blade 2.3–11(–14.8) × 1.1–3.6(–5.5) cm, length 1.1–6.5 times width.

basal: petiole (5–)7.5–19 cm;

blade usually elliptic to ovate, sometimes oblong-lanceolate, (3.4–)5.3–17 × 1.1–6.7 cm, length 1.8–6.5 times width, base attenuate, margins crenate, serrate, or serrulate;

cauline similar to basal except: petiole 1.3–16.2 cm;

blade 3–11(–14.8) × 1.4–3.6(–5.5) cm.

Peduncles

4.4–27 cm, glabrous or puberulent.

5.9–27 cm.

Flowers

sepals lanceolate, margins eciliate, auricles 1–2 mm;

petals deep lemon-yellow adaxially, upper 2, and sometimes lateral 2, brownish purple abaxially, lower 3 brownish purple-veined, lateral 2 sparsely bearded, lowest 11–19 mm, spur yellow or pale green, gibbous, 0.5–3 mm;

style head bearded; cleistogamous flowers axillary.

Capsules

ellipsoid to oblong, 6–14 mm, glabrous or finely puberulent.

6–14 mm.

Seeds

medium to dark brown or red-brown, 2–3 mm, elaiosome completely covering funiculus.

medium brown.

Lowest

petal 11–15(–19) mm.

2n

= 36, 48.

= 36, 48.

Viola praemorsa

Viola praemorsa var. flavovirens

Phenology Flowering Apr–Jun.
Habitat Vernally moist slopes and banks, grassy areas, rocky stream banks
Elevation 500–1600 m (1600–5200 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
CA; CO; ID; MT; NV; OR; UT; WA; WY; AB; BC
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
ID; MT; UT; WA; WY
Discussion

Varieties 3 (3 in the flora).

Viola praemorsa is a complex group that appears to be evolving. Sympatric populations and the similarity of their flowers provide opportunities for hybridization and introgression (D. M. Fabijan et al. 1987). Some botanists have suggested that all taxa in the V. nuttallii complex, which includes V. bakeri, V. nuttallii, V. praemorsa, V. tomentosa, and V. vallicola, should be treated as varieties of V. nuttallii, as C. L. Hitchcock et al. (1955–1969, vol. 3) did, on the basis that these taxa are more or less sympatric in range, intergrade with one another, and possess no distinctive gross morphological features by which they can be consistently recognized. S. L. Welsh et al. (1987) treated V. praemorsa and V. linguaefolia Nuttall as synonymous with V. nuttallii, stating that V. nuttallii (and related taxa) are acaulescent to short-caulescent. Although some plants have short internodes, all plants in the V. nuttallii complex are caulescent. We acknowledge the complexity and taxonomic difficulties inherent in the V. nuttallii complex; patterns of morphology, cytology, and leaf flavonoid chemistry provide a basis for recognizing infrataxa. Fabijan et al. conducted the most extensive study of the complex to date; their treatment of V. praemorsa is followed here.

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

Populations of var. flavovirens in Idaho County, Idaho, have cauline leaves longer (14.8 versus 8 cm) and wider (5.5 versus 3.1 cm) than the maximum lengths and widths cited by D. M. Fabijan et al. (1987).

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

Key
1. Basal and cauline leaf blade bases ± truncate to subcordate; basal leaf blades 1.7–5.9(–7.3) cm, length 1.1–3 times width; plants 5.5–21.5 cm.
var. praemorsa
1. Basal and cauline leaf blade bases attenuate; basal leaf blades 2.7–17 cm, length 1.7–6.5 times width; plants 10.5–36.5 cm
→ 2
2. Basal leaf blades (3.4–)5.3–17 cm, usually ovate to elliptic, sometimes oblong-lanceolate, length 1.8–6.5 times width; peduncles 5.9–27 cm.
var. flavovirens
2. Basal leaf blades 2.7–8.5 cm, usually ovate to elliptic, sometimes oblong-lanceolate, length 1.7–3.4 times width; peduncles 5–15 cm.
var. linguifolia
Source FNA vol. 6, p. 145. FNA vol. 6, p. 147.
Parent taxa Violaceae > Viola Violaceae > Viola > Viola praemorsa
Sibling taxa
V. adunca, V. affinis, V. arvensis, V. bakeri, V. beckwithii, V. bicolor, V. biflora, V. blanda, V. brittoniana, V. canadensis, V. canina, V. charlestonensis, V. clauseniana, V. cucullata, V. cuneata, V. douglasii, V. egglestonii, V. epipsila, V. flettii, V. frank-smithii, V. glabella, V. guadalupensis, V. hallii, V. hastata, V. hirsutula, V. howellii, V. japonica, V. labradorica, V. lanceolata, V. langsdorffii, V. lithion, V. lobata, V. macloskeyi, V. missouriensis, V. nephrophylla, V. novae-angliae, V. nuttallii, V. ocellata, V. odorata, V. orbiculata, V. palmata, V. palustris, V. pedata, V. pedatifida, V. pedunculata, V. pinetorum, V. primulifolia, V. prionantha, V. pubescens, V. purpurea, V. quercetorum, V. renifolia, V. riviniana, V. rostrata, V. rotundifolia, V. sagittata, V. selkirkii, V. sempervirens, V. septemloba, V. sheltonii, V. sororia, V. striata, V. subsinuata, V. tomentosa, V. tricolor, V. trinervata, V. tripartita, V. umbraticola, V. utahensis, V. vallicola, V. villosa, V. walteri
V. praemorsa var. linguifolia, V. praemorsa var. praemorsa
Subordinate taxa
V. praemorsa var. flavovirens, V. praemorsa var. linguifolia, V. praemorsa var. praemorsa
Synonyms V. nuttallii subsp. praemorsa, V. nuttallii var. praemorsa V. flavovirens, V. praemorsa subsp. flavovirens
Name authority Douglas ex Lindley: Edwards’s Bot. Reg. 15: plate 1254. (1829) (Pollard) R. J. Little: J. Bot. Res. Inst. Texas 4: 225. (2010)
Web links