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Chrysosplenium wrightii

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Chrysosplenium wrightii
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Saxifragales
Family: Saxifragaceae
Genus: Chrysosplenium
Species:
C. wrightii
Binomial name
Chrysosplenium wrightii
Franch. & Sav.
Synonyms[1]

Chrysosplenium alternifolium var. wrightii (Franch. & Sav.) Sutô

Chrysosplenium wrightii, or Wright's golden saxifrage, is a plant species native to northwestern North America and northeastern Asia. It grows on tundra and along stream banks at elevations up to 2300 m in British Columbia, Yukon, Alaska, the Kamchatka Peninsula in Russia, and in eastern Siberia. The plant was first described in 1878 as being from Japan. This was based on material collected along the "Ochotsk Sea," presumably either Sakhalin Island or one of the Kuril Islands, parts of Japan at the time but now in the Russian Federation.[2][3][4]

Two infraspecific taxa have been proposed, both names accepted by The Plant List:

  • Chrysosplenium wrightii var. beringanum (Rose) H.Hara, from St. Paul Island in Alaska[5][6]
  • Chrysosplenium wrightii subsp. saxatile (Khokhr.) Vorosch., from Russia[7][8]

Chrysosplenium wrightii is an herb reproducing by means of stolons running along the surface of the ground. Flowering stalks are up to 16 cm tall, bearing a cyme of up to 30 flowers. Flowers are yellow, purple, or orange, usually with purple spots. [2][9][10][11]

References

  1. ^ The Plant List
  2. ^ a b Flora of North America v 8 p 75.
  3. ^ Franchet, Adrien René & Savatier, Paul Amedée Ludovic. 1878. Enumeratio Plantarum in Japonia Sponte Crescentium 2(2): 356.
  4. ^ Suto, Tiharu. 1935. Journal of Japanese Botany 11(6): 396.
  5. ^ Hara, Hiroshi. Journal of the Faculty of Science: University of Tokyo, Section 3, Botany 7: 63. 1957.
  6. ^ Rose, Joseph Nelson. 1897. Botanical Gazette 23: 275.
  7. ^ Voroschilov, Vladimir Nikolaevich. 1991. Byulleten' Moskovskogo Obshchestva Ispytatelei Prirody, Otdel Biologicheskii n.s., 96: 133.
  8. ^ Khokhrjakov, Andrej Pavlovich. 1973. Byull. Glavn. Bot. Sada 88: 45.
  9. ^ Cody, W. J. 1996. Flora of Yukon Territory i–xvii, 1–669. NRC Research Press, Ottawa.
  10. ^ Welsh, S. L. 1974. Anderson's Flora of Alaska and Adjacent Parts of Canada i–xvi, 1–724. Brigham Young University Press, Provo.
  11. ^ Saxifrage Family in Denali National Park and Preserve