Mitella trifida |
Mitella |
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Pacific mitrewort, threepart miterwort |
and, Bishop's-cap, Latin mitra, miterwort, mitrelle, mitrewort, turban or headdress |
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Habit | Plants not stoloniferous. | Herbs, rhizomatous, stoloniferous or not; caudex not cormlike, usually with persistent leaf bases. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Flowering stems | 12–45 cm. |
ascending or erect, leafy or leafless, (2–)6–55(–65) cm, subglabrous or short to long stipitate-glandular. |
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Leaves | petiole 2.5–10 cm, subglabrous or short stipitate-glandular and long stipitate-glandular, longer hairs retrorse, white, tan, or brown; blade cordate, cordate-ovate, or reniform, usually shorter than or sometimes ± as long as wide, 1.2–6 × 2–8 cm, margins shallowly 5- or 7-lobed, crenate, uniformly ciliate, apex of terminal lobe rounded to obtuse, surfaces short stipitate-glandular and sparsely long stipitate-glandular; cauline leaves absent. |
in basal rosette and cauline; cauline leaves absent or 1–3, alternate or opposite; stipules present; petiole present, sometimes absent in cauline leaves, subglabrous or stipitate-glandular; blade ovate, cordate, or reniform, usually shallowly lobed, rarely unlobed, base cordate to truncate, margins crenate to dentate, apex acute, obtuse, or rounded, surfaces glabrous or subglabrous to variously stipitate-glandular; venation palmate. |
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Inflorescences | 1–3, closely 4–20-flowered, 1 flower per node, weakly secund or not secund, 12–45 cm, short stipitate-glandular and, sometimes, sparsely long stipitate-glandular proximally and distally. |
racemes, terminal from axillary buds in rosette, (scapose or leafy, anthesis usually acropetalous, basipetalous in M. caulescens, not secund to weakly secund or, rarely, strongly secund), 2–60-flowered, sometimes flowers solitary, bracteolate. |
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Pedicels | 0.3–1.5 mm, short stipitate-glandular. |
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Flowers | hypanthium campanulate, 1–1.5 × 1.5–2.5(–3) mm; sepals erect or spreading, whitish or purple tinged, oblong to triangular-ovate, 0.8–1.5 × 1–1.3 mm; petals white, sometimes pink or purple tinged, 3-lobed or, sometimes, unlobed, 1–3.5 mm, lobes lanceolate, lateral lobes ascending; stamens 5, opposite sepals; filaments white, 0.1–0.2 mm; anthers 0.1–0.2 × 0.1–0.2 mm; ovary ca. 1/2 inferior; styles divergent, flattened, 0.1–0.2 mm; stigmas unlobed. |
hypanthium adnate ± entire length of ovary, free from ovary to 1.5 mm, green, greenish white, or greenish yellow; sepals 5, white, greenish white, greenish, yellowish green, or greenish yellow, sometimes purple tinged; petals 5, greenish, greenish yellow, whitish green, or white, sometimes pink or purple tinged, (claw slender); nectariferous tissue proximal to stamens absent or obscure; stamens 5 or 10, opposite or alternate with sepals; filaments filiform; ovary nearly superior to nearly completely inferior, 1-locular, (2-lobed), carpels connate ± entire length, (equal); placentation parietal; styles 2; stigmas 2. |
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Capsules | obscurely 2-beaked, (dehiscent by adaxial sutures on free, lobed portion, dehiscent fruit sometimes appearing almost circumscissile). |
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Seeds | dark reddish brown, 0.7–1 mm, pitted. |
(4–40), reddish purple, dark reddish brown, or blackish, shiny, ellipsoid to ovoid, nearly smooth or pitted. |
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x | = 7. |
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2n | = 14. |
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Mitella trifida |
Mitella |
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Phenology | Flowering May–Jul. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Deep forest, moist wooded and open slopes | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 300-2000 m (1000-6600 ft) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
AK; CA; ID; MT; OR; WA; AB; BC |
North America; Asia (China, Japan, Korea, Mongolia, Russia) |
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Discussion | Mitella trifida varies in flower size, petal-blade lobing, and pubescence. Plants with relatively small flowers and petal blades entire or shallowly trifid and often purplish have been named var. violacea. Plants matching this description occur in British Columbia, Montana, and Washington and appear to represent a minor morphological variant that does not warrant recognition. The Gosiute Indians of Utah made an infusion from roots of Mitella trifida to treat colic (D. E. Moerman 1998). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Species ca. 20 (9 in the flora). Mitella is treated here in the broad sense; phylogenetic data indicate that it is polyphyletic (D. E. Soltis et al. 1990; Soltis and R. K. Kuzoff 1995). Historically, four or five genera have been recognized (including Mitella, Ozomelis Rafinesque, Pectiantia Rafinesque). Formal restructuring of generic boundaries is complicated by the presence of nearly a dozen Asian species (M. Wakabayashi 2001) and lack of a comprehensive understanding of the genus relative to the rest of Saxifragaceae. Mitella nuda and M. diphylla, both with ten stamens, form a clade that would comprise a narrowly defined Mitella. A second clade composed of M. diversifolia, M. stauropetala, M. trifida, and Conimitella williamsii would form a second, distinct genus. Molecular data suggest that M. breweri, M. caulescens, and M. pentandra also form a distinct clade and perhaps a third, distinct genus. The relationships of M. ovalis are less certain; some analyses suggest that it may be sister to the genus Tolmiea (Soltis and Kuzoff; Kuzoff and Soltis, unpubl.). Mitella diphylla exhibits splash-cup seed dispersal similar to Chrysosplenium (D. B. O. Savile 1953). Y. Okuyama et al. (2004) found that four Japanese species of Mitella are pollinated by fungus gnats, the pinnatifid petals of some species providing a resting platform for long- and spiny-legged flies. S. A. Spongberg (1972) reported syrphid flies and short-tongued bees as the most frequent visitors to M. diphylla. In the keys and descriptions, leaf blade length is measured from the apex of the blade along the midvein proximally along the petiole to a perpendicular line that touches the proximal extension of the blade. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 8, p. 114. | FNA vol. 8, p. 108. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | M. trifida var. violacea, Ozomelis anomola, Ozomelis micrantha, Ozomelis trifida | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | Graham: Edinburgh New Philos. J. 7: 185. 1829 , | Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 1: 406. (1753): Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 190. 1754 , | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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