Thalictrum thalictroides

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Thalictrum thalictroides (syn. Anemonella thalictroides), the rue-anemone[1] or windflower,[2] is a herbaceous perennial plant native to woodland in eastern North America. It has white or pink flowers surrounded by a whorl of leaflets, and it blooms in spring.

Description

File:A flora of North America (Table 44) (7361638674).jpg
A flora of North America (Table 44) (7361638674)

Thalictrum thalictroides is a hairless plant growing from a cluster of tuberous roots, with upright stems Template:Cvt tall that end with flowers. The basal leaves have petioles (leaf stalks) Template:Cvt long and leaf blades that are two times ternately compound. The leaflets are widely rounded in shape and the ends are three lobed.[3]

It flowers in spring, with flowers are borne singly or in umbel-like inflorescences with 3 to 6 flowers.[3] The flowers have short stems that hold the fully opened flowers above the foliage. The involucral bracts have three leaflets like the leaves. The showy rounded flowers have 4-15 carpels surrounded by many yellow stamens in the middle, and a cup of 5 to 10 white to pinkish-lilac petal-like sepals.[4][5] The sepals are about Template:Cvt long and the filaments Template:Cvt long.[3]

In late spring, Template:Cvt long, Template:Linktext to Template:Linktext shaped fruits called achenes are released. The green achenes have 8 to 10 prominent veins and become dark brown when ripe.[3]

The Latin specific epithet thalictroides is in reference to the plant's leaves that look similar to meadow rue.[6]

Taxonomy

Originally described as Anemone thalictroides by Linnaeus in 1753, it was transferred to a new, monospecific genus, Anemonella, by Édouard Spach in 1839.[7] Although similar to plants in the genus Thalictrum, Sprach considered the diminutive size, umbelliform inflorescence, and tuberous roots of this species to be distinctive enough to designate a new genus. Bernard Boivin considered this distinction suspect, and transferred the species to the genus Thalictrum in 1957.[8] Molecular evidence supports the placement of the species within Thalictrum,[9] and this placement is accepted by several modern treatments,[3] although The Plant List retains it in Anemonella.[10]

Distribution and habitat

It typically inhabits banks and thickets in low-lying deciduous woodland, at Template:Cvt.[11] Distribution is mainly in the north eastern United States, and Ontario in Canada.

Similar species

The rue-anemone is often confused with the similar species, the false rue-anemone (Enemion biternatum). Both plants have white flowers that appear in early spring and grow in wooded areas. However, the false rue-anemone is more likely to be found in moist bottomlands and can form large colonies, while the rue-anemone grows singly on wooded slopes. Sometimes rue-anemone sepals are pale to dark pink, whereas false rue-anemone sepals are always white. The false rue-anemone holds its flowers in leaf axils, most often singly. In contrast, the flowers of a rue-anemone appear in a cluster above a whorl of leaf-like bracts, most often in groups of three to six. While false rue-anemones always have five sepals, rue-anemones can have five to ten sepals.[12] False rue-anemones have a small cluster of no more than six green carpels in the center of the flower, while rue-anemones sometimes have as many as fifteen. False rue-anemones usually have deep clefts in their leaves, while rue-anemones do not.[13]

References

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External links

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