Enemion biternatum

False rue-anemone
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Plantae
Clade:Angiosperms
Clade:Eudicots
Order:Ranunculales
Family:Ranunculaceae
Genus:Enemion
Species: E. biternatum
Binomial name
Enemion biternatum
Synonyms
  • Isopyrum biternatum (Rafinesque) Torrey & A. Gray

Enemion biternatum (also Isopyrum biternatum), commonly known as the false rue-anemone, is a spring ephemeral native to moist deciduous woodland in the eastern United States and extreme southern Ontario.[1]

Description

The plant sends up evergreen basal leaves in the fall,[2] flower stems in the spring, and goes dormant in late spring and early summer after the seed ripens.

Leaves are twice or thrice compound with groups of three leaflets. Leaflets are smooth-edged, irregularly and deeply lobed twice or thrice, often with one to three secondary shallow lobes. Basal leaves are held on long stalks, and there are leaves arranged alternately up the flowering stems, with shorter stalks. All stems are reddish and hairless.[3]

The root system is weakly rhizomatous,[1] and occasionally produces small tubers. Plants spread over time to form thick colonies.[4]

The flowering stems are 4 to 16 inches (10 to 40 cm) high.[3] Flowers are produced singly or in leafy racemes of two to four flowers,[5] which means that there are leaves arranged alternately up the stems and flowers are in stems that come out of leaf axils. On either side of the leaf axils are two rounded stipules.[5]

A closeup of a flower

The flowers have five white petal-like sepals that are each 5.5–13.5 mm (316916 in) long and 3.5–8.5 mm (18516 in) wide,[1] 25-50 stamens with yellow pollen on the anthers, and three to six green carpels.[6] If a carpel is fertilized, it develops into a beaked pod (follicle). When ripe, the pod splits open on one side to release several reddish-brown seeds.[5]

Ecology

The flowers produce pollen, but no nectar. Small insects such as sweat bees (Lasioglossum and Halictus), mining bees (Andrena), honeybees (Apis mellifera), and hoverflies visit the flowers to collect or feed on pollen. Some bees likely visit searching in vain for nectar.[4]

Status

Enemion biternatum is listed as a schedule 1 threatened species in Canada, where only 6 populations were reported in southwestern Ontario.[7]

Isopyrum biternatum is listed as an endangered species in Florida, where it has only been reported in Jackson and Washington counties.[8]

Similar species

The false rue-anemone is often confused with the similar species, the rue-anemone (Thalictrum thalictroides). The false rue-anemone holds its flowers in leaf axils, most often singly. The flowers of a rue-anemone appear in a cluster above a whorl of leaf-like bracts, most often in groups of 3-6. The rue-anemone has a greater variation in flower size, and while false rue-anemones always have five sepals, rue-anemones most often have more than five. Sometimes rue-anemone sepals are pale to dark pink, whereas false rue-anemone sepals are always white. 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.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Ford, Bruce A. (1997). "Enemion biternatum". In Flora of North America Editorial Committee. Flora of North America North of Mexico (FNA). 3. New York and Oxford. Retrieved 28 April 2016 via eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, MO & Harvard University Herbaria, Cambridge, MA.
  2. A. A. Reznicek; E. G. Voss; B. S. Walters (February 2011). "Enemion biternatum". Michigan Flora Online. University of Michigan. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
  3. 1 2 Chayka, Katy; Dziuk, Peter (2016). "Enemion biternatum (False Rue Anemone)". Minnesota Wildflowers.
  4. 1 2 Hilty, John (2016). "False Rue Anemone (Enemion biternatum)". Illinois Wildflowers.
  5. 1 2 3 Bebeau, G. D. (2013). "False Rue-anemone, Enemion biternatum Raf". Plants of the Eloise Butler Wildflower Garden.
  6. Torrey, John; Gray, Asa (1838). A Flora of North America, Volume 1. New York: Wiley & Putnam. p. 660.
  7. "Species Profile (False Rue-anemone)". Species at Risk Public Registry. Government of Canada. 2005.
  8. Coile, Nancy C.; Garland, Mark A. (2003). Notes on Florida’s Endangered and Threatened Plants. Botany Contribution No. 38 (PDF) (4th ed.). Gainesville: Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Division of Plant Industry. p. 29.
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