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Anemone
Family: Ranunculaceae
Anemone image
Max Licher
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Bryan E. Dutton, Carl S. Keener & Bruce A. Ford in Flora of North America (vol. 3)
Herbs , perennial, from rhizomes, caudices, or tubers. Leaves basal, simple or compound, petiolate. Leaf blade lobed or parted or undivided, reniform to obtriangular or lanceolate, margins entire or variously toothed. Inflorescences terminal, 2-9-flowered cymes or umbels, or flowers solitary, to 60 cm; involucres present, often with primary involucres subtending inflorescences, and secondary and tertiary involucres subtending inflorescence branches or single flowers (primary, secondary, and tertiary involucres appearing to be in tiers), involucral bracts 2-7(-9), leaflike or sepaloid, distant from or close to flowers. Flowers bisexual, radially symmetric; sepals not persistent in fruit, 4-20(-27), white, purple, blue, green, yellow, pink, or red, plane, linear to oblong or ovate to obovate, 3.5-40 mm; petals usually absent (present in A . patens ), distinct, plane, obovate to elliptic, 1.5-2 mm; nectary present; stamens 10-200; filaments filiform or somewhat broadened at base; staminodes absent between stamens and pistils; pistils many, simple; ovule 1 per pistil; style present. Fruits achenes, aggregate, sessile or stalked, ovoid to obovoid, sides not veined; beak (persistent style) present, sometimes rudimentary, terminal, straight or curved, to 40(-50) mm, sometimes plumose. x =7 or 8. The taxonomy of Anemone continues to be problematic. Anemone occidentalis and A . patens var. multifida (the first two taxa in this treatment) are frequently placed in the genus Pulsatilla Miller on the basis of the long plumose achene beaks, and A . acutiloba and A . americana (the last two taxa in this treatment) in the genus Hepatica Miller, primarily on the basis of the involucre immediately subtending the flower and the lobed, persistent leaves. Recent phylogenetic analyses of Anemone in the broad sense, however, indicate that both Pulsatilla and Hepatica should be subsumed within Anemone . While traditional morphologic characters are useful in distinguishing between Pulsatilla and Hepatica species, respectively, many other morphologic and molecular attributes are shared with Anemone , strongly suggesting that these genera should be united (S. B. Hoot et al. 1994). In addition, a number of genera that have been recognized primarily on a cytotaxonomic basis (e.g., Anemonastrum , Anemonidium , Anemonoides , and Jurtsevia ) are reduced to synonymy here. Some North American species of Anemone are closely related to plants in Europe, Asia, and South America and continue to be recognized at different ranks. For example, Anemone patens Linnaeus var. multifida (a species included in this treatment) was called Pulsatilla multifida (Pritzel) Juzepczuk for the former Soviet Union by S. V. Juzepczuk (1970) and Pulsatilla patens (Linnaeus) Miller var. multifida (Pritzel) Li S.H. & Huang Y. H. for China by Wang W.-T. (1980). Moreover, interspecific hybridization among some sympatric or nearly sympatric North American species also contributes to the confusion (see N. L. Britton 1891; C. L. Hitchcock et al. 1955-1969, vol. 2; R. S. Mitchell and J. K. Dean 1982). Additional analyses (e.g., G. Boraiah and M. Heimburger 1964; M. Heimburger 1959; C. Joseph and M. Heimburger 1966; and C. S. Keener et al. 1995) may prove to be helpful in resolving the taxonomy within this morphologically diverse genus.
Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Sep 4-20, petaloid; pet none; pistils numerous, in a subglobose to cylindric head, pubescent; style short or elongate; stigma minute; achenes flattened, clavate, or fusiform, tipped with the persistent style; perennials from a rhizome or caudex, with palmately deeply divided basal lvs and an erect stem with a whorl of 3 or more involucral lvs subtending one or more elongate peduncles; fls medium-sized to large, white to blue or red or greenish. (Pulsatilla) 100+, N. Hemisphere.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Show all taxa || << 51 - 90 taxa >>
Anemone nemorosa
Image of Anemone nemorosa
Anemone nikoensis
Image of Anemone nikoensis
Anemone obtusiloba
Image of Anemone obtusiloba
Anemone okennonii
Image of Anemone okennonii
Anemone oligantha
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Anemone oregana
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Anemone palmata
Image of Anemone palmata
Anemone parviflora
Image of Anemone parviflora
Anemone pavonina
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Anemone pennsylvanica
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Anemone pensylvanica
Image of Anemone pensylvanica
Anemone pentaphylla
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Anemone piperi
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Anemone polycarpa
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Anemone pratensis
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Anemone pseudoaltaica
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Anemone pulsatilla
Image of Anemone pulsatilla
Anemone quinquefolia
Image of Anemone quinquefolia
Anemone raddeana
Image of Anemone raddeana
Anemone ranunculoides
Image of Anemone ranunculoides
Anemone richardsonii
Image of Anemone richardsonii
Anemone riparia
Image of Anemone riparia
Anemone rivularis
Image of Anemone rivularis
Anemone sphenophylla
Image of Anemone sphenophylla
Anemone stolonifera
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Anemone sylvestris
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Anemone tenella
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Anemone tetonensis
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Anemone thalictroides
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Anemone thomsonii
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Anemone tomentosa
Image of Anemone tomentosa
Anemone trullifolia
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Anemone tschernjaewii
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Anemone tuberosa
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Anemone umbrosa
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Anemone vernalis
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Anemone virginiana
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Anemone vitifolia
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Anemone yulongshanica
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Anemone zephyra
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The National Science Foundation
Development supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)
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