Saxifraga hyperborea
Appearance
Pygmy saxifrage | |
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Saxifraga hyperborea | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Order: | Saxifragales |
Family: | Saxifragaceae |
Genus: | Saxifraga |
Species: | S. hyperborea
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Binomial name | |
Saxifraga hyperborea | |
Synonyms[1][2] | |
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Saxifraga hyperborea, the pygmy saxifrage, is a plant species native to Canada, Alaska, Greenland, Russia, Spitsbergen, and from mountainous areas in the western United States. One report from Mount Washington in New Hampshire is unverified. The plant grows in wet tundra, snow banks, stream banks and lake sides at elevations up to 3000 m. The US populations have been called S. debilis or S. rivularis in various publications.[3]
Saxifraga hyperborea is a small mat-forming herb sometimes appearing purple, with a woody caudex. Flowers are purple or white, up to 5 mm across.[3][4][5][6][7][8]
References
[edit]- ^ Tropicos
- ^ The Plant List
- ^ a b Flora of North America v 8 p 144.
- ^ Brown, Robert. 1823. Chloris Melvilliana 16.
- ^ Dorn, Robert D. 1988. Vascular Plants of Wyoming 300.
- ^ Hooker, William Jackson. 1832. Flora Boreali-Americana 1(5): 246.
- ^ Böcher, T. W. 1978. Greenlands Flora 326 pp.
- ^ Moss, E. H. 1983. Flora of Alberta (ed. 2) i–xii, 1–687. University of Toronto Press, Toronto.