Cardamine heptaphylla
Close-up on a flower of Cardamine heptaphylla
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Brassicales
Family: Brassicaceae
Genus: Cardamine
Species:
C. heptaphylla
Binomial name
Cardamine heptaphylla
(Vill.) O.E.Schulz, 1903
Synonyms
  • Cardamine baldensis Fritsch
  • Cardamine pinnata (Lam.) R.Br.
  • Dentaria heptaphylla Vill.
  • Dentaria canescens Ten.
  • Dentaria pinnata Lam.

Cardamine heptaphylla, common name pinnate coralroot is a species of flowering plant in the family Brassicaceae. [1][2][3]

Etymology

The genus name Cardamine is derived from the Greek kardamon, cardamom - an unrelated plant in the ginger family, used as a pungent spice in cooking. The specific epithet heptaphylla is composed of ancient Greek ἑπτά, hepta (seven) and φύλλον, phullon (leaf).

Distribution

This species is widespread in Central and Southern Europe, from Northern Spain, to Italy and S.W. Germany.[4][5]

Habitat

This species grows mainly in mountain woods, especially in beech and spruce forests, but sometimes in plain, at an elevation up to 2,200 metres (7,200 ft) above sea level. It prefers calcareous soils. [6]

Description

Cardamine heptaphylla can reach a size of 30–60 millimetres (1.2–2.4 in). These deciduous, perennial, rhizomatous, herbaceous, flowering plants are characterized by a glabrous, erect, unbranched stem, and by few but very large imparipinnate leaves, with 5 to 9 large opposite leaflets, ovate-lanceolate, irregularly toothed. They have a horizontally crawling rhizome.

The large flowers grow in a many-flowered inflorescence. The inflorescence is composed by a cluster with four cup-shaped broad flowers. Each flower is carried by a rather long pedicel. Flowers may be white, pink or purplish. Petals are 18 to 23 mm long, obovate, usually somewhat wrinkled and three times longer than the calyx. Corolla has a diameter of 15–25 millimetres (0.59–0.98 in). They bloom from April to July. The flowers are hermaphroditic. The pollination is done by bees, flies, butterflies and moths. The fruit is a 4 to 7 cm long pod. [4][6]

References

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