Skip Navigation
Sign In
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Chicago Botanic Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Denver Botanic Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Desert Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • NY Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Sitemap

Thalictrum polycarpum

Thalictrum polycarpum (Torr.) S.Watson   (redirected from: Thalictrum fendleri var. polycarpum Torr.)
Family: Ranunculaceae
[Thalictrum fendleri var. polycarpum Torr.]
Thalictrum polycarpum image
  • FNA
  • Resources
Marilyn M. Park & Dennis Festerling Jr. in Flora of North America (vol. 3)
Roots fibrous. Stems erect, 6-18(-20) dm, glabrous. Leaves mostly cauline, petiolate. Leaf blade 3-4×-ternately compound; leaflets orbiculate to obovate, apically 3-cleft or 3-parted, divisions undivided or shallowly 3-lobed, 15-40 mm wide, lobes rounded or somewhat acute, surfaces glabrous or glandular. Inflorescences terminal, panicles, many flowered. Flowers: sepals whitish to purplish, elliptic to ovate or lanceolate, 2-4(-5) mm; filaments whitish to pinkish, 3-6 mm; anthers (1.4-)2-4 mm, distinctly apiculate. Achenes 10-15, spreading in globose heads, not reflexed, sessile or nearly so; stipe 0-0.6 mm; body nearly globose to obovoid to obliquely obovate, laterally compressed, somewhat inflated and papery, 4-7(-8) mm, glabrous to glandular, often with 1 or 2 primary veins on each side, veins sinuous, branched, anastomosing-reticulate; beak 2-4 mm.

Flowering mid-late spring (Apr-Jun). Streamsides and other moist places, forests, and open woodlands; 600-3100 m; Calif., Nev., Oreg., Utah; Mexico (Baja California).

Thalictrum polycarpum is the only species in sect. Heterogamia with anastomosing-reticulate veins on the achene.

The stems and roots of Thalictrum polycarpum are considered poisonous when ingested by humans or cattle; Native Americans used this species medicinally as a wash for headaches, as an applications for sprains, and as a universal charm and panacea (D. E. Moerman 1986).

Thalictrum polycarpum
Open Interactive Map
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Thalictrum polycarpum image
Click to Display
100 Initial Media
- - - - -
View All Media
Institute for Museum and Library Services KU BI Logo Logo for the Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

EcoFlora is part of the SEINet Portal Network. Learn more here.

Powered by Symbiota.