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

Ranunculus cardiophyllus

Ranunculus cardiophyllus Hook.  
Family: Ranunculaceae
Heart-Leaf Buttercup, more...heartleaf buttercup
[Ranunculus cardiopetalus Greene, moreRanunculus cardiophyllus var. subsagittatus (A. Gray) L. Benson, Ranunculus cardiophyllus var. typicus L. Benson, Ranunculus pedatifidus var. cardiophyllus (Hook.) Britton]
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Max Licher
  • FNA
  • Resources
Alan T. Whittemore in Flora of North America (vol. 3)
Stems erect, 11-53 cm, pilose or glabrous, each with 1-5 flowers. Roots cylindric, 1.3-2 mm thick. Basal leaves persistent, blades ovate or elliptic, undivided or innermost 3-5-parted, 2.2-6.9 × 1.8-4.5 cm, base cordate to broadly obtuse, margins crenate with more than 5 crenae, apex rounded to broadly acute. Flowers: pedicels pilose; receptacle canescent; sepals 5-8 × 3-7 mm, abaxially pilose, hairs colorless; petals (0-)5-10, 6-13 × 4-13 mm; nectary scale ciliate or sometimes glabrous. Heads of achenes ovoid or cylindric, 5-16 × 5-9 mm; achenes 1.8-2.2 × 1.5-2 mm, finely canescent; beak subulate, curved or straight, 0.6-1.2 mm. 2 n = 32.

Flowering spring-summer (May-Sep). Wet or dry meadows; 600-3400 m; Alta., B.C., Sask.; Ariz., Colo., Mont., N.Mex., N.Dak., S.Dak., Utah, Wash., Wyo.

Ranunculus cardiophyllus is quite variable. Through most of its range, leaves always have rounded marginal crenae and cordate or truncate bases, stems are often densely pilose (but may be sparsely pilose or glabrous), and achene beaks are curved. In plants from Arizona and New Mexico, however, leaves may have obtuse marginal crenae or broadly obtuse bases, stems are never densely pilose, and achene beaks are sometimes straight. Forms showing some or all of these charactersistics are often separated as R . cardiophyllus var. subsagittatus . The characteristics are poorly correlated, however, and taxonomic recognition is not warranted.

Most specimens of Ranunculus cardiophyllus have all of the basal leaves unlobed, but plants with the innermost basal leaf 3-5-lobed are common. A few specimens, mostly from the northern part of its range, have all of the basal leaves 5-parted or -divided. Those plants approach R . pedatifidus in their morphology, and R . cardiophyllus has sometimes been considered a variety of that species.

Ranunculus cardiophyllus
Open Interactive Map
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Max Licher
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus image
Ranunculus cardiophyllus 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.