Geum peckii

Pursh

Fl. Amer. Sept. 1: 352. 1813.

Common names: Mountain avens
Conservation concernEndemic
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 9. Treatment on page 64. Mentioned on page 60.
Revision as of 00:00, 6 November 2020 by imported>Volume Importer
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Plants subscapose. Stems 7–40 cm, glabrate, sparsely downy, or pilose proximally, downy or pilose distally. Leaves: basal 5–15 cm, blade strongly lyrate-pinnate, major leaflet 1, minor leaflets 4–10, terminal leaflet much larger than minor laterals; cauline 0.8–1.7(–2.5) cm, stipules not evident, blade bractlike, not resembling basal, simple, 3-fid. Inflorescences 1–2(–4)-flowered. Pedicels densely downy, usually eglandular. Flowers erect; epicalyx bractlets 2–3 mm; hypanthium green; sepals spreading, 4–7 mm; petals spreading, yellow, obcordate, nearly orbiculate, or broadly ovate, 9–13 mm, nearly 2 times sepals, apex broadly rounded, emarginate, or irregularly erose. Fruiting tori sessile, glabrous. Fruiting styles wholly persistent, not geniculate-jointed, 6–9 mm, apex not hooked, pilose in basal 1/3, eglandular. 2n = 42.


Phenology: Flowering summer.
Habitat: Alpine meadows, wet spots on rocky cliffs and slopes, montane streamsides, coastal bogs
Elevation: 0–1900 m

Discussion

Of conservation concern.

Geum peckii occurs at 0–10 m in Nova Scotia and at 1500–1900 m in New Hampshire.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Geum peckii"
Joseph R. Rohrer +
Mountain avens +
N.S. +  and N.H. +
0–1900 m +
Alpine meadows, wet spots on rocky cliffs and slopes, montane streamsides, coastal bogs +
Flowering summer. +
Fl. Amer. Sept. +
Conservation concern +  and Endemic +
Acomastylis +, Erythrocoma +, Novosieversia +  and Stylypus +
Geum peckii +
species +