Isopyrum
Isopyrum is a genus of flowering plants of the family Ranunculaceae native to Eurasia and North America. Isopyrum plants possess white flowers with five sepals and five petals. The genus was first described in 1753 by the biologist Carl Linnaeus. In 1920, the genus Paraquilegia was segregated out from Isopyrum to contain plants that we more morphologically aligned with members of the genus Aquilegia (columbines). DescriptionIsopyrum is a genus of perennial herbs in the family Ranunculaceae. The smooth and glabrous stems stand erect. Leaves are biternate. The leaves attached to the base of the stem are pale green on the bottom and green on the top. Leaves attached to the stem have short petioles with white sheathes.[1] Flowers on Isopyrum plants have radial symmetry. Each flower possesses five sepals and five petals. Sepals are white and petaloid. The petals are substantially smaller than the sepals. Each flower also features yellow anthers and between 20 and 30 stamens. There are between one and five pistils (female sex organs) to a flower.[1] Isopyrum fruit are stored in follicles that appear in groups of one to five. Each bears numerous seeds. These seeds are smooth and have an ovoid to ellipsoid shape. The seeds can be varying shades of black.[1] TaxonomyThe genus Isopyrum was first described by the Swedish biologist Carl Linnaeus in 1753.[1] In 1920, British botanists James Ramsay Drummond and John Hutchinson published a paper, "A Revision of Isopyrum (Ranunculaceae) and Its Nearer Allies", in the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew's Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information to address problems that had developed within the genus. Prior to their paper, the genus had permitted substantial morphological variance to coexist with certain species demonstrating greater affinities towards the genus Aquilegia (columbines).[2] Part of the pair's proposed resolution was creating Paraquilegia and expanding the genus Semiaquilegia.[3]: 46 DistributionThe Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew's Plants of the World Online (POWO), which recognizes four species, characterized Isopyrum as solely an Eurasian genus. POWO treats Isopyrum as native to Spain, France, and much of Eastern Europe. POWO also identifies that the genus was introduced to Denmark and has an extinct range in Switzerland.[4] According to the Flora of China, members of Isopyrum are present across Eurasia and in North America.[1] As of 2001[update], the Flora of China identified two species – Isopyrum anemonoides and Isopyrum manshuricum – as having native ranges which extended into China.[1] SpeciesThe list may not be complete or up-to-date. Many of the species formerly placed in Isopyrum are now placed in other genera of the Ranunculaceae, especially Enemion and Dichocarpum. Accepted species include:[5]
Synonyms include:[6]
References
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