Ranunculus L.
Perennial, sometimes annual, terrestrial or aquatic herbs; roots fibrous or swollen, sometimes arising from a stout or bulbous rootstock. Lvs usually alternate, rarely opposite, basal and cauline, simple or variously divided to 2-pinnatisect. Fls solitary or in lax leafy cymes; involucre 0. Sepals green, (3)-5-(7). Petals (0)-5-(12 or more), usually yellow, sometimes white, brown or reddish; nectaries near base of petal, 1-(3), pit-like, covered by a scale or naked. Stamens few to many, spiralled. Carpels few to many, with 1 ovule. Achenes few to many; style neither greatly elongated nor feathery. Receptacle glabrous or hairy, globular or cylindric.
SYNOPSIS
- I. Subgen. BATRACHIUM.
- Lvs mostly cauline, usually some or all divided into capillary segments. Petals white, rarely yellow; nectary a lunate or circular pit. Achenes transversely wrinkled. Aquatic plants.
- A. Sect. BATRACHIUM:
- II. Subgen. RANUNCULUS.
- Lvs mostly basal, divided into broad or narrow, but never capillary, segments. Petals yellow, rarely white or reddish; nectary a naked pit or pocket or covered with a scale. Achenes not transversely wrinkled, often flattened. Mostly terrestrial.
- B. Sect. ECHINELLA.
- Roots fibrous. Sepals 5; petals usually 5. Nectary scale entire, truncate, attached laterally or free to base. Achenes beaked, bordered; face bearing spines, hooked hairs, or tubercles:
- 2. * arvensis6. * muricatus8. * parviflorus10. * sardous12. * sessiliflorus
- C. Sect. EPIROTES.
- Roots fibrous. Sepals 5; petals 5-15-(25). Nectary usually naked, solitary or (2)-3 together. Achenes long-beaked, not bordered or flattened, rarely winged; face smooth, hairy or glabrous.
- 1.
- Tufted alpines with stout rhizomes (treated in detail by Fisher, op. cit.)
- (i)
- Petals white:
- 19. buchananii33. lyallii
- (ii)
- Petals yellow
- a.
- b.
- 2.
- Lowland to alpine, often subaquatic; rosettes tufted on slender stolons or rhizomes:
- 14. acaulis16. amphitrichus17. biternatus25. glabrifolius32. limosella34. macropus
- D. Sect. FICARIA.
- Some roots tuberous, others fibrous. Sepals 3; petals 8-12. Nectary scale entire, free. Achenes with minute beak, barely compressed, keeled, glabrous or hairy:
- 4. * ficaria
- E. Sect. FLAMMULA.
- Roots fibrous. Sepals 5; petals 5. Nectary scale entire, free. Achenes with very short beak, slightly compressed, glabrous or tuberculate:
- 5. * flammula7. * ophioglossifolius
- F. Sect. HECATONIA.
- Roots fibrous. Sepals 3-5; petals 3-5. Nectary scale forked or surrounding the nectary. Achenes small, glabrous, barely compressed, very numerous in cylindric heads; beak very short:
- 11. * sceleratus
- G. Sect. RANUNCULUS.
- Roots fibrous. Sepals 5; petals usually 5. Nectary scale entire or retuse, usually free to base. Achenes beaked, usually bordered, usually flattened; face smooth, hairy or glabrous.
- 1.
- Tufted, never stoloniferous, rarely producing offset daughter rosettes
- (i)
- Nectary at base of petal, with broad scale:
- 1. * acris3. * bulbosus15. altus38. multiscapus43. reflexus51. urvilleanus
- (ii)
- Nectary at base of limb, with narrow scale
- a.
- Stem 1-flowered, leafless:
- 18. brevis35. maculatus42. recens44. royi
- b.
- Stem 1-3-(10)-flowered, with 1 or more bracts:
- 24. foliosus31. kirkii37. mirus48. stylosus49. subscaposus
- 2.
- Stoloniferous
- (i)
- Lamina divided into stalked leaflets:
- 9. * repens36. membranifolius50. ternatifolius
- (ii)
- Lamina lobed but not divided to base:
- 20. carsei21. cheesemanii47. simulans
Key
KEY TO WEEDY SPP.
R. foliosus is the only native sp. in this key. It has been collected in weedy habitats only rarely.
Key
400 spp., cosmopolitan, mostly temperate. Native spp. 40, naturalised 13.
Most of the native alpine spp. were treated in a detailed monograph by Fisher, F. J. F., The Alpine Ranunculi of New Zealand (1965). However, the taxonomy of those native spp. not treated by Fisher still is in need of detailed revision. Some changes have been made for this treatment, most of them nomenclatural. A few distinctive new spp. have been recognised, but some complexes (e.g., R. foliosus and its allies) have not been critically studied.
Chromosome numbers were reported by Hair, J.B., New Zealand J. Bot. 21: 3-7 (1983).
The shapes described for lvs below are the outline of the lamina; dissection of the lamina is treated separately. For this large genus, a synopsis, general key, and key to weedy spp. are provided.