Though I love seeing them, I'm afraid I haven't paid close enough attention to identify the various alpine potentilla species that occur in the eastern slope Rockies in south-central Alberta (Kananaskis Prov. Park, Banff N.P.). However, I wonder if someone might recognize this one on sight?
The plant is up to about 10 cm in height; the leaves are basal and trifoliate; the flowers are mostly solitary but can be branched with up to 2 (probably 3) flowers; petals are longer than sepals. Unfortunately, I did not turn over the leaves to judge the hairiness! Could it be Potentilla uniflora?
Thanks in advance for any insight.
Comments
Re: Potentilla ID
With the altitude, flower shape and trefoil leaves, P. uniflora does seem plausible..but Wow! that one is HUGE: in the Southern Rockies it is almost always stemless (barely 1" tall!)...I wonder if this is a hybrid?
Re: Potentilla ID
Thanks, Panayoti.
If it is helpful to know re. a possible ID, the trifoliate alpine potentillas that occur here are P. hyparctica, P. nivea, P.ovina (3 to 5 leaflets), P. uniflora, P. villosa, and P. hookeriana (with 3-5 leaflets), according to Moss & Packer (Flora of Alberta). I have gotten rather lost in the written descriptions, and have not found really useful photos for most of these species .. hence my confusion. ???
P.S. I also posted another potentilla, which may well also be P. uniflora... the leaf shape is very similar to this one but they are densely hairy. I suppose it could just be individual difference??
I think it is uniflora....I remember seeing this one in the Rockies and coming to the conclusion it was uniflora.