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Viola selkirkii
Pursh ex Goldie |
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TAXONOMY |
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Family: |
Violaceae |
Genus: |
Viola |
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Species Synonyms: |
none |
Common Names: |
Selkirk’s violet
great-spurred violet
long-spurred violet |
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DISTRIBUTION |
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Canada: |
central Yukon – eastern British Columbia
– central Alberta, east-central Saskatchewan – Ontario –
Quebec – Labrador – Nova Scotia |
Saskatchewan: |
east-central Saskatchewan; Greenwater Lake –
Porcupine Hills – Pasquia Hills |
Ecoregion: |
Boreal Transition, Mid-Boreal Upland, Mid-Boreal
Lowland, Churchill River Upland |
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HABITAT |
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Saskatchewan: |
moist deciduous, mixed, or white spruce woods |
Associated species: |
balsam poplar, bishop’s cap, fragrant bedstraw,
Manitoba maple, mountain bladder fern, northern white violet, western oakfern,
white spruce |
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RARITY STATUS |
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Provincial
Status According to Harms (2003): |
Vulnerable |
Nature Conservancy
Status: |
G5 S2S3 |
Saskatchewan
Species at Risk Status: |
None |
COSEWIC Status:
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None |
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Selkirk’s
violet is vulnerable because it is rare or uncommon in Saskatchewan. This
species is usually locally numerous within limited areas. No immediate threats
are known but may occur in the future. |
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SPECIES
DESCRIPTION |
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Height: |
6 – 15 cm |
Rhizomes: |
rhizomes long, slender |
Stems: |
perennial, leafy stem absent; runners absent |
Leaves: |
basal, stalked, 1.5 – 3.5 cm wide, oval,
base heart-shaped with a narrow space between lobes, tip acute to obtuse,
elongating after flowering, short-hairy above, hairless below, margin round-toothed;
stipules lance-shaped, tip tapering to a long point, dry and membranous,
margin entire or few-toothed |
Inflorescence: |
flowers solitary, from basal stalks; stalks equalling
or longer than leaves; self-fertilizing flowers on erect stalks |
Flowers: |
perfect, irregular; sepals 5, 6 – 7 mm long,
lance-shaped, hairless; petals 5, 7 – 10 mm long, lateral petals beardless,
pale violet, the lower 3 with dark violet veins, spur 5 – 7 mm long;
stamens 5; style squared at the tip |
Fruits: |
capsule 3-valved, 4 – 6 mm long, nearly
round, yellowish-green, hairless |
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VIOLA
KEY FOR SPECIES FOUND IN SASKATCHEWAN |
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1 Plants without leafy stems; leaves
and flower stalks arising from a woody base and/or plants with runners |
2 |
1 Plants with leafy stems; flowers
axillary, runners and woody bases absent |
11 |
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2 Leaves deeply divided; plants of
prairies and dry areas |
V. pedatifida |
2 Leaves toothed or lobed but not
deeply divided or margin entire; plants of meadows to moist woods or boggy
areas |
3 |
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3 Flowers white, may have purplish
lines towards the base |
4 |
3 Flowers blue to violet |
7 |
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4 Plants without runners; leaves circular
to kidney-shaped |
V. renifolia |
4 Plants with runners; leaves oval
to kidney-shaped |
5 |
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5 Leaves hairy, at least when young;
leaf and flower stalks reddish |
V. blanda var. palustriformis |
5 Leaves hairless; leaf and flower
stalks greenish |
6 |
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6 Leaves 2 – 5 cm long, 2.5
– 3.5 cm wide |
V. palustris var. brevipes |
6 Leaves 1 – 2 cm long, 1 –
1.5 cm wide |
V. macloskeyi ssp. pallens |
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7 Rhizomes thick and fleshy; runners
absent; woody base usually short and thick; lateral petals bearded or not;
sepals with or without marginal hairs |
8 |
7 Rhizome slender and cord-like; runners
present or absent; woody base present or absent; lateral petals always bearded
(except V. selkirkii); sepals without marginal hairs |
10 |
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8 Spurred petal beardless |
V. sororia |
8 Spurred petal bearded |
9 |
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9 Sepals with marginal hairs |
V. septentrionalis |
9 Sepals without marginal hairs |
V. nephrophylla |
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10 Runners present; petal spur much
shorter than the blade; lateral petals bearded; plants of moist meadows
and streams |
V. palustris var. palustris |
10 Runners absent; petal spur to 2/3
as long as blade; lateral petals beardless; plants of woods and rocky slopes |
V. selkirkii |
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11 Leaves lance-shaped to narrowly
oval; flowers yellow, may have purple veins at the base |
12 |
11 Leaves heart-shaped to kidney-shaped;
flowers yellow, white or blue |
13 |
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12 Leaves usually at least three times
as long as wide, lance-shaped to elliptic |
V. nuttallii |
12 Leaves less than three times as
long as wide, narrowly oval |
V. vallicola var. vallicola |
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13 Flowers yellow, with purplish-brown
veins; plants of rich deciduous woods |
V. pubescens var. scabriuscula |
13 Flowers white to lilac or blue;
plants of woods or meadows |
14 |
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14 Flowers white inside, yellow at
base and with purplish veins or purple tinge on outside; stipules entire |
V. canadensis var. rugulosa |
14 Flowers blue to lilac; stipules
toothed |
15 |
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15 Leaves thin, hairless; stipules
oval; flowers lilac |
V. conspersa |
15 Leaves thick, glabrous to densely
pubescent; stipules linear; flowers deep blue |
16 |
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16 Leaves densely hairy |
V. adunca var. adunca |
16 Leaves hairless |
V. labradorica |
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