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Cleome serrulata From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cleome serrulata (Rocky Mountain Beeweed, Rocky Mountain Beeplant, Bee Spiderflower, stinking clover, Navajo spinach) is a species of Cleome, native to western North America from southern British Columbia, east to Minnesota and Illinois, and south to New Mexico and northernmost California. It is also naturalized further east in North America. [1][2][3] Cleome serrulata
Contents[hide] 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 3 Uses 4 Notes Description [edit]
Rocky Mountain Beeweed
It is an annual plant growing to 10­150 cm (4­60 in) tall, with spirally arranged leaves. The leaves are trifoliate, with three slender leaflets each 1­7 cm (0.4­2.75 in) long. The flowers are reddish­purple, pink, or white, with four petals and six long stamens. The fruit is a capsule 3­6cm (1­2.4 in) long containing several seeds.[1][2] Plant in flower Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Plantae
(unranked):
Angiosperms
(unranked):
Eudicots
(unranked):
Rosids
Order:
Brassicales
Family:
Cleomaceae
Genus:
Cleome
Species:
C. serrulata
Binomial name
Cleome serrulata Taxonomy [edit]
In 1817, Frederick Traugott Pursh described this species in the first volume of Flora Americae Septentrionalis. [4]
In the first volume of Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis in 1824 Augustin Pyramus de Candolle moved this species into his idea of what the genus Peritoma should be, calling it Peritoma serrulatum. [5] Pursh (1814)
Synonyms
Peritoma serrulatum DC. Cleome integrifolia Torr. & Gray In 1901, Edward Lee Greene built a genus of Cleome species based on Candolles Peritoma including this species as Peritoma serrulatum DC. and Peritoma lutem Raf. Other species that were included have since been determined to be synonyms of these species.[6] Taxonomy references Greene, Edward L. (1899­1901). Pittonia A Series of Papers Relating to Botany and Botanists
04­16. . Volume IV. Washington, D.C.: Press of the Law Reporter Company. Retrieved 2009­
Candolle, Aug. Pyramo de (1824) (in plantin). Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis: sive enumeratio contracta ordinum generum specierumque plantarum huc usque cognitarum, juxta methodi naturalis normas digesta. Pars Prima. Paris: Sumptibus Treuttel et Würtz. http://books.google.com/books?id=6vQTAAAAQAAJ . Retrieved 2009­04­
16. Pursh, Fredrick (1814) (in plantin). Flora Americæ Septentrionalis; or, A Systematic Arrangement and Description of the Plants of North America. Containing, besides what have been described by preceding authors, many new and rare species, collected during twelve years travels and residence in that country, in two volumes . Vol. I. London: White, Cochrane, and Co.. Retrieved 2009­04­16. Uses [edit]
It is used in the southwestern U.S. as a food, medicine, or dye.[7][8] It is called waa’ in the Navajo language. Its scientific description was based on specimens collected on the Lewis and Clark Expedition. [9] Notes [edit]
1.
2.
3.
4.
^ a b Plants of British Columbia: Cleome serrulata
^ a b Jepson Flora: Cleome serrulata ^ USDA Plants Profile: Cleome serrulata ^ Flora Americae Septentrionalis (1817), page 441
5.
6.
7.
^ Prodromus Systematis (1824), page 237 ^ Pittonia (1901), page 208 ^ Northern Arizona University Paleoethnobotany Manual: Bee Weed
8.
9.
^ Plants for a Future: Cleome serrulata ^ Native Wildflowers of the North Dakota Grasslands: Rocky Mountain Beeplant (Cleome serrulata)
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Submit ratings Categories: Cleomaceae | Flora of the North­Central United States | Flora of the Western United States | Flora of Western Canada | Flora of California | Flora of the Rocky Mountains | Native American cuisine