Viola palmata L. var. palmata

Locations ofViola palmata L. var. palmata in Virginia

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Detail

Family
Violaceae
Botanical Name
Viola palmata L. var. palmata
Common Name
Cleft Violet
Synonym(s)
Viola palmata L. var. dilatata Elliott; Viola triloba Schw. var. dilatata (Ell.) Brainerd; Viola palmata L., s.l. (in part)
Flora of Virginia Name/Status
Viola palmata L., s.l.
Comments
Incompletely mapped at present; the concept and name follow the treatment of violets by Flora of the Southeastern U.S. (FSUS) and the treatment of northeastern U.S. violets by Ballard, Kartesz, and Nishino (Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society, 150(1): 3-266, 2023. This var. has traditionally been referred to as Viola palmata var. dilatata; however, according to FSUS, "the type of V. palmata unambiguously refers V. palmata sensu stricto to the common Piedmont and upper Coastal Plain plant with deeply dissected leaf blades; var. dilatata Elliott is thus rendered a synonym of var. palmata, and the widespread northern taxon previously treated as var. palmata must use the earliest available name, var. triloba." Following Weakley's treatment, var. palmata is the southeastern element of the V. palmata complex and is distinguished by consistently having leaves deeply cut into linear-oblong segments. It should generally be found in the more eastern counties and should be more widely represented in the Coastal Plain than indicated. Recent herbarium studies by Harvey Ballard indicate that other specimens previously mapped as this taxon and occurring west of the Coastal Plain belong to other species. See also Comments under the provisional maps for V. palmata var. triloba and V. stoneana.
Habitat
More observations and specimens are needed to properly circumscribe the habitat of this variety. It appears to be typically associated with mesic to dry-mesic hardwood forests, growing in moderately to strongly base-rich soils. All verified records are from the Coastal Plain.
Native Status
Native

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