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Osmorhiza claytonii

Species of flowering plant From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Osmorhiza claytonii
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Osmorhiza claytonii is a North American perennial herb, native to Canada and the eastern United States. It is also known as Clayton's sweetroot,[3] sweet cicely, or woolly sweet cicely[4] a name it shares with other members of its genus Osmorhiza.[5][6][7]

Quick Facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...
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Description

Osmorhiza claytonii is a herbaceous perennial 45–90 centimetres (1–3 ft) tall and pubescent. Leaves are large, compound, deeply divided, and dentate. Flowers are small 1.5 millimetres (0.059 in), white, and clustered with others on a long-stalked umbel. Its native habitats include rich woods and wooded slopes.[8]

The leaves are yellowish green. There are white hairs on the stem and to a lesser extent on the leaves as well. It is ternately branched, having three-leafed branches. When broken it has an anise like smell or flavor.

The seeds of this plant have barbs on the end allowing them to stick to clothing, fur, or feathers.

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Ecology

Small to medium-sized bees, wasps, flies, and beetles feed on the nectar and pollen of the flowers. The caterpillars of the butterfly Papilio polyxenes (Black Swallowtail) feed on the foliage.[9]

Similar species

O. claytonii is very similar in appearance to Osmorhiza longistylis (long-styled sweet-cicely) with a similar geographic range. The roots of O. longistylis have a stronger anise smell than those of O. claytonii, and the styles of the flowers protrude beyond the petals, while the styles of O. claytonii are shorter than the petals.[10]


References

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