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Aconitum columbianum  

No occurrences found

Family: Ranunculaceae
Columbian monkshood
Aconitum columbianum image
Max Licher
  • FNA
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Alan T. Whittemore & Bruce D. Parfitt in Flora of North America (vol. 3)
Roots tuberous, tuber distally not obviously bulblike, to 60 × 15 mm, parent tuber producing 1 (rarely 2) daughter tubers with connecting rhizome very short, i.e., tubers ±contiguous. Stems erect and stout to twining and reclining, 2-30 dm. Cauline leaves: blade deeply 3-5(-7)-divided, usually with more than 2 mm leaf tissue between deepest sinus and base of blade, 5-15 cm wide, segment margins variously cleft and toothed. Inflorescences open racemes or panicles. Flowers commonly blue, sometimes white, cream colored, or blue tinged at sepal margins, 18-50 mm from tips of pendent sepals to top of hood; pendent sepals 6-16 mm; hood conic-hemispheric, hemispheric, or crescent-shaped, 11-34mm from receptacle to top of hood, 6-26 mm wide from receptacle to beak apex. Available information suggests that Aconitum columbianum is probably not one of the extremely toxic aconites (D. E. Brink 1982; J. D. Olsen et al. 1990).

Duration: Perennial Lifeform: Forb/Herb General: Perennial, 20-150 cm tall, sometimes taller; stems erect and stout or twining and reclining; roots tuberous. Leaves: Cauline, alternate, palmately cleft into 3-5 segments, 5- 15 cm wide, the segments narrowly elliptic, lanceolate, or linear in outline, blades glabrous to finely pubescent, margins of the ultimate segments variously cleft and toothed; blades petiolate. Flowers: Inflorescence a raceme, mostly 10-20 flowered, the flowers bilateral, nodding; pedicels 2-9 mm long; sepals 5, ovate, 1-4 mm long; petals 5, 4-9 mm long, greenish, cream-white, or pink; stamens 10, the anthers juxtaposed on the upper side of the flower; style elongate, 5.5-9 mm long, curved, exserted from the corolla; flowers July- August. Fruits: Aggregate of follicles, oblong, 1-2 cm long, beaked; seeds numerous. Ecology: Streambanks, meadows, seeps, coniferous forests, moist soils; 1100-3200 m (3500-10500 ft); Apache, Cochise, Coconino, Greenlee, Navajo, and Pima counties; western U.S., northern Mexico. Notes: Ours, as here described, is ssp. columbianum. Aconitum can appear quite similar to Delphinium. Aconitum has hooded upper sepals and usually 2 petals, whereas Delphinium has spurred upper sepals and usually 4 petals. Moonkshood is a highly toxic plant that should be handled with extreme care. Editor: Springer et al. 2008
Aconitum columbianum
Open Interactive Map
Aconitum columbianum image
Russ Kleinman, Bill Norris, Kelly Kindscher, & Danielle Walkup
Aconitum columbianum image
Max Licher
Aconitum columbianum image
Russ Kleinman, Bill Norris, Kelly Kindscher, & Danielle Walkup
Aconitum columbianum image
Max Licher
Aconitum columbianum image
Russ Kleinman, Bill Norris, Kelly Kindscher, & Danielle Walkup
Aconitum columbianum image
Russ Kleinman, Bill Norris, Kelly Kindscher, & Danielle Walkup
Aconitum columbianum image
Russ Kleinman, Bill Norris, Kelly Kindscher, & Danielle Walkup
Aconitum columbianum image
Max Licher
Aconitum columbianum image
Russ Kleinman, Bill Norris, Kelly Kindscher, & Danielle Walkup
Aconitum columbianum image
Patrick Alexander
Aconitum columbianum image
Patrick Alexander
Aconitum columbianum image
Patrick Alexander
Aconitum columbianum image
Patrick Alexander
Aconitum columbianum image
Aconitum columbianum image
Aconitum columbianum image
Aconitum columbianum image
Aconitum columbianum image
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