North American Dentarias (Toothworts)

Submitted by Barstow on Wed, 04/27/2011 - 07:02

I've had the following request out on the SRGC forum for some time without much luck. I'll try again here - these are seldom or never offered in the seedexes. I understand that seed is ripe quite early in the year:

"I am looking for various North American Toothworts (Dentaria spp) such as Dentaria laciniata, multifida, heterophylla, diphylla, californica, tenella, pucherrima, gemmata, nuttallii etc. Can anyone help?
Pay or trade."

Comments


Submitted by IMYoung on Wed, 04/27/2011 - 09:05

I hope you have more success here  in the "home of these plants, Stephen.... I can't say I know of many growing them in the UK.


Submitted by Barstow on Wed, 04/27/2011 - 10:21

Hoy wrote:

Stephen, you know that Dentaria and Cardamine are synonyms? You can find several of the plants by looking at Cardamine laciniata etc ;)

Yes, thanks for pointing that out, Trond! I was aware of this and have searched for both in the seedexes. It seems that they are all now classified as Cardamine, but Dentarias are different in having fleshy(edible) rhizomes which the bittercresses (Cardamine) do not. I thought people would be more familiar with the name Dentaria...


Submitted by Hoy on Wed, 04/27/2011 - 13:42

I thought you would know; Stephen  ;D

I grow several Cardamines but not any American. I sowed californica this spring and 2-3 have germinated and grow as cress ;D Seem they will flower this summer!

The showiest is this pentaphylla though.


Submitted by Barstow on Wed, 04/27/2011 - 14:18

So, you do now have an American Cardamine! Where did you get seed?

I have seedlings of Cardamine douglasii and pensylvanica - the latter looks like it would be very weedy like hirsuta...

Pentaphyllos and macrophylla are the most floriferous ones here so far...


Submitted by RickR on Wed, 04/27/2011 - 18:13

Stephenb wrote:

"I am looking for various North American Toothworts (Dentaria spp) such as Dentaria laciniata, multifida, heterophylla, diphylla, californica, tenella, pucherrima, gemmata, nuttallii etc. Can anyone help?
Pay or trade."

I'll put you on my list for Cardamine laciniata seed, too, Stephen.  It certainly does seed early: last year I was too late when I went to collect seed.  I will email you when the time is near.  No other Cardamine spp. are native here, and I don't have any other in the garden either.


Submitted by Howey on Thu, 04/28/2011 - 06:25

Hi Stephen:  Have tried twice already to send you a note about Dentaria in my garden plus a picture - it's been so long since I did this that I guess I need a refresher course.  Anyway, we'll skip the words and see if the picture will go through this time.  Fran

Frances Howey
London, Ontario, Canada
Zone 5b


Submitted by Hoy on Thu, 04/28/2011 - 10:30

Stephenb wrote:

So, you do now have an American Cardamine! Where did you get seed?
Yes but not in the garden yet! I got seed from Nargs of course ;D!

I have seedlings of Cardamine douglasii and pensylvanica - the latter looks like it would be very weedy like hirsuta...

Pentaphyllos and macrophylla are the most floriferous ones here so far...

Here is Cardamine waldsteinii - also a charming shade tolerant plant in flower now. I think it has the hugest flowers of the genus.


Submitted by RickR on Thu, 04/28/2011 - 21:19

I'm not sure how to frame this question, but since Cardamine laciniata is the only one I am familiar with,

are all cardamine species ephemeral?

Any experience with self fertility/infertility?


Submitted by Hoy on Fri, 04/29/2011 - 06:29

RickR wrote:

I'm not sure how to frame this question, but since Cardamine laciniata is the only one I am familiar with,

are all cardamine species ephemeral?

Any experience with self fertility/infertility?

All Cardamines I have are more or less ephemeral. However, if the summer is moist some of them keep their leaves for a long time.

C pentaphyllos, enneaphyllos and waldsteinii seem to be self-incompatible as they never or seldom set seed (have only one clone of each). Heptaphylla sets plenty of fertile seed and bulbifera sets lots of bulbils. Pratensis is so common that they always produce seed and even parts of leaves and stem can root.