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Compilation
Cerastium cerastoides

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Filed as Cerastium cerastoides (L.) Britton var. parviflorum Ledeb. [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Lectotype of Stellaria cerastoides L. [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Filed as Cerastium cerastoides (L.) Britton var. parviflorum Ledeb. [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Filed as Cerastium indet. [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Cerastium cerastoides (L.) Britton [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Type? of Cerastium cerastoides (L.) Britton variety lalesarense Bornm. [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Filed as Cerastium cerastoides (L.) Britton var. parviflorum Ledeb. [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Cerastium cerastoides (L.) Britton [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Filed as Cerastium cerastoides (L.) Britton var. parviflorum Ledeb. [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Filed as Cerastium cerastoides (L.) Britton var. parviflorum Ledeb. [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Filed as Cerastium cerastoides (L.) Britton var. parviflorum Ledeb. [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
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Name

Identification
Cerastium cerastoides (L.) Britton [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE ] (stored under name); Verified by W. Möschl, 1965 Cerastium cerastoides (L.) Britton [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE ] Verified by K. Victor (JE), 2010
Related name
  • Stellaria cerastoides
  • Cerastium obtusifolium
  • Cerastium cerastoides
Common name
  • Starwort mouse-ear chickweed, Flora of North America Vol. 5
  • céraiste à trois styles, Flora of North America Vol. 5

Flora

Entry for Cerastium cerastoides (Linnaeus) Britton [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Herbarium
Flora of North America (FNA)
Collection
Flora of North America
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of North America, Vol 5,
Names
Cerastium cerastoides (Linnaeus) Britton [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE], Mem. Torrey Bot. Club, 5: 150. 1894
Stellaria cerastoides Linnaeus [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE], Sp. Pl., 1: 422. 1753
Arenaria trigyna (Villars) Shinners [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Cerastium lapponicum Crantz [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Cerastium trigynum Villars [family CARYOPHYLLACEAE]
Dichodon cerastoides (Linnaeus) Reichenbach [family ]
Provencheria cerastoides (Linnaeus) B. Boivin [family ]
Treatment Author(s)
John K. Morton
Information
Plants perennial, mat-forming, rhizomatous. Stems creeping, much-branched, rooting, glabrous except for line of small hairs down each internode; flowering shoots decumbent or ascending, 5–10 cm; nonflowering shoots prostrate, 5–15 cm; small axillary tufts of leaves usually absent. Leaves sessile, tending to be marcescent, somewhat succulent; blade elliptic-oblong or linear-lanceolate, 2–12 × 1–3 mm, apex obtuse, rarely acute, glabrous, sometimes ciliate at base. Inflorescences lax, 1–3-flowered terminal cymes; bracts lanceolate, 2–5 mm, glabrous or ciliate. Pedicels becoming curved, slender, 5–35 mm, equaling or exceeding sepals, glandular-puberulent. Flowers: sepals narrowly lanceolate, 4–5 mm, margins narrow, midrib present, apex obtuse, glandular-pubescent towards base; petals 5–8 mm, 1–1.5 times as long as sepals, apex deeply 2-fid; stamens 10; styles 3(–6). Capsules ovoid-conic, oblong after dehiscence, straight, 7–10 mm, 1.5–2 times as long as sepals; teeth 6(–12), erect to spreading, margins convolute. Seeds brown, 0.5 mm diam., shallowly rugose; testa not inflated. 2n = 38.
Phenology
jun-aug (summer)
Altitude range
0–800 m;
Distribution
GreenlandEuropeamphi-Atlantic.Canada Nfld. and Labr.Canada NunavutCanada Que.
Discussion
Cerastium cerastoides is an unusual member of the genus because it normally has only three styles and a straight, six-toothed capsule, rather than a curved capsule as in most of the other species. The blunt sepals help to distinguish this species from C. arvense subsp. strictum, with which it is most likely to be confused. The epithet of this species is often misspelled “cerastioides.”

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