Creeping buttercup is perennial weed and the most common of the buttercups found in turf. It is an easy weed to recognise with its lovely golden yellow flowers that can add an array of colour if the infestation is widespread. It prefers heavy wet soils that often suffer from prolonged wetness and water logging. John discuses what to be wary of at the beginning of the season, how John removes weeds, why to not use membrane and more.Please Like and Follow Us on Facebo. Creeping buttercup, a King County Weed of Concern, is a low-growing perennial with creeping stolons that's found in rural and urban areas throughout King County, such as pastures, farmlands, natural wetlands, city gardens, and lawns. Stems reach one foot tall. Leaves are dark green with pale patches, divided into 3 toothed leaflets. Ranunculus repens, commonly known as creeping buttercup, is a weedy, stoloniferous perennial that typically rises to 8-12' tall, but spreads to 36' wide or more by prostrate stems that root in the ground at the nodes. It will form a dense ground cover in moist areas. Creeping buttercup Description: Creeping buttercup is a short perennial plant (about 6-12 inches tall) with bright yellow flowers that shoot up to 24 inches high. The long stems grow along the ground and take root at the leaf nodes. The three-part leaves are dark green, often with pale spots, and have deeply toothed margins.
Ranunculus repens | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Order: | Ranunculales |
Family: | Ranunculaceae |
Genus: | Ranunculus |
Species: | |
Binomial name | |
Ranunculus repens |
Ranunculus repens, the creeping buttercup, is a flowering plant in the buttercup family Ranunculaceae, native to Europe, Asia and northwestern Africa.[1][2] It is also called creeping crowfoot and (along with restharrow) sitfast.[3]
Description[edit]

It is a herbaceous, stoloniferousperennial plant growing to 50 cm (20 inches) tall. It has both prostrate running stems, which produce roots and new plants at the nodes, and more or less erect flowering stems. The basal leaves are compound, borne on a 4–20 cm (1.6–7.9 inches) long petiole and divided into three broad leaflets 1.5–8 cm (0.59–3.15 inches) long, shallowly to deeply lobed, each of which is stalked, distinguishing the species from Ranunculus acris in which the terminal leaflet is sessile.[4] The leaves higher on the stems are smaller, with narrower leaflets and may be simple and lanceolate. Both the stems and the leaves are finely hairy. The flowers are golden yellow, glossy, and 2–3 cm (0.79–1.18 inches) diameter, usually with five petals, and the flower stem is finely grooved. The gloss is caused by the smooth upper surface of the petal that acts like a mirror; the gloss aids in attracting pollinating insects and thermoregulation of the flower's reproductive organs.[5][6] The fruit is a cluster of achenes 2.5–4 mm (0.098–0.157 inches) long. Creeping buttercup has three-lobed dark green, white-spotted leaves that grow out of the node. It grows in fields and pastures and prefers wet soil.[7][8]
Habitat[edit]
It is a very common weed of agricultural land and gardens, spreading quickly by its rooting stolons and resisting removal with a deeply anchored filamentous root ball. In Ireland: very common in damp places, ditches and flooded areas.[4][9]
Cultivation and uses[edit]
Creeping buttercup was sold in many parts of the world as an ornamental plant, and has now become an invasive species in many parts of the world.[2]
Like most buttercups, Ranunculus repens is poisonous, although when dried with hay these poisons are lost. The taste of buttercups is acrid, so cattle avoid eating them. The plants then take advantage of the cropped ground around it to spread their stolons. Creeping buttercup also is spread through the transportation of hay. Contact with the sap of the plant can cause skin blistering.[10]
Etymology[edit]
Ranunculus is a diminutive of 'rana', meaning 'little frog'. This name is in reference to the amphibious habitat of many Ranunculus species.[11]
Repens means 'creeping' or 'stoloniferous'.[11]
References[edit]
- ^Ranunculus repens L. Flora Europaea
- ^ ab'Ranunculus repens'. Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN). Agricultural Research Service (ARS), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). Retrieved 24 December 2017.
- ^Oxford English Dictionary entry for 'Sit-fast':2. Sc.a. The plants restharrow and creeping crowfoot. 1808 JAMIESON, Sitfasts, restharrow. 1825 {emem} Suppl., Sitfast, Creeping Crowfoot, Ranunculus Repens.
- ^ abParnell, P. and Curtis, T. (2012). Webb's An Irish Flora. Cork University Press. ISBN978-185918-4783
- ^Van Der Kooi, C. J.; Elzenga, J.T.M.; Dijksterhuis, J.; Stavenga, D.G. (2017). 'Functional optics of glossy buttercup flowers'. Journal of the Royal Society Interface. 14 (127): 20160933. doi:10.1098/rsif.2016.0933. PMC5332578. PMID28228540.
- ^Buttercups focus light to heat their flowers and attract insects New Scientist 25 February 2017
- ^Blamey, M. & Grey-Wilson, C. (1989). Flora of Britain and Northern Europe. ISBN0-340-40170-2
- ^Flora of NW Europe: Ranunculus repens[permanent dead link]
- ^Hackney, P. (1992). Stewart and Corry's Flora of the North-east of Ireland. Third Edition. Institute of Irish Studies and The Queen's University of Belfast ISBN0-85389-446-9.
- ^Ranunculus repens. Plants for a Future
- ^ abGledhill, David (2008). 'The Names of Plants'. Cambridge University Press. pp. 326, 328. ISBN9780521685535
Creeping Buttercup Ground Cover
External links[edit]
- Media related to Ranunculus repens at Wikimedia Commons
Creeping Buttercup Plants
