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Dicentra (Greek dís "twice", kéntron "spur"),<ref>Template:LSJ, Template:LSJ</ref> known collectively as the bleeding-hearts, is a genus containing eight species of herbaceous flowering perennial plants with unique, "heart"-shaped flowers and finely divided foliage. The species are, primarily, native to North America, although several are found in temperate East Asia.

Description and growth requirementsEdit

Flowers have two tiny sepals and four petals. The flowers are bisymmetric: the two outer petals are spurred or pouched at the base and curved outwards or backwards at the tip, and the two inner ones with or without a crest at the tip. In Dicentra, all leaves are in a basal rosette, and flowers are on leafless stalks. In other genera with bisymmetric heart-shaped flowers (Lamprocapnos, Dactylicapnos, Ichtyoselmis, Ehrendorferia), leaves grow on stems as well as from the root.<ref name="dicentra">Template:Cite book</ref> Each of the two compound stamens is composed of one median and two lateral half stamens fused together. The stamens and pistil are held between the inner petals.

Native to Northeastern Asia, the Pacific Northwest, as well as parts of the eastern United States, Dicentra almost universally prefer growing in cool, temperate, wet forests with excellent drainage, often growing side-by-side with ferns, Hosta, mosses, and other shade- or dappled-light-loving species, depending on location and region. While Dicentra will bloom in filtered light or shade, if grown in poorly-drained soil and intense lighting, they will not bloom or thrive.<ref name="Hodges 2012">Template:Cite journal</ref>

Seeds with elaiosomes are borne in long capsules.

All parts of Dicentra are poisonous if ingested.

TaxonomyEdit

Current speciesEdit

The genus Dicentra includes plants whose flowers and leaves grow on stems directly from the roots. Species with branching stems used to be included in the genus, but have now been moved to other genera.<ref name="dicentra" />

Image Scientific name Common Name Distribution
File:Dicentra canadensis - Canadian Heart Flower.jpg Dicentra canadensis (Goldie) Walp. squirrel-corn eastern North America
File:Dicentra cucullaria.png Dicentra cucullaria (L.) Bernh. Dutchman's-breeches eastern North America, with a disjunct population in the Columbia Basin
File:Fringed bleeding-heart flower cluster.jpg Dicentra eximia (Ker-Gawl.) Torr. fringed bleeding-heart, turkey-corn Appalachian Mountains
File:Dicentra formosa by Danny S. - 001.JPG Dicentra formosa (Haw.) Walp. western or Pacific bleeding-heart Pacific Coast of North America
File:Dicentra nevadensis imported from iNaturalist photo 22525515 on 5 December 2019.jpg Dicentra nevadensis Eastw. Sierra bleeding-heart Sierra Nevada peaks of Tulare and Fresno Counties, endemic to central eastern California
File:Dicentrapauciflora.jpg Dicentra pauciflora S. Wats. short-horn steer's-head Oregon and California
File:Dicentra peregrina Komakusa.jpg Dicentra peregrina (Rudolphi) Makino komakusa Japan, the Kuril Islands, Sakhalin Island, and northeastern Siberia
File:Dicentra uniflora.jpg Dicentra uniflora Kellogg long-horn steer's-head western United States

Former speciesEdit

The genera Dactylicapnos, Ichtyoselmis, Ehrendorferia and Lamprocapnos were previously included as subgenera in Dicentra, but have been shown not to belong in this genus (see for example Flora of China)

  • Dactylicapnos Wall. (14 species of herbaceous climbers with yellow flowers, Himalaya to SW China)
    • Dactylicapnos burmanica (K.R.Stern) Lidén
    • Dactylicapnos grandifoliolata Merrill (Dicentra paucinervia K.R.Stern)
    • Dactylicapnos lichiangensis (Fedde) Hand.-Mazz.
    • Dactylicapnos macrocapnos (Prain) Hutchinson
    • Dactylicapnos roylei (Hook.f. & Th.) Hutchinson
    • Dactylicapnos scandens (D.Don) Hutchinson
    • Dactylicapnos schneideri (Fedde) Lidén
    • Dactylicapnos gaoligongshanensis Lidén
    • Dactylicapnos torulosa (Hook.f. & Th.) Hutchinson (Dicentra wolfdietheri Fedde)
    • Dactylicapnos cordata Lidén
  • Ehrendorferia Lidén (2 species of erect robust herbaceous perennials with yellow or cream erect flowers, Western N America)
  • Ichtyoselmis Lidén (1 species of large herbaceous perennial with serrate leaflets and large drooping cream flowers, China, Burma)
    • Ichtyoselmis macrantha (Oliver) Lidén
  • Lamprocapnos Endlicher (1 species of herbaceous perennial with large pink flowers in horizontal racemes, NE China, Korea)
    • Lamprocapnos spectabilis (L.) Fukuhara bleeding heart=Dicentra spectabilis Lem.

CultivationEdit

File:Dicentra 'King of Hearts' and 'Ivory Hearts'.jpg
Two bleeding-heart hybrids: Dicentra 'King of Hearts' (deep pink) and Dicentra 'Ivory Hearts' (white)

There are several hybrids and cultivars involving Dicentra eximia, Dicentra formosa, and Dicentra peregrina, including (those marked Template:Smallcaps have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit):-<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • Dicentra 'Aurora' — Dicentra formosa × Dicentra eximia — white flowers
  • D. formosa 'Bacchanal' (Template:Smallcaps)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • Dicentra 'Ivory Hearts' — Dicentra peregrina × Dicentra eximia 'Alba' — white
  • Dicentra 'King of Hearts' — Dicentra peregrina × (Dicentra formosa subsp. oregana × Dicentra eximia)
  • D. formosa 'Langtrees' (Template:Smallcaps)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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Hybrids involving Dicentra peregrina are often intolerant of hot, humid climates and sun, like the species itself.

ReferencesEdit

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