[Saxifrages: The Genera Cascadia, Micranthes and Saxifraga in the Cascade Mountains of Oregon and Washington]
Merten's Saxifrage, Wood Saxifrage, Woodland Saxifrage
Saxifraga mertensiana
Synonym: Saxifraga mertensiana var. eastwoodiae
Merten's saxifrage on moist slopes east of Rowena Overlook, between
Mosier and The Dalles, OR....April 5, 1997.
Leaf of Merten's saxifrage
on moist slopes east of Rowena Overlook, between Mosier and The Dalles, OR....April
5, 1997. Note the broad teeth or lobes that are further divided into smaller (although
fairly large) teeth.
Characteristics:
Merten's saxifrage is a perennial with flowering stems arising
15-40 cm high above 1-3 basal leaves which sit atop short thick rhizomes. The
herbage is smooth to having long, soft, spreading hairs or glands on the stem.
The succulent leaves are large and round with large teeth on the margins (See
photo at right.) The hairy leaf stems are 1-4 times longer than the blades which
are 3-10 cm wide and nearly as long.
The inflorescence is an open cyme or panicle, with many flowers.
Some of the flowers may be replaced by pink bulblets. The 5 petals are white,
oblong-elliptic to obovate in shape, narrowing quickly to a clawless or short-clawed
base. The petals are each about 3-5 mm long. The calyx is cleft nearly to the
base, with each of the 5 lanceolate to lanceolate-oblong lobes reflexed outwards.
The stamens are roughly equal in length to the petals with pink anthers.
Habitat:
Merten's saxifrage may be found on wet shady cliffs or along
streams.
Range:
Merten's saxifrage may be found from southern Alaska south between
the coast and the Cascade crest to the central Sierra Nevada of California.
In British Columbia, it extends eastward to northwest Montana and south through
central Idaho to northeastern Oregon.
In the Columbia River Gorge, it may be found primarily on the
Oregon side of the river between the elevations of 100'-4000' from west of Crown
Point to as far east as Mayer State Park.
The photo above shows a close-up of the flower
of Merten's saxifrage. Note the narrowly ovate petals that taper gradually to
a pointed tip and the base of the petal that tapers abruptly to a claw. Unlike
brook saxifrage, the petals are rarrower and all roughly the same size and shape.
The 10 stamens have club-shaped filaments about as long as the petals.
The photo above shows a close-up of the leaves
and inflorescence of Merten's saxifrage as seen on the McCord Creek Trail in
the western Columbia River Gorge........May 2005. On this particular plant,
the flowers have been replaced by numerous pinkish bulbils which can propagate
vegetatively.
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Merten's saxifrage on moist rocky slopes atop Sister Rocks, northwestern corner of the Trapper Creek Wilderness..........June 22, 2013.
Paul Slichter