Micranthes integrifolia Small (redirected from: Saxifraga laevicarpa)
Family: Saxifragaceae
[Micranthes bidens Small,  more...]
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Plants solitary or in clumps, (sometimes gynodioecious), often with bulbils on caudices, or short-rhizomatous. Leaves basal; petiole flattened, 0.5-4 cm; blade narrowly to broadly ovate, 2-7 cm, ± leathery, base attenuate, margins entire or minutely denticulate, usually ciliate, surfaces sparsely to moderately hairy. Inflorescences (15-)20+-flowered, open to ± congested, conic thyrses, (usually branched, lateral cymules ± open), 12-35 cm, densely pink- to purple-tipped stipitate-glandular. Flowers: sepals spreading to slightly reflexed, ovate; petals white, not spotted, obovate, clawed, 2-4 mm, longer than sepals; filaments linear, flattened; pistils connate to 1/2 their lengths; ovary 1/2+ inferior. Capsules reddish or purplish, folliclelike. 2n = 38.

Flowering late winter-spring. Vernally moist mead-ows, grassy slopes, rock outcrops; 0-1800 m; B.C.; Calif., Oreg., Wash.

The occasional occurrence of sterile pollen has been noted in this as well as in other species of Micranthes (as Saxifraga, K. I. Beamish 1961). Some populations exhibit gynodioecism (P. E. Elvander 1982).