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  1. Draba fladnizensis

    Draba fladnizensis is a species of plant in the family Brassicaceae known by the common names arctic draba, Austrian draba, and white arctic whitlow-grass. It has a circumpolar distribution, occurring throughout the northern latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere. It is present in Europe, Asia, and North America from Alaska across northern Canada to Greenland. Its distribution extends south through the higher elevations in the Rocky Mountains to Colorado and Utah. It is common and widespread in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago, occurring on several Arctic islands including Baffin, Devon, and Ellesmere Islands. It is named after the Austrian village of Flattnitz, in the Gurktaler Alpen. This petite perennial plant grows at ground level, sometimes forming a mat around its caudex. The basal leaves have blades up to 1.6 centimeters long which are variable in shape. They have tiny hairs along the edges. There are sometimes one or two leaves on the short flowering stem. Wikipedia

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  3. explorer.natureserve.org

    Draba fladnizensis is a high elevation, alpine species throughout is circumpolar range. It is found in alpine tundra habitats in Europe, Canada, United States, and Asia. Throughout its range it is threatened by climate change, and in the US it is threatened in the most western part of its range, Utah by introduced mountain goats.
  4. inaturalist.org

    Draba fladnizensis is a species of flowering plant in the mustard family known by the common names arctic draba, Austrian draba, and white arctic whitlow-grass. It has a circumpolar distribution, occurring throughout the northern latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere. It is present in Europe, Asia, and North America from Alaska across northern Canada to Greenland.
  5. In the absence of flowers, the white-flowered Draba fladnizensis (2n = 16) is often confused with the yellow-flowered D. crassifolia (2n = 40). The latter is an annual or short-lived perennial that rarely forms a well-developed caudex, whereas D. fladnizensis almost always produces a distinct caudex. Although most individuals of both species ...
  6. fieldguide.mt.gov

    White Arctic Draba is a low perennial herb with 1 to a few leafless stems that are 2-6 cm high and which arise from basal leaf rosettes that, in turn, arise from the ends of a simple or branched rootcrown. ... White Arctic DrabaDraba fladnizensis. Montana Field Guide. Montana Natural Heritage Program. Retrieved on January 20, 2025, ...
  7. svalbardflora.no

    Draba fladnizensis is characterized by having only simple and sometimes forked, forward pointing hairs on the leaves, and glabrous stems and fruits. The only other white-flowered Draba in Svalbard with a predominance of simple hairs on the leaves (and glabrous stems and fruits), is D. lactea.This species, however, nearly always has some very small, multibranched hairs on the distal parts of ...
  8. powo.science.kew.org

    Draba fladnizensis var. glaberrima Gaudin in Fl. Helv. 4: 254 (1829) Draba fladnizensis var. homotricha (Lindblom) Ball in Bull. Soc. Bot. France 7: 230 (1860) Draba fladnizensis f. homotricha (Lindblom) E.Ekman in Svensk Bot. Tidskr. 26: 432 (1932)
  9. species.wikimedia.org

    Koch, M.A. et al. 2023. Draba fladnizensis in BrassiBase Tools and biological resources to study characters and traits in the Brassicaceae. Published online. Accessed: 2023 April 13. Govaerts, R. et al. 2023. Draba fladnizensis in Kew Science Plants of the World Online.The Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.Published online.
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