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my native cory- Corydalis aureahas been in flower for several weeks now, and will continue through summer; because plants are biennial and don't usually seem to seed back in to the same spot (they like disturbed soil, and most spots here grow over in a year or two) i have to hunt for them over again every year..luckily, they have also sown themselves into my yard in a couple of places, so i should be able to keep track of them and get some patches established..this is a good year for them in the bush, and i have found them in several places--i don't know how they spread-the seeds are heavy, yet turn up in widely scattered sites..they are assoicated a lot with soil turned up by pocket gophers, as they like the loose soil, don't know if they spread the seeds...
Quote from: cohan on June 01, 2010, 07:06:25 PMmy native cory- Corydalis aureahas been in flower for several weeks now, and will continue through summer; because plants are biennial and don't usually seem to seed back in to the same spot (they like disturbed soil, and most spots here grow over in a year or two) i have to hunt for them over again every year..luckily, they have also sown themselves into my yard in a couple of places, so i should be able to keep track of them and get some patches established..this is a good year for them in the bush, and i have found them in several places--i don't know how they spread-the seeds are heavy, yet turn up in widely scattered sites..they are assoicated a lot with soil turned up by pocket gophers, as they like the loose soil, don't know if they spread the seeds...Looks like a nice one. I would guess that the seeds are dispersed by ants. Göte
Quote from: gote on June 04, 2010, 08:05:31 AMQuote from: cohan on June 01, 2010, 07:06:25 PMmy native cory- Corydalis aureahas been in flower for several weeks now, and will continue through summer; because plants are biennial and don't usually seem to seed back in to the same spot (they like disturbed soil, and most spots here grow over in a year or two) i have to hunt for them over again every year..luckily, they have also sown themselves into my yard in a couple of places, so i should be able to keep track of them and get some patches established..this is a good year for them in the bush, and i have found them in several places--i don't know how they spread-the seeds are heavy, yet turn up in widely scattered sites..they are assoicated a lot with soil turned up by pocket gophers, as they like the loose soil, don't know if they spread the seeds...Looks like a nice one. I would guess that the seeds are dispersed by ants. Götequite possible--but we are talking about plants scattered very thinly over a large area--say very roughly 4-6 locations with one to 3 plants over something like 75 hectares..the ants could spread them some metres from the plant, but (i'm speculating, no ant expert) i guess the ants will not cross the territory of many other ants to carry the seeds many hundreds of metres? the way this species quickly turns up in disturbed soil though, i suppose there could alsobe pre-existing seed in many places that doesn't germinate until the right conditions arrive..
Most Corydalis growing in forests have ephemeral seeds but this refers to perennial species. An annual or biennial would need seeds that persist otherwise the species could be wiped out by a bad year. I am also not an ant expert but my guess is that they may not go further than say a hundred meters (Help Anthony!) which is not enough to explain your spread. Göte
Hi McMarkI agree that there is still a lot of taxonomic work to be done on Corydalis but check out Bulb log 25 2009 where you will see some pictures showing the large long stemmed basal leaf found on so called true C. elata.