Aquilegia longissima

{{Short description|North American species of columbine}}

{{Speciesbox

|status = G3

|status_system = TNC

|status_ref =

|image = Aquilegia longissima BBNP 1.jpg

|genus = Aquilegia

|species = longissima

|authority = A.Gray ex S.Watson

|synonyms=Aquilegia coerulea f. longissima (A.Gray) Rapaics

|synonyms_ref=

}}

Aquilegia longissima, the long-spur columbine or long-spurred columbine, is a rare perennial flowering plant in the family Ranunculaceae that is native to northern Mexico, Texas, and Arizona.

Description

Aquilegia longissima grows to {{cvt|25–90|cm}} tall, with biternate basal leaves measuring {{cvt|20–45|cm}} across, usually shorter than the stems. The flowers are erect with pale yellow lanceolate sepals of {{cvt|25–40|mm}} length, spreading at right angles to the petals. The petals are yellow, spoon-shaped, and {{cvt|15–30|mm}} long.

The most remarkable feature of the species is the extremely long nectar spurs, measuring {{cvt|72–180|mm}}, straight, evenly tapered, and very slender in shape, and usually hanging straight down. They are the longest spurs of any eudicot.

Taxonomy

In the original species description by Asa Gray in 1883, Aquilegia longissima is distinguished from the shorter-spurred golden columbine Aquilegia chrysantha by the narrow spatulate petals and long, slender spurs hanging straight down.

The species is part of a clade containing all the North American species of columbines, that likely split from their closest relatives in East Asia in the mid-Pliocene, approximately 3.84 million years ago.

=Etymology=

The specific epithet longissima means "longest" in Latin, referring to the unusual size of the nectar spurs.

Distribution and habitat

Aquilegia longissima is native to Trans-Pecos Texas and southern Arizona in the United States and Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo León, and Sonora in northern Mexico. It grows at altitudes of {{cvt|1370–1520|m}} in gravelly limestone or igneous soils, on canyon walls, and along streams, drainages, springs, or waterfalls, within shady, mesic canyons of pine-oak or pine-oak-juniper woodlands.

Ecology

Aquilegia longissima flowers from July to September.

William Trelease hypothesized in 1883 that the most likely pollinator of A. longissima would be the giant sphinx moth, Cocytius antaeus. The giant sphinx moth is a rare stray in west Texas and has been collected in Big Bend National Park near long-spur columbine populations; however, the common pollinators are likely large hawkmoths in the genera Manduca and Agrius with tongue lengths from {{cvt|9–14|cm}} long.

Hybridization is common among columbines and populations with intermediate spur lengths from {{cvt|7–9|cm}} are found near some long-spur columbine populations. One such population is found at Cattail Falls in Big Bend National Park, a site significantly impacted by human visitation.

Conservation

{{As of|2024|November}}, NatureServe listed Aquilegia longissima as Vulnerable (G3) worldwide. This status was last reviewed on {{Nowrap|19 November 1997}}. In individual states, it is listed as Imperiled (S2) in Texas and has no status rank in Arizona. It has not been assessed for the IUCN Red List.

References

{{Commons category}}

{{Reflist|30em|refs=

{{Catalogue of Life | id=FZT2 |option=taxon |title=Aquilegia longissima A. Gray ex S. Watson |access-date=14 November 2024}}

{{ cite book| last1= Correll | first1=Donovan S. | last2=Johnston | first2= Marshall C. |date= 1970 | title= Manual of the Vascular Plants of Texas | location= Renner, Texas | publisher= Texas Research Foundation | page= 638 }}

{{eFloras|1|233500112|Aquilegia longissima |family=Ranunculaceae |first=Alan T. |last=Whittemore | access-date = 14 November 2024 }}

{{cite journal |last1= Fior|first1= Simone|last2= Li|first2= Mingai|last3= Oxelman|first3= Bengt|last4= Viola|first4= Roberto|last5= Hodges|first5= Scott A.|last6= Ometto|first6= Lino|last7= Varotto|first7= Claudio|title= Spatiotemporal reconstruction of the Aquilegia rapid radiation through next-generation sequencing of rapidly evolving cpDNA regions|journal= New Phytologist|year= 2013|volume= 198|issue= 2|pages= 579–592|doi=10.1111/nph.12163 |pmid= 23379348|doi-access= free|bibcode= 2013NewPh.198..579F}}

{{cite journal|last1= Gray|first1= Asa|title=Aquilegia longissima|journal=Botanical Gazette |year=1883|volume=8|pages=295}}

{{cite web |title=Aquilegia - genus |url=https://www.iucnredlist.org/search?taxonomies=105408&searchType=species |date=2024 |website=IUCN Red List |access-date=13 November 2024 }}

{{Cite NatureServe|date= 1 November 2024|id=2.137278|title=Aquilegia longissima|access-date=14 November 2024}}

{{cite POWO |id=708941-1 |title=Aquilegia longissima A.Gray ex S.Watson |access-date=14 November 2024}}

{{cite book |last=Rickett |first=Harold William |title=Wildflowers of the United States - Texas |publisher=McGraw-Hill Book Co. |location=New York |publication-date=1966 |volume=3 (1) |page=102}}

{{cite web|title=Conservation Implications of Spur Length Variation in Long-Spur Columbines ("Aquilegia longissima")|last=Stubben, CJ and BG Milligan|year=2007|url=http://www.treesearch.fs.fed.us/pubs/29596}}

{{cite journal|last1= Trelease|first1= William|title=Aquilegia longissima|journal=Botanical Gazette |year=1883|volume=8|pages=319}}

}}

{{Taxonbar |from=Q15365595}}

longissima

Category:Flora of Arizona

Category:Flora of Texas

Category:Flora of Chihuahua (state)

Category:Flora of Coahuila

Category:Flora of Nuevo León

Category:Flora of Sonora

Category:Taxa named by Asa Gray