Prairie Buttercup

The buttercup species is home to more than three hundred species of plants, most of them flowering.

Some grow on land, some in water and the vast majority of them are wildflowers, not normally cultivated by man.

Being one of the first bright yellow spring flowers, the midwestern eyes are always happy to see it after a long and windy winter.

Flowering Shrubs
Flowering Shrubs

The Prairie buttercup is found all over the midwest
The Prairie buttercup is found all over the midwest

The prairie buttercup did in fact orginally range much further to the east and south but a great deal of land cultivatino has virtually exterminated it for all intents and purposes, however there are of course many other types of buttercup, which live in both dry and marshy areas.

The Praire buttercup is a perennial, and will self proliferate, being found in heavy native pastures throughout the midwest.

It grows best in very rich moist soil but does not grow well in marshy areas and thus is not found in wetlands in the midwest.

The flowers of the prairie buttercup are about half an inch wide, whiel the leaves are rhombic, or very nearly round in nature, with teeth along their sides.

The upper leaves are dissected into  five narrow segments.

The entire plant may be only about a few inches tall, being smaller when blooming but will later grow longer to become about eight or ten inches tall, with fine silky hairs  on the leaves and stems.

Many buttercups have a very strong irritant in them that will harm the stomachs of livestock that graze on them, but they don’t actually poison the livestock primarily because they are not tasty plants and after a few bites they are usually left alone

“The name for the buttercup family (Ranunculaceae) and the generic name Ranunculus are from the Latin for “a little frog,” the name applied by the great Roman naturalist Pliny the Elder to these mostly aquatic plants that grow where frogs abound.”

Prairie buttercups were first described for scientific purposes by a Scottish botanist, in the early 1800’s( John Goldie) (1793-1886).

One Comment

Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *