Ranunculus lappaceus
Common Buttercup
Common Buttercup
Not at ANBG
Overview:
Ranunculus lappaceus, commonly known as the common buttercup, Australian buttercup or Yarrakalgamba, is found across eastern Australia
Like buttercups elsewhere, it is a perennial herb with yellow flowers appearing in spring and summer
Common name: Common Buttercup
Conservation status: ...
Etymology:
The genus name Ranunculus is Late Latin for "little frog", the diminutive of rana; this probably refers to many species being found near water, like frogs
The species name is Latin "with burrs"
Flowers
The yellow five-petaled flowers are up to 4 cm wide and appear in spring and summer
Fruit:
Leaves:
Stem & branches:
Roots:
Habit:
Ranunculus lappaceus grows as a perennial herb which grows anywhere to 50 cm high
The new growth is hairy
Habitat:
Heavy moisture-retentive soils are the main habitat
In the Sydney region, R. lappaceus grows on alluvial or clay-based soils on Wianamatta Shale or basalt in open forest, with such trees as mountain blue gum (Eucalyptus deanei), ribbon gum (E. viminalis), forest red gum (E. tereticornis) or prickly paperbark (Melaleuca styphelioides)
R. lappaceus is found from sea level to an altitude of 1,200 m, and the annual rainfall of the area it occurs in the Sydney Basin is 700–1,200 mm
Distribution:
The range is across Eastern Australia, from Queensland, though NSW and Victoria and into South Australia, as well as Tasmania
In Western Australia, it is replaced by the similar species R. colonorum, which has recurved sepals
The latter species has been misidentified as R. lappaceus
Additional notes:
Taxonomy
James Edward Smith described it in 1815, and it still bears its original name
It is a member of the large cosmopolitan genus Ranunculus, known as buttercups
Miscellaneous
A field study conducted in Beaconsfield Upper found that Ranunculus lappaceus had flowered 78 days earlier in 2006 than it had in 1983, due to some form of change in climate
Ranunculus lappaceus adapts readily to cultivation in acidic soils in sun or part-shade
It can be grown in rockeries or general bedding
Sources of information: