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{{Short description|Species of plant}}
{{speciesbox
{{Use American English|date=March 2023}}
| taxon = Boykinia richardsonii
{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2023}}
{{Speciesbox
| image = Boykinia richardsonii (6186466601).jpg
| image = Boykinia richardsonii (6186466601).jpg
| image_caption =
| image_caption =
|status = G4
| authority = ([[William Jackson Hooker|Hook.]]) [[Asa Gray|Gray]] ''ex'' [[Benjamin Daydon Jackson|B.D.Jacks.]]
|status_system = TNC
|status_ref = <ref name="NatureServe">{{cite web |last1=NatureServe |title=''Boykinia richardsonii'' Richardson's Brookfoam |url=https://explorer.natureserve.org/Taxon/ELEMENT_GLOBAL.2.147288/Boykinia_richardsonii |website=NatureServe Explorer |publisher=NatureServe |access-date=1 May 2023 |location=Arlington, Virginia |date=2023}}</ref>
| genus = Boykinia
| species = richardsonii
| authority = ([[William Jackson Hooker|Hook.]]) [[Joseph Rothrock|Rothr.]]
| synonyms =
| synonyms =
* ''Saxifraga richardsonii'' (Hook.)
* ''Saxifraga richardsonii'' Hook.
* ''Therofon richardsonii'' (Hook.) [[Otto Kuntze|Kuntze]]
* ''Therofon richardsonii'' (Hook.) [[Otto Kuntze|Kuntze]]
* ''Saxifraga nelsoniana'' Hook. & [[George A. Walker Arnott|Arn]].
* ''Saxifraga nelsoniana'' Hook. & [[George A. Walker Arnott|Arn.]]
* ''Hemieva richardsonii'' [[Constantine Samuel Rafinesque|Raf.]]
* ''Hemieva richardsonii'' [[Constantine Samuel Rafinesque|Raf.]]
}}
}}

'''''Boykinia richardsonii''''' is a species of flowering plant in the ''[[Saxifragaceae]]'' family, [[endemism|endemic]] to [[Alaska]] and the adjacent Canadian territory of [[Yukon]]. It is commonly known as '''Richardson's brookfoam''', but has also been called '''Alaska boykin''', '''bearflower''',<ref name="ITIS page">{{cite web|title=''Boykinia richardsonii''|url=https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=501038#null|website=[[Integrated Taxonomic Information System]]|access-date=February 1, 2023}}</ref> '''Richardson's boykin''' and '''Richardson's saxifrage'''.<ref name="Louise Murie Macleod story">{{cite news|last=Hatch|first=Cory|title=Conservation icon, 100, to publish book|url=https://www.jhnewsandguide.com/archives/conservation-icon-100-to-publish-book/article_e1edcb13-4e71-5311-8ca8-01e4d4a0cb22.html|newspaper=Jackson Hole News & Guide|location=[[Jackson Hole, Wyoming]]|date=March 21, 2012|access-date=February 3, 2023}}</ref> "Bearflower" reflects its popularity with [[grizzly bears]] as [[forage]] in the summer months when it flowers.<ref name="NPS Denali quilt page">{{cite web|title=Interpreting Denali's Landcover Types with Fabric|author=[[Denali National Park and Preserve]]|url=https://www.nps.gov/articles/aps-v6-i2-c10.htm|publisher=[[U.S. National Park Service]]|access-date=January 31, 2023}}</ref><ref name="Bear grazing thesis">{{cite web|last=Hechtel|first=John|title=Activity and food habits of barren-ground grizzly bears in arctic Alaska|url=https://www.adfg.alaska.gov/static/home/library/pdfs/wildlife/research_pdfs/activity_food_habits_barren_ground_grizzly_bears.pdf|date=1985|publisher=[[University of Montana]]|pages=61–62|via=[[Alaska Department of Fish and Game]]|access-date=January 31, 2023}}</ref>
'''''Boykinia richardsonii''''' is a species of flowering plant in the [[Family (biology)|family]] ''[[Saxifragaceae]]'', [[endemism|endemic]] to [[Alaska]] and the adjacent Canadian territory of [[Yukon]]. It is commonly known as '''Richardson's brookfoam''', but has also been called '''Alaska boykin''', '''bearflower''',<ref name="ITIS page">{{cite web|title=''Boykinia richardsonii''|url=https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=501038#null|website=[[Integrated Taxonomic Information System]]|access-date=February 1, 2023}}</ref> '''Richardson's boykin''' and '''Richardson's saxifrage'''.<ref name="Louise Murie Macleod story">{{cite news|last=Hatch|first=Cory|title=Conservation icon, 100, to publish book|url=https://www.jhnewsandguide.com/archives/conservation-icon-100-to-publish-book/article_e1edcb13-4e71-5311-8ca8-01e4d4a0cb22.html|newspaper=Jackson Hole News & Guide|location=[[Jackson Hole, Wyoming]]|date=March 21, 2012|access-date=February 3, 2023}}</ref> "Bearflower" reflects its popularity with [[grizzly bears]] as [[forage]] in the summer months when it flowers.<ref name="NPS Denali quilt page">{{cite web|title=Interpreting Denali's Landcover Types with Fabric|author=[[Denali National Park and Preserve]]|url=https://www.nps.gov/articles/aps-v6-i2-c10.htm|publisher=[[U.S. National Park Service]]|access-date=January 31, 2023}}</ref><ref name="Bear grazing thesis">{{cite web|last=Hechtel|first=John|title=Activity and food habits of barren-ground grizzly bears in arctic Alaska|url=https://www.adfg.alaska.gov/static/home/library/pdfs/wildlife/research_pdfs/activity_food_habits_barren_ground_grizzly_bears.pdf|date=1985|publisher=[[University of Montana]]|pages=61–62|via=[[Alaska Department of Fish and Game]]|access-date=January 31, 2023}}</ref>


The species is named for Scottish naturalist [[John Richardson (naturalist)|John Richardson]], who first identified it on his mid-1820s exploration of the western [[Canadian Arctic]] coast with [[John Franklin]]. [[William Jackson Hooker]] first described it in ''Flora Boreali-Americana'', the 1833 account of plant species identified on that expedition. It was originally misclassified as part of the genus ''[[Saxifraga]]''.
The species is named for Scottish naturalist [[John Richardson (naturalist)|John Richardson]], who first identified it on his mid-1820s exploration of the western [[Canadian Arctic]] coast with [[John Franklin]]. [[William Jackson Hooker]] first described it in ''Flora Boreali-Americana'', the 1833 account of plant species identified on that expedition. It was originally misclassified as part of the genus ''[[Saxifraga]]''.


''B. richardsonii'' is believed to have evolved in temperate Arctic forests of the [[Neogene]], or Late Tertiary, period and survived through the ensuing [[glacial period]]s since much of [[Beringia]] remained an unglaciated [[Refugium (population biology)|refugium]].<ref name="BLM report">{{cite report|last1=Cortés-Burns|first1=Helen|last2=Carlson|first2=Matthew L.|last3=Lipkin|first3=Robert|last4=Flagstad|first4=Lindsey|last5=Yokel|first5=David|date=December 2009|title=Rare Vascular Plants of the North Slope: A Review of the Taxonomy, Distribution, and Ecology of 31 Rare Plant Taxa That Occur in Alaska's North Slope Region|url=https://www.blm.gov/sites/blm.gov/files/documents/files/Library_Alaska_TechnicalReport58.pdf|publisher=[[U.S. Bureau of Land Management]]|page=5|access-date=January 31, 2023}}</ref> Today it is found at lower elevations in open meadows or [[tundra]], along streams, and sometimes in the shade provided by [[Salix arctica|Arctic willow]]
''Boykinia richardsonii'' is believed to have evolved in temperate Arctic forests of the [[Neogene]], or Late Tertiary, period and survived through the ensuing [[glacial period]]s since much of [[Beringia]] remained an unglaciated [[Refugium (population biology)|refugium]].<ref name="BLM report">{{cite report|last1=Cortés-Burns|first1=Helen|last2=Carlson|first2=Matthew L.|last3=Lipkin|first3=Robert|last4=Flagstad|first4=Lindsey|last5=Yokel|first5=David|date=December 2009|title=Rare Vascular Plants of the North Slope: A Review of the Taxonomy, Distribution, and Ecology of 31 Rare Plant Taxa That Occur in Alaska's North Slope Region|url=https://www.blm.gov/sites/blm.gov/files/documents/files/Library_Alaska_TechnicalReport58.pdf|publisher=[[U.S. Bureau of Land Management]]|page=5|access-date=January 31, 2023}}</ref> Today it is found at lower elevations in open meadows or [[tundra]], along streams, and sometimes in the shade provided by [[Salix arctica|Arctic willow]].


==Description==
==Description==


From a system of dark brown [[rhizome]]s spreading underground the plant's stem rises {{convert|10|–|60|cm|in}}, with capitate [[trichome]]s. [[Reniform leaf|Reniform]] [[basal leaves]], 2–7 cm long by 5–11 cm wide, generally one and a half times as wide, sprout from trichomous [[petiole (botany)|petioles]] 2.5–10 cm long. The leaves, glandular-[[pubescent (botany)|pubescent]] below and [[glabrousness#In botany|glabrate]] above with frequent [[stomata]], are shallowly lobed and 2-3 times [[glossary of leaf morphology|dentate]] on the margins. [[Stipule]]s, 2–5 millimeters long, are either a dilation of the petiole base or [[wikt:foliaceous|foliaceous]]; the smaller ones are fringed with [[wikt:subulate|subulate]] bristles.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph">{{cite journal |last1=Gornall |first1=Richard J. |last2=Bohm |first2=Bruce A. |title=A monograph of ''Boykinia'', ''Peltoboykinia'', ''Bolandra'' and ''Suksdorfia'' |journal=[[Botanical Journal of the Linnaean Society]] |date=January 1985 |volume=90 |issue=1 |pages=1–71 |doi=10.1111/j.1095-8339.1985.tb02201.x |url=https://www.researchgate.net/profile/R-Gornall/publication/258436970_A_monograph_of_Boykinia_Peltoboykinia_Bolandra_and_Suksdorfia_Saxifragaceae/links/55f1a06f08aef559dc486035/A-monograph-of-Boykinia-Peltoboykinia-Bolandra-and-Suksdorfia-Saxifragaceae.pdf |access-date=February 1, 2023}}</ref>{{rp|42–43}}
From a system of dark brown [[rhizome]]s spreading underground the plant's stem rises {{convert|10|–|60|cm|in}}, with capitate [[trichome]]s. [[Reniform leaf|Reniform]] [[basal leaves]], 2–7 cm long by 5–11 cm wide, generally one and a half times as wide, sprout from trichomous [[petiole (botany)|petioles]] 2.5–10 cm long. The leaves, glandular-[[pubescent (botany)|pubescent]] below and [[glabrousness#In botany|glabrate]] above with frequent [[stomata]], are shallowly lobed and 2–3 times [[glossary of leaf morphology|dentate]] on the margins. [[Stipule]]s, 2–5 millimeters long, are either a dilation of the petiole base or [[wikt:foliaceous|foliaceous]]; the smaller ones are fringed with [[wikt:subulate|subulate]] bristles.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph">{{cite journal |last1=Gornall |first1=Richard J. |last2=Bohm |first2=Bruce A. |title=A monograph of ''Boykinia'', ''Peltoboykinia'', ''Bolandra'' and ''Suksdorfia'' |journal=[[Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society]] |date=January 1985 |volume=90 |issue=1 |pages=1–71 |doi=10.1111/j.1095-8339.1985.tb02201.x |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/258436970 |access-date=February 1, 2023}}</ref>{{rp|42–43}}


[[Cauline leaves]] are similar to the stipules, fringed with brown hair. The plant's [[inflorescence]] is narrowly cylindrical, with three flowers on each branch. Its [[Pedicel (botany)|Pedicels]] are densely [[wikt:stipitate|stipitate]]-glandular.<ref name="Flora of North America">{{cite web|title=Boykinia richardsonii|url=http://floranorthamerica.org/Boykinia_richardsonii|website=[[Flora of North America]]|date=November 5, 2020|access-date=February 1, 2023}}</ref>
[[Cauline leaves]] are similar to the stipules, fringed with brown hair. The plant's [[inflorescence]] is narrowly cylindrical, with three flowers on each branch. Its [[Pedicel (botany)|pedicels]] are densely [[wikt:stipitate|stipitate]]-glandular.<ref name="Flora of North America">{{cite web|title=Boykinia richardsonii|url=http://floranorthamerica.org/Boykinia_richardsonii|website=[[Flora of North America]]|date=November 5, 2020|access-date=February 1, 2023}}</ref>


At the end of each pedicel is a calyx 6–14 mm long, divided at about half its length into [[sepal]]s, triangular to [[wikt:lanceolate|lanceolate]], another 3–7 mm. The free portion of the [[hypanthium]] is another 2–3 mm; its nectary is greenish or purple with an [[Ovary (botany)#Inferior ovary|inferior ovary]]. [[Petal]]s are white, sometimes with pink veins, ovate, 8-12 by 3-7 mm (generally double or triple the lengths of the sepals) with a [[Cuneate leaf|cuneate]] or clawed base. [[Stamen]]s are 3–5 mm long, generally equal or slightly shorter than the sepals. Filaments are 2-4 times the length of the [[Dehiscence (botany)#Anther dehiscence|undehisced anthers]].<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|42–43}}
At the end of each pedicel is a calyx 6–14 mm long, divided at about half its length into [[sepal]]s, triangular to [[wikt:lanceolate|lanceolate]], another 3–7 mm. The free portion of the [[hypanthium]] is another 2–3 mm; its nectary is greenish or purple with an [[Ovary (botany)#Inferior ovary|inferior ovary]]. [[Petal]]s are white, sometimes with pink veins, ovate, 8–12 by 3–7 mm (generally double or triple the lengths of the sepals) with a [[Cuneate leaf|cuneate]] or clawed base. [[Stamen]]s are 3–5 mm long, generally equal or slightly shorter than the sepals. Filaments are 2–4 times the length of the [[Dehiscence (botany)#Anther dehiscence|undehisced anthers]].<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|42–43}}


The plant's [[Capsule (fruit)|capsules]] are ovoid, [[wikt:turbinate|turbinate]] or [[Glossary of botanical terms#U|urceolate]]. The seeds within are smooth, brown and 1.3–1.9 mm long.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|42–43}}<ref name="Flora of North America" /> Their [[testa (botany)|testae]] are often creased or folded, but also covered with [[tubercule]]s, which do not protrude much above the seed coat's surface.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|25}}
The plant's [[Capsule (fruit)|capsules]] are ovoid, [[wikt:turbinate|turbinate]] or [[Glossary of botanical terms#U|urceolate]]. The seeds within are smooth, brown and 1.3–1.9 mm long.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|42–43}}<ref name="Flora of North America" /> Their [[testa (botany)|testae]] are often creased or folded, but also covered with [[tubercule]]s, which do not protrude much above the seed coat's surface.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|25}}
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==Taxonomy==
==Taxonomy==


In 1825 British naval commander [[John Franklin]] and naturalist [[John Richardson (naturalist)|John Richardson]] headed [[Mackenzie River expedition|an expedition to explore and map the coast]] of the northwestern [[Canadian Arctic]] mainland. After traveling overland to the mouth of the [[Mackenzie River]] along [[fur trading]] routes, the two split up the party between them. Franklin headed west, with the intent of going as far as possible, while Richardson went east with the goal of reaching the mouth of the [[Coppermine River]], which he and Franklin had started east from on [[Coppermine expedition|an ill-fated similar expedition]] attempting to reach [[Hudson Bay]] several years before. This time both expeditions were successful, with Richardson reaching the Coppermine and Franklin getting as far as [[Prudhoe Bay]] in today's Alaska, areas never previously visited by Europeans, and returning.<ref name="Richardson biography">{{cite web |url=http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=4670 |title=Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online'' |publisher=Library and Archive Canada |access-date=February 3, 2023}}</ref>
In 1825, British naval commander [[John Franklin]] and naturalist [[John Richardson (naturalist)|John Richardson]] headed [[Mackenzie River expedition|an expedition to explore and map the coast]] of the northwestern [[Canadian Arctic]] mainland. After traveling overland to the mouth of the [[Mackenzie River]] along [[fur trading]] routes, the two split up the party between them. Franklin headed west, with the intent of going as far as possible, while Richardson went east with the goal of reaching the mouth of the [[Coppermine River]], which he and Franklin had started east from on [[Coppermine expedition|an ill-fated similar expedition]] attempting to reach [[Hudson Bay]] several years before. This time both expeditions were successful, with Richardson reaching the Coppermine and Franklin getting as far as [[Prudhoe Bay]] in today's Alaska, areas never previously visited by Europeans, and returning.<ref name="Richardson biography">{{cite web |url=http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=4670 |title=Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online'' |publisher=Library and Archive Canada |access-date=February 3, 2023}}</ref>


The two botanists in Richardson's group, [[Alexander Collie]] and [[George Tradescant Lay]], discovered the flower and collected a specimen, stored in the [[Kew Gardens#Herbarium|Kew Gardens]] [[herbarium]] with the name of [[Frederick William Beechey]], Collie's commanding officers on another expedition, on it.<ref name="Kew page">{{cite web|title=''Boykinia richardsonii''|url=https://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:1012693-2|website=[[Plants of the World Online]]|publisher=[[Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew]]|date=2022|access-date=February 3, 2023}}</ref> This is likely a mistake as Collie and Lay were the designated botanists under Richardson.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|42–43}} So many new species were identified by the expedition that it was necessary to publish one volume for the plants and another for the animals.<ref name="Richardson biography" />
The two botanists in Richardson's group, [[Alexander Collie]] and [[George Tradescant Lay]], discovered the flower and collected a specimen, stored in the [[Kew Gardens#Herbarium|Kew Gardens]] [[herbarium]] with the name of [[Frederick William Beechey]], Collie's commanding officer on another expedition, on it.<ref name="Kew page">{{cite web|title=''Boykinia richardsonii''|url=https://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:1012693-2|website=[[Plants of the World Online]]|publisher=[[Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew]]|date=2022|access-date=February 3, 2023}}</ref> This is likely a mistake as Collie and Lay were the designated botanists under Richardson.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|42–43}} So many new species were identified by the expedition that it was necessary to publish one volume for the plants and another for the animals.<ref name="Richardson biography" />


[[William Jackson Hooker]] wrote ''Flora Boreali-Americana'', the catalogue of plant species. He described the plant as ''Saxifraga richardsonii'', saying an earlier identification as ''[[Saxifraga nelsoniana]]'' was incorrect. Hooker noted that its many glands and acute petals made it unlike any other ''Saxifraga'' save ''jamesii'', and that "the two might form a distinct little group."<ref name="Flora Boreali-Americana">{{cite book |last1=Hooker |first1=William James |author1-link=William Jackson Hooker |title=Flora Boreali-Americana, Vol. 1 |date=1840 |publisher=Bohn |page=247 |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Flora_Boreali_Americana/Yk5NAAAAYAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA247&printsec=frontcover |access-date=February 3, 2023}}</ref> [[Constantine Samuel Rafinesque]] alternatively proposed ''Hemieva richardsonii'' in 1837,<ref name="Kew page" /> as part of a genus later accepted as ''[[Suksdorfia]]'', based on its floral morphology. This was not accepted and later analyses have found it having much more in common with other ''[[Boykinia]]''.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|38}}
[[William Jackson Hooker]] wrote ''Flora Boreali-Americana'', the catalog of plant species. He described the plant as ''Saxifraga richardsonii'', saying an earlier identification as ''[[Saxifraga nelsoniana]]'' was incorrect. Hooker noted that its many glands and acute petals made it unlike any other ''Saxifraga'' save ''jamesii'', and that "the two might form a distinct little group."<ref name="Flora Boreali-Americana">{{cite book |last1=Hooker |first1=William James |author1-link=William Jackson Hooker |title=Flora Boreali-Americana, Vol. 1 |date=1840 |publisher=Bohn |page=247 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Yk5NAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA247 |access-date=February 3, 2023}}</ref> [[Constantine Samuel Rafinesque]] alternatively proposed ''Hemieva richardsonii'' in 1837,<ref name="Kew page" /> as part of a genus later accepted as ''[[Suksdorfia]]'', based on its floral morphology. This was not accepted and later analyses have found it having much more in common with other ''[[Boykinia]]''.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|38}}


Later, after [[Thomas Nuttall]] described ''Boykinia'' as another genus of the ''[[Saxifragaceae]]'' family in 1834,<ref name=trop1>{{ cite web |url=http://www.tropicos.org/Name/40030255 |title=Name - !''Boykinia'' Nutt. |quote=''nom. cons.''; Type Specimens: T: ''Boykinia aconitifolia'' Nutt. |work=Tropicos |publisher=[[Missouri Botanical Garden|Missouri Botanical Garden (MOBOT)]] |location=[[St. Louis, Missouri]] |access-date=February 3, 2023}}</ref> ''richardsonii'' and ''jamesii'' were both reassigned to it in 1868. [[Otto Kuntze]] proposed ''Therofon richardsonii'' in 1891, but it was rejected.<ref name="Kew page" />
Later, after [[Thomas Nuttall]] described ''Boykinia'' as another genus of the ''[[Saxifragaceae]]'' family in 1834,<ref name=trop1>{{ cite web |url=http://www.tropicos.org/Name/40030255 |title=Name - !''Boykinia'' Nutt. |quote=''nom. cons.''; Type Specimens: T: ''Boykinia aconitifolia'' Nutt. |work=Tropicos |publisher=[[Missouri Botanical Garden|Missouri Botanical Garden (MOBOT)]] |location=[[St. Louis, Missouri]] |access-date=February 3, 2023}}</ref> ''richardsonii'' and ''jamesii'' were both reassigned to it in 1868. [[Otto Kuntze]] proposed ''Therofon richardsonii'' in 1891, but it was rejected.<ref name="Kew page" />


In 1905 [[Carl Otto Rosendahl]] suggested that ''B. richardsonii'' belonged in a separate [[section (botany)|section]] of the genus which he named ''Renifolium'' after its distinctive leaf shape. [[Adolf Engler]] validated the idea a quarter-century later. Richard Gornall of [[Leicester University]] and Bruce A. Bohm of the [[University of British Columbia]] further expanded the idea into several sections of ''Boykinia'' in a 1985 ''[[Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society]]'' [[monograph]], based on distinctions such as ''richardsonii''{{'}}s five stamens compared to 10 in other species, three-flowered inflorescence, high [[polyploidy]], and [[flavonoid]] profile emphasizing [[flavone]]s in contrast to the more complex [[flavonols]] in the other species.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|37}} They considered it the [[type species]] of ''Renifolium''.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|42–43}}
In 1905, [[Carl Otto Rosendahl]] suggested that ''B.&nbsp;richardsonii'' belonged in a separate [[section (botany)|section]] of the genus which he named ''Renifolium'' after its distinctive leaf shape. [[Adolf Engler]] validated the idea a quarter-century later. Richard Gornall of [[Leicester University]] and Bruce A. Bohm of the [[University of British Columbia]] further expanded the idea into several sections of ''Boykinia'' in a 1985 ''[[Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society]]'' [[Monograph#Biology|monograph]], based on distinctions such as ''richardsonii''{{'}}s five stamens compared to 10 in other species, three-flowered inflorescence, high [[polyploidy]], and [[flavonoid]] profile emphasizing [[flavone]]s in contrast to the more complex [[flavonols]] in the other species.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|37}} They considered it the [[type species]] of ''Renifolium''.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|42–43}}

===Etymology===
[[File:Portrait of Sir John Richardson Wellcome M0002316.jpg|thumb|right|John Richardson in 1828]]
The species' binomial name recognizes two prominent early 19th-century naturalists. The ''Boykinia'' generic name honors plant collector Samuel Boykin of [[Milledgeville, Georgia]]. Hooker gave it its [[specific epithet]] after Richardson, under whose leadership it was first identified.<ref name="Arctic Guide" />

Three of its vernacular names also recognize Richardson's role in the form of an initial possessive; they differ in what kind of flower to call it. "Saxifrage"<ref name="Louise Murie Macleod story" /> recalls its original generic from before ''Boykinia'' was identified<ref name="Flora Boreali-Americana" /> and "boykin" is derived from its generic name.<ref name="Arctic Guide" /> "Brookfoam", probably the most commonly used,<ref name="Lee Petersen page">{{cite web|last=Petersen|first=Lee W.|title=Alaska boykinia – ''Boykinia richardsonii''|url=https://www.lwpetersen.com/alaska-wildflowers/alaska-boykinia-boykinia-richardsonii/|website=lwpetersen.com|date=July 1, 2021|access-date=February 8, 2023}}</ref> is the vernacular name for most ''Boykinia'' species.<ref name="NPS Denali quilt page" /><ref name="Arctic Guide" /><ref name="ITIS page" /><ref name="USDA page">{{cite web|title=''Boykinia richardsonii'' (Hook.) Rothr.|url=https://plants.usda.gov/home/plantProfile?symbol=BORI2|website=USDA Plants Database|publisher=[[United States Department of Agriculture]]|access-date=February 8, 2023}}</ref>

Within Alaska, two other names are common. "Bearflower" reflects its popularity as forage with grizzly bears during the summer months.<ref name="NPS Denali quilt page" /><ref name="Flora of North America" /> Hultén,<ref name="Alaska Flora">{{cite web|last=Hultén|first=Eric|authorlink=Eric Hultén|title=Boykinia richardsonii (Hook.) Gray|url=http://alaskaflora.org/hulten/do?method=detail&id=562-4|website=Flora of Alaska|date=1968|access-date=February 8, 2023}}</ref> and some other sources, use "Alaska boykinia".<ref name="Flora of North America" /><ref name="trop1" /> "I'm definitely learning that if it is found in Alaska, it's going to end up with some variation of 'Alaska' or 'Alaskan' in a name," wildlife photographer Lee Petersen remarked on this name in 2021, "and that's what Alaskans will call it, no matter how widely distributed it is."<ref name="Lee Petersen page" />


==Distribution and habitat==
==Distribution and habitat==


Delineations of the species' range vary but most agree on an area running across the [[Alaska North Slope]] into the foothills of the [[Brooks Range]] up to elevations of {{cvt|400|m}}, thence across the [[Canada-United States border|Canadian border]] through the [[Arctic National Wildlife Refuge]] (ANWR) into northern [[Yukon]] and [[Ivvavik National Park]], where it turns south through [[Vuntut National Park]], then bending southwest through the [[Porcupine River]] valley to finish at the [[Alaska Range]], found as high up the slopes as {{cvt|1700|m}} in [[Denali National Park and Preserve]]. Some maps show isolated areas on the [[Seward Peninsula]] and the [[Norton Sound]] coast.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|42–43}} Others extend it along the Arctic coast into the [[Northwest Territories]] to the Coppermine, the area where Richardson's team found the first specimens identified, or the entirety of northern Alaska.<ref name="Arctic Guide">{{cite book |last1=Chester |first1=Sharon |title=The Arctic Guide:Wildlife of the Far North |date=2016 |publisher=[[Princeton University Press]] |isbn=9781400865963 |page=494 |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Arctic_Guide/yDD9CwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA494&printsec=frontcover |access-date=February 4, 2023}}</ref>
Delineations of the species' range vary but most agree on an area running across the [[Alaska North Slope]] into the foothills of the [[Brooks Range]] up to elevations of {{cvt|400|m}}, thence across the [[Canada–United States border]] through the [[Arctic National Wildlife Refuge]] (ANWR) into northern [[Yukon]] and [[Ivvavik National Park]], where it turns south through [[Vuntut National Park]], then bending southwest through the [[Porcupine River]] valley to finish at the [[Alaska Range]], found as high up the slopes as {{cvt|1700|m}} in [[Denali National Park and Preserve]]. Some maps show isolated areas on the [[Seward Peninsula]] and the [[Norton Sound]] coast.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|42–43}} Others extend it along the Arctic coast into the [[Northwest Territories]] to the Coppermine, the area where Richardson's team found the first specimens identified, or the entirety of northern Alaska.<ref name="Arctic Guide">{{cite book |last1=Chester |first1=Sharon |title=The Arctic Guide:Wildlife of the Far North |date=2016 |publisher=[[Princeton University Press]] |isbn=9781400865963 |page=494 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yDD9CwAAQBAJ&pg=PA494 |access-date=February 4, 2023}}</ref>


Two early 20th century expeditions reported finding specimens across the [[Bering Strait]], in eastern [[Siberia]]. While [[Eric Hultén]] did not confirm this, he found it "very probable" that ''B. richardsonii'' would occur there as well. But it is not reported in either of the two most comprehensive Soviet-era catalogues of plants.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|42–43}} As a result, it is believed today that the two earlier reports of its occurrence in Siberia were mistaken.<ref name="Flora of North America" />
Two early 20th century expeditions reported finding specimens across the [[Bering Strait]], in eastern [[Siberia]]. While [[Eric Hultén]] did not confirm this, he found it "very probable" that ''B.&nbsp;richardsonii'' would occur there as well. But it is not reported in either of the two most comprehensive Soviet-era catalogs of plants.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|42–43}} As a result, it is believed today that the two earlier reports of its occurrence in Siberia were mistaken.<ref name="Flora of North America" /> The [[Global Biodiversity Information Facility]] records 17 occurrences in an area of the Swedish Arctic near the border with Norway, since 2006.<ref name="GBIF Swedish occurrences">{{cite web|title=''Boykinia richardsonii'' Hook. (Rothr.)|url=https://www.gbif.org/occurrence/search?dataset_key=38b4c89f-584c-41bb-bd8f-cd1def33e92f&taxon_key=7952076|website=[[Global Biodiversity Information Facility]]|date=July 7, 2022|access-date=February 7, 2023}}</ref>


Specimens from different areas of the range have been recorded as widely varying in their [[chromosome]] counts. A 1968 study of those from the Brooks Range found those had 84, a 2''n'' count way above that typical for the genus, while eight years later Alaska Range specimens were found to have 36. The only difference found in plants from the two regions is the greater equatorial diameter of pollen grains in the Brooks Range samples.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|44}}
Specimens from different areas of the range have been recorded as widely varying in their [[chromosome]] counts. A 1968 study of those from the Brooks Range found those had 84, a 2''n'' count way above that typical for the genus, while eight years later Alaska Range specimens were found to have 36. The only difference found in plants from the two regions is the greater equatorial diameter of pollen grains in the Brooks Range samples.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|44}}


Gornall and Bohm found this distinction merited further study if confirmed. They speculated it might correlate with plants growing in regions that were glaciated during [[Last Glacial Period|the last Ice Age]] and those that were not, such as the ANWR, Ivavvik and Vuntut parks along the northern Alaska–Yukon border.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|44}} ''B. richardsonii'' evolved prior to that time, during the [[Neogene]] (Late Tertiary) period 25–10 million years ago, when according to the fossil record from the Seward Peninsula much of today's Alaska was heavily forested, dominated by a mix of [[temperate forests|temperate]] species like [[hazelnut]] and [[Tsuga|hemlock]] with [[boreal forests|boreal]] species [[larch]] and [[spruce]]. When the glaciers came, many species native to these forests either migrated southward or went extinct. The [[Beringia]] [[Refugium (population biology)|refugium]] created in the areas not glaciated allowed ''B. richardsonii'' and some of the other species from these forests to survive in their original range,<ref name="BLM report" /> although they have remained [[endemism|endemic]] to it long after the glaciers' retreat.<ref name="Pielou book">{{cite book |last1=Pielou |first1=E.C. |author1-link=E.C. Pielou |title=A Naturalist's Guide to the Arctic |date=2012 |publisher=[[University of Chicago Press]] |isbn=9780226148670 |page=136 |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/A_Naturalist_s_Guide_to_the_Arctic/QQuqAAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA136&printsec=frontcover |access-date=February 5, 2023}}</ref>
Gornall and Bohm found this distinction merited further study if confirmed. They speculated it might correlate with plants growing in regions that were glaciated during [[Last Glacial Period|the last Ice Age]] and those that were not, such as the ANWR, Ivavvik and Vuntut parks along the northern Alaska–Yukon border.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|44}} ''B.&nbsp;richardsonii'' evolved prior to that time, during the [[Neogene]] (Late Tertiary) period 25–10 million years ago, when according to the fossil record from the Seward Peninsula much of today's Alaska was heavily forested, dominated by a mix of [[temperate forests|temperate]] species like [[hazelnut]] and [[Tsuga|hemlock]] with [[boreal forests|boreal]] species [[larch]] and [[spruce]]. When the glaciers came, many species native to these forests either migrated southward or went extinct. The [[Beringia]] [[Refugium (population biology)|refugium]] created in the areas not glaciated allowed ''B.&nbsp;richardsonii'' and some of the other species from these forests to survive in their original range,<ref name="BLM report" /> although they have remained [[endemism|endemic]] to it long after the glaciers' retreat.<ref name="Pielou book">{{cite book |last1=Pielou |first1=E.C. |author1-link=E.C. Pielou |title=A Naturalist's Guide to the Arctic |date=2012 |publisher=[[University of Chicago Press]] |isbn=9780226148670 |page=136 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QQuqAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA136 |access-date=February 5, 2023}}</ref>
[[File:Richardson's brookfoam on Firth River banks in Slope Reach, Ivvavik National Park, YT.jpg|thumb|left|''B. richardsonii'' on the banks of the [[Firth River]] in [[Ivvavik National Park]]]]
[[File:Richardson's brookfoam on Firth River banks in Slope Reach, Ivvavik National Park, YT.jpg|thumb|''B. richardsonii'' on the banks of the [[Firth River]] in [[Ivvavik National Park]]]]
With much less forest cover remaining today in its range, ''B. richardsonii'' has adapted to life on the mostly treeless [[tundra]], where it flowers during the brief summer months, from June to August. It most commonly grows in the gullies formed by streams or the meltwater between snow patches that linger into early summer. Patches that grow in the shade of dwarf shrubs, mostly various ''[[Salix]]'' species, particularly ''[[Salix arctica]]'', recall the species' sylvan beginnings. In the southern part of its range, it also occurs on the edges of, and just outside, subalpine forests. Throughout its range it is a [[calcicole]], preferring soil rich in [[Lime (material)|lime]].<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|44}}<ref name="Hultén book">{{cite book |last1=Hultén |first1=Eric |author1-link=Eric Hultén |title=Flora of Alaska and Neighboring Territories: A Manual of the Vascular Plants |date=1968 |publisher=[[Stanford University Press]] |isbn=9780804706438 |page=xx |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Flora_of_Alaska_and_Neighboring_Territor/Sd-Eh1GWsyoC?hl=en&gbpv=1 |access-date=February 6, 2023}}</ref>
With much less forest cover remaining today in its range, ''B.&nbsp;richardsonii'' has adapted to life on the mostly treeless [[tundra]], where it flowers during the brief summer months, from June to August. It most commonly grows in the gullies formed by streams or the meltwater between snow patches that linger into early summer. Patches that grow in the shade of dwarf shrubs, mostly various ''[[Salix]]'' species, particularly ''[[Salix arctica]]'', recall the species' sylvan beginnings. In the southern part of its range, it also occurs on the edges of, and just outside, subalpine forests. Throughout its range it is a [[calcicole]], preferring soil rich in [[Lime (material)|lime]].<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|44}}<ref name="Hultén book">{{cite book |last1=Hultén |first1=Eric |author1-link=Eric Hultén |title=Flora of Alaska and Neighboring Territories: A Manual of the Vascular Plants |date=1968 |publisher=[[Stanford University Press]] |isbn=9780804706438 |page=xx |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Sd-Eh1GWsyoC |access-date=February 6, 2023}}</ref>


==Ecology==
==Ecology==


In the Denali area, ''B. richardsonii'' has been observed to be popular [[grizzly bear]] [[forage]] in the summertime, so much so that it has come to be known locally as bearflower.<ref name="NPS Denali quilt page" /> A [[University of Montana]] graduate student who devoted his [[master's thesis]] to the feeding habits of grizzlies on barren ground in the Alaskan Arctic said the species was by far the most popular plant with them (although in some areas the bears ignored it in favor of the local grasses).<ref name="Bear grazing thesis" /> A similar study that followed bears with [[radiocollar]]s around the [[Firth River]] valley in Ivvavik National Park, near the northern end of the plant's range, found they were likewise the most popular plant with the bears there.<ref name="Ursus article">{{cite journal |last1=McHutchon |first1=A. Grant |last2=Wellwood |first2=Debbie |title=Grizzly Bear Food Habits in the Northern Yukon, Canada |journal=[[Ursus (journal)|Ursus]] |date=2003 |volume=14 |issue=3 |pages=225–235 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3873022 |access-date=February 7, 2023}}</ref>
In the Denali area, ''B.&nbsp;richardsonii'' has been observed to be popular [[grizzly bear]] [[forage]] in the summertime, so much so that it has come to be known locally as bearflower.<ref name="NPS Denali quilt page" /> A [[University of Montana]] graduate student who devoted his [[master's thesis]] to the feeding habits of grizzlies on barren ground in the Alaskan Arctic said the species was by far the most popular plant with them (although in some areas the bears ignored it in favor of the local grasses).<ref name="Bear grazing thesis" /> A similar study that followed bears with radiocollars around the [[Firth River]] valley in Ivvavik National Park, near the northern end of the plant's range, found they were likewise the most popular plant with the bears there.<ref name="Ursus article">{{cite journal |last1=McHutchon |first1=A. Grant |last2=Wellwood |first2=Debbie |title=Grizzly Bear Food Habits in the Northern Yukon, Canada |journal=[[Ursus (journal)|Ursus]] |date=2003 |volume=14 |issue=3 |pages=225–235 |jstor=3873022 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3873022 |access-date=February 7, 2023}}</ref>


[[Adolph Murie]] observed the plant's popularity with grizzlies during his studies in Alaska, once watching a bear spend two hours leisurely consuming ''richardsonii'' in a large patch (although it was more common for bears to consume it as part of a rotation of whatever plants were locally available, especially when that included [[Equisetum arvense|horsetail]], another favorite). He noted the flowers seemed to particularly interest the bears, often to the exclusion of the rest of the plant, although in one case he saw a bear discard the flowers and concentrate on the stems and leaves.<ref name="Adolph Murie book">{{cite book |last1=Murie |first1=Adolph |author1-link=Adolph Murie |title=The Grizzly Bears of Mount McKinley |date=1981 |publisher=[[U.S. National Park Service]] |pages=143–44 |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Grizzlies_of_Mount_McKinley/K6OqZadKX3gC?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA143&printsec=frontcover |access-date=February 7, 2023}}</ref>
[[Adolph Murie]] observed the plant's popularity with grizzlies during his studies in Alaska, once watching a bear spend two hours leisurely consuming ''richardsonii'' in a large patch (although it was more common for bears to consume it as part of a rotation of whatever plants were locally available, especially when that included [[Equisetum arvense|horsetail]], another favorite). He noted the flowers seemed to particularly interest the bears, often to the exclusion of the rest of the plant, although in one case he saw a bear discard the flowers and concentrate on the stems and leaves.<ref name="Adolph Murie book">{{cite book |last1=Murie |first1=Adolph |author1-link=Adolph Murie |title=The Grizzly Bears of Mount McKinley |date=1981 |publisher=[[U.S. National Park Service]] |pages=143–44 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K6OqZadKX3gC&pg=PA143 |access-date=February 7, 2023}}</ref>


In 1963, Murie recalled, he found even greater evidence than usual of ''richardsonii''{{'}}s popularity with grizzlies. That summer followed a heavier than usual winter, and snowbanks lingered later into the summer than usual. Berries, which grizzlies usually turn to foraging in the late summer months as the nutritional content of herbaceous plants declines, were consequently scarce. But the late snowmelt also resulted in a more abundant growth of ''richardsonii'' than usual for August, and Murie saw large patches thoroughly grazed. [[Feces#Feces of animals|Scat]] he analyzed at the time was correspondingly heavy with evidence of its consumption, and one sample he collected around the [[September equinox]] that year showed no evidence that the bear had eaten any berries, only ''richardsonii'', the latest he recalled that ever having been the case.<ref name="Adolph Murie book" />
In 1963, Murie recalled, he found even greater evidence than usual of ''richardsonii''{{'}}s popularity with grizzlies. That summer followed a heavier than usual winter, and snowbanks lingered later into the summer than usual. Berries, which grizzlies usually turn to foraging in the late summer months as the nutritional content of herbaceous plants declines, were consequently scarce. But the late snowmelt also resulted in a more abundant growth of ''richardsonii'' than usual for August, and Murie saw large patches thoroughly grazed. [[Feces#Feces of animals|Scat]] he analyzed at the time was correspondingly heavy with evidence of its consumption, and one sample he collected around the [[September equinox]] that year showed no evidence that the bear had eaten any berries, only ''richardsonii'', the latest he recalled that ever having been the case.<ref name="Adolph Murie book" />


Bears are not the only species that consume ''B. richardsonii''. Gornall and Bohm reported seeing some plants with their capsules broken open, suggesting to them that birds feed on the seeds.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|44}}
Bears are not the only species that consume ''B.&nbsp;richardsonii''. Gornall and Bohm reported seeing some plants with their capsules broken open, suggesting to them that birds feed on the seeds.<ref name="Gornall-Bohm Monograph" />{{rp|44}}

==Aesthetics==

Many observers have commented favorably on ''B.&nbsp;richardsonii''{{'}}s appearance. Hooker called it "truly handsome",<ref name="Flora Boreali-Americana" /> Hultén describes it as "magnificent"<ref name="Hultén book" /> Pielou calls it "showy"<ref name="Pielou book" /> and Murie called its inforescence "conspicuous".<ref name="Adolph Murie book" /> The [[U.S. National Park Service]] says the species is easily identifiable around Denali due to its "straight spike of white-pink flowers and kidney-shaped leaves covered in a waxy layer—no other plant in the park has this combination of characteristics."<ref name="NPS Denali quilt page" />

Murie's widow, Louise, said after her 100th birthday, upon the publication of ''McKinley Flora'', a collaboration with her husband that was published in 2012, having been thought lost for half a century, that ''B.&nbsp;richardsonii'' was her favorite Denali flower. "It was so changeable. The petals were mostly white, but in the center of each flower there was kind of a rose color. It's hard to describe those flowers, they're so complicated."<ref name="Louise Murie Macleod story" />


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
* {{Commons category-inline|Boykinia richardsonii|''Boykinia richardsonii''}}
*{{commonscat-inline}}
* {{Wikispecies-inline|Boykinia richardsonii|''Boykinia richardsonii''}}
*{{wikispecies-inline}}

{{taxonbar|from=Q15604693}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q15604693}}
{{Draft categories|1=

[[Category:Boykinia]]
[[Category:Boykinia|richardsonii]]
[[Category:Flora of Alaska]]
[[Category:Flora of Alaska]]
[[Category:Flora of Yukon]]
[[Category:Flora of Yukon]]
[[Category:Flora of the Northwest Territories]]
[[Category:Flora of the Northwest Territories]]
[[Category:Taxa named by William Jackson Hooker]]
[[Category:Taxa named by William Jackson Hooker]]
}}

Latest revision as of 15:56, 16 April 2024

Boykinia richardsonii

Apparently Secure  (NatureServe)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Saxifragales
Family: Saxifragaceae
Genus: Boykinia
Species:
B. richardsonii
Binomial name
Boykinia richardsonii
Synonyms
  • Saxifraga richardsonii Hook.
  • Therofon richardsonii (Hook.) Kuntze
  • Saxifraga nelsoniana Hook. & Arn.
  • Hemieva richardsonii Raf.

Boykinia richardsonii is a species of flowering plant in the family Saxifragaceae, endemic to Alaska and the adjacent Canadian territory of Yukon. It is commonly known as Richardson's brookfoam, but has also been called Alaska boykin, bearflower,[2] Richardson's boykin and Richardson's saxifrage.[3] "Bearflower" reflects its popularity with grizzly bears as forage in the summer months when it flowers.[4][5]

The species is named for Scottish naturalist John Richardson, who first identified it on his mid-1820s exploration of the western Canadian Arctic coast with John Franklin. William Jackson Hooker first described it in Flora Boreali-Americana, the 1833 account of plant species identified on that expedition. It was originally misclassified as part of the genus Saxifraga.

Boykinia richardsonii is believed to have evolved in temperate Arctic forests of the Neogene, or Late Tertiary, period and survived through the ensuing glacial periods since much of Beringia remained an unglaciated refugium.[6] Today it is found at lower elevations in open meadows or tundra, along streams, and sometimes in the shade provided by Arctic willow.

Description

[edit]

From a system of dark brown rhizomes spreading underground the plant's stem rises 10–60 centimetres (3.9–23.6 in), with capitate trichomes. Reniform basal leaves, 2–7 cm long by 5–11 cm wide, generally one and a half times as wide, sprout from trichomous petioles 2.5–10 cm long. The leaves, glandular-pubescent below and glabrate above with frequent stomata, are shallowly lobed and 2–3 times dentate on the margins. Stipules, 2–5 millimeters long, are either a dilation of the petiole base or foliaceous; the smaller ones are fringed with subulate bristles.[7]: 42–43 

Cauline leaves are similar to the stipules, fringed with brown hair. The plant's inflorescence is narrowly cylindrical, with three flowers on each branch. Its pedicels are densely stipitate-glandular.[8]

At the end of each pedicel is a calyx 6–14 mm long, divided at about half its length into sepals, triangular to lanceolate, another 3–7 mm. The free portion of the hypanthium is another 2–3 mm; its nectary is greenish or purple with an inferior ovary. Petals are white, sometimes with pink veins, ovate, 8–12 by 3–7 mm (generally double or triple the lengths of the sepals) with a cuneate or clawed base. Stamens are 3–5 mm long, generally equal or slightly shorter than the sepals. Filaments are 2–4 times the length of the undehisced anthers.[7]: 42–43 

The plant's capsules are ovoid, turbinate or urceolate. The seeds within are smooth, brown and 1.3–1.9 mm long.[7]: 42–43 [8] Their testae are often creased or folded, but also covered with tubercules, which do not protrude much above the seed coat's surface.[7]: 25 

Taxonomy

[edit]

In 1825, British naval commander John Franklin and naturalist John Richardson headed an expedition to explore and map the coast of the northwestern Canadian Arctic mainland. After traveling overland to the mouth of the Mackenzie River along fur trading routes, the two split up the party between them. Franklin headed west, with the intent of going as far as possible, while Richardson went east with the goal of reaching the mouth of the Coppermine River, which he and Franklin had started east from on an ill-fated similar expedition attempting to reach Hudson Bay several years before. This time both expeditions were successful, with Richardson reaching the Coppermine and Franklin getting as far as Prudhoe Bay in today's Alaska, areas never previously visited by Europeans, and returning.[9]

The two botanists in Richardson's group, Alexander Collie and George Tradescant Lay, discovered the flower and collected a specimen, stored in the Kew Gardens herbarium with the name of Frederick William Beechey, Collie's commanding officer on another expedition, on it.[10] This is likely a mistake as Collie and Lay were the designated botanists under Richardson.[7]: 42–43  So many new species were identified by the expedition that it was necessary to publish one volume for the plants and another for the animals.[9]

William Jackson Hooker wrote Flora Boreali-Americana, the catalog of plant species. He described the plant as Saxifraga richardsonii, saying an earlier identification as Saxifraga nelsoniana was incorrect. Hooker noted that its many glands and acute petals made it unlike any other Saxifraga save jamesii, and that "the two might form a distinct little group."[11] Constantine Samuel Rafinesque alternatively proposed Hemieva richardsonii in 1837,[10] as part of a genus later accepted as Suksdorfia, based on its floral morphology. This was not accepted and later analyses have found it having much more in common with other Boykinia.[7]: 38 

Later, after Thomas Nuttall described Boykinia as another genus of the Saxifragaceae family in 1834,[12] richardsonii and jamesii were both reassigned to it in 1868. Otto Kuntze proposed Therofon richardsonii in 1891, but it was rejected.[10]

In 1905, Carl Otto Rosendahl suggested that B. richardsonii belonged in a separate section of the genus which he named Renifolium after its distinctive leaf shape. Adolf Engler validated the idea a quarter-century later. Richard Gornall of Leicester University and Bruce A. Bohm of the University of British Columbia further expanded the idea into several sections of Boykinia in a 1985 Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society monograph, based on distinctions such as richardsonii's five stamens compared to 10 in other species, three-flowered inflorescence, high polyploidy, and flavonoid profile emphasizing flavones in contrast to the more complex flavonols in the other species.[7]: 37  They considered it the type species of Renifolium.[7]: 42–43 

Etymology

[edit]
John Richardson in 1828

The species' binomial name recognizes two prominent early 19th-century naturalists. The Boykinia generic name honors plant collector Samuel Boykin of Milledgeville, Georgia. Hooker gave it its specific epithet after Richardson, under whose leadership it was first identified.[13]

Three of its vernacular names also recognize Richardson's role in the form of an initial possessive; they differ in what kind of flower to call it. "Saxifrage"[3] recalls its original generic from before Boykinia was identified[11] and "boykin" is derived from its generic name.[13] "Brookfoam", probably the most commonly used,[14] is the vernacular name for most Boykinia species.[4][13][2][15]

Within Alaska, two other names are common. "Bearflower" reflects its popularity as forage with grizzly bears during the summer months.[4][8] Hultén,[16] and some other sources, use "Alaska boykinia".[8][12] "I'm definitely learning that if it is found in Alaska, it's going to end up with some variation of 'Alaska' or 'Alaskan' in a name," wildlife photographer Lee Petersen remarked on this name in 2021, "and that's what Alaskans will call it, no matter how widely distributed it is."[14]

Distribution and habitat

[edit]

Delineations of the species' range vary but most agree on an area running across the Alaska North Slope into the foothills of the Brooks Range up to elevations of 400 m (1,300 ft), thence across the Canada–United States border through the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) into northern Yukon and Ivvavik National Park, where it turns south through Vuntut National Park, then bending southwest through the Porcupine River valley to finish at the Alaska Range, found as high up the slopes as 1,700 m (5,600 ft) in Denali National Park and Preserve. Some maps show isolated areas on the Seward Peninsula and the Norton Sound coast.[7]: 42–43  Others extend it along the Arctic coast into the Northwest Territories to the Coppermine, the area where Richardson's team found the first specimens identified, or the entirety of northern Alaska.[13]

Two early 20th century expeditions reported finding specimens across the Bering Strait, in eastern Siberia. While Eric Hultén did not confirm this, he found it "very probable" that B. richardsonii would occur there as well. But it is not reported in either of the two most comprehensive Soviet-era catalogs of plants.[7]: 42–43  As a result, it is believed today that the two earlier reports of its occurrence in Siberia were mistaken.[8] The Global Biodiversity Information Facility records 17 occurrences in an area of the Swedish Arctic near the border with Norway, since 2006.[17]

Specimens from different areas of the range have been recorded as widely varying in their chromosome counts. A 1968 study of those from the Brooks Range found those had 84, a 2n count way above that typical for the genus, while eight years later Alaska Range specimens were found to have 36. The only difference found in plants from the two regions is the greater equatorial diameter of pollen grains in the Brooks Range samples.[7]: 44 

Gornall and Bohm found this distinction merited further study if confirmed. They speculated it might correlate with plants growing in regions that were glaciated during the last Ice Age and those that were not, such as the ANWR, Ivavvik and Vuntut parks along the northern Alaska–Yukon border.[7]: 44  B. richardsonii evolved prior to that time, during the Neogene (Late Tertiary) period 25–10 million years ago, when according to the fossil record from the Seward Peninsula much of today's Alaska was heavily forested, dominated by a mix of temperate species like hazelnut and hemlock with boreal species larch and spruce. When the glaciers came, many species native to these forests either migrated southward or went extinct. The Beringia refugium created in the areas not glaciated allowed B. richardsonii and some of the other species from these forests to survive in their original range,[6] although they have remained endemic to it long after the glaciers' retreat.[18]

B. richardsonii on the banks of the Firth River in Ivvavik National Park

With much less forest cover remaining today in its range, B. richardsonii has adapted to life on the mostly treeless tundra, where it flowers during the brief summer months, from June to August. It most commonly grows in the gullies formed by streams or the meltwater between snow patches that linger into early summer. Patches that grow in the shade of dwarf shrubs, mostly various Salix species, particularly Salix arctica, recall the species' sylvan beginnings. In the southern part of its range, it also occurs on the edges of, and just outside, subalpine forests. Throughout its range it is a calcicole, preferring soil rich in lime.[7]: 44 [19]

Ecology

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In the Denali area, B. richardsonii has been observed to be popular grizzly bear forage in the summertime, so much so that it has come to be known locally as bearflower.[4] A University of Montana graduate student who devoted his master's thesis to the feeding habits of grizzlies on barren ground in the Alaskan Arctic said the species was by far the most popular plant with them (although in some areas the bears ignored it in favor of the local grasses).[5] A similar study that followed bears with radiocollars around the Firth River valley in Ivvavik National Park, near the northern end of the plant's range, found they were likewise the most popular plant with the bears there.[20]

Adolph Murie observed the plant's popularity with grizzlies during his studies in Alaska, once watching a bear spend two hours leisurely consuming richardsonii in a large patch (although it was more common for bears to consume it as part of a rotation of whatever plants were locally available, especially when that included horsetail, another favorite). He noted the flowers seemed to particularly interest the bears, often to the exclusion of the rest of the plant, although in one case he saw a bear discard the flowers and concentrate on the stems and leaves.[21]

In 1963, Murie recalled, he found even greater evidence than usual of richardsonii's popularity with grizzlies. That summer followed a heavier than usual winter, and snowbanks lingered later into the summer than usual. Berries, which grizzlies usually turn to foraging in the late summer months as the nutritional content of herbaceous plants declines, were consequently scarce. But the late snowmelt also resulted in a more abundant growth of richardsonii than usual for August, and Murie saw large patches thoroughly grazed. Scat he analyzed at the time was correspondingly heavy with evidence of its consumption, and one sample he collected around the September equinox that year showed no evidence that the bear had eaten any berries, only richardsonii, the latest he recalled that ever having been the case.[21]

Bears are not the only species that consume B. richardsonii. Gornall and Bohm reported seeing some plants with their capsules broken open, suggesting to them that birds feed on the seeds.[7]: 44 

Aesthetics

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Many observers have commented favorably on B. richardsonii's appearance. Hooker called it "truly handsome",[11] Hultén describes it as "magnificent"[19] Pielou calls it "showy"[18] and Murie called its inforescence "conspicuous".[21] The U.S. National Park Service says the species is easily identifiable around Denali due to its "straight spike of white-pink flowers and kidney-shaped leaves covered in a waxy layer—no other plant in the park has this combination of characteristics."[4]

Murie's widow, Louise, said after her 100th birthday, upon the publication of McKinley Flora, a collaboration with her husband that was published in 2012, having been thought lost for half a century, that B. richardsonii was her favorite Denali flower. "It was so changeable. The petals were mostly white, but in the center of each flower there was kind of a rose color. It's hard to describe those flowers, they're so complicated."[3]

References

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  1. ^ NatureServe (2023). "Boykinia richardsonii Richardson's Brookfoam". NatureServe Explorer. Arlington, Virginia: NatureServe. Retrieved May 1, 2023.
  2. ^ a b "Boykinia richardsonii". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved February 1, 2023.
  3. ^ a b c Hatch, Cory (March 21, 2012). "Conservation icon, 100, to publish book". Jackson Hole News & Guide. Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Retrieved February 3, 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d e Denali National Park and Preserve. "Interpreting Denali's Landcover Types with Fabric". U.S. National Park Service. Retrieved January 31, 2023.
  5. ^ a b Hechtel, John (1985). "Activity and food habits of barren-ground grizzly bears in arctic Alaska" (PDF). University of Montana. pp. 61–62. Retrieved January 31, 2023 – via Alaska Department of Fish and Game.
  6. ^ a b Cortés-Burns, Helen; Carlson, Matthew L.; Lipkin, Robert; Flagstad, Lindsey; Yokel, David (December 2009). Rare Vascular Plants of the North Slope: A Review of the Taxonomy, Distribution, and Ecology of 31 Rare Plant Taxa That Occur in Alaska's North Slope Region (PDF) (Report). U.S. Bureau of Land Management. p. 5. Retrieved January 31, 2023.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Gornall, Richard J.; Bohm, Bruce A. (January 1985). "A monograph of Boykinia, Peltoboykinia, Bolandra and Suksdorfia". Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. 90 (1): 1–71. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.1985.tb02201.x. Retrieved February 1, 2023.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Boykinia richardsonii". Flora of North America. November 5, 2020. Retrieved February 1, 2023.
  9. ^ a b "Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online". Library and Archive Canada. Retrieved February 3, 2023.
  10. ^ a b c "Boykinia richardsonii". Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 2022. Retrieved February 3, 2023.
  11. ^ a b c Hooker, William James (1840). Flora Boreali-Americana, Vol. 1. Bohn. p. 247. Retrieved February 3, 2023.
  12. ^ a b "Name - !Boykinia Nutt". Tropicos. St. Louis, Missouri: Missouri Botanical Garden (MOBOT). Retrieved February 3, 2023. nom. cons.; Type Specimens: T: Boykinia aconitifolia Nutt.
  13. ^ a b c d Chester, Sharon (2016). The Arctic Guide:Wildlife of the Far North. Princeton University Press. p. 494. ISBN 9781400865963. Retrieved February 4, 2023.
  14. ^ a b Petersen, Lee W. (July 1, 2021). "Alaska boykinia – Boykinia richardsonii". lwpetersen.com. Retrieved February 8, 2023.
  15. ^ "Boykinia richardsonii (Hook.) Rothr". USDA Plants Database. United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved February 8, 2023.
  16. ^ Hultén, Eric (1968). "Boykinia richardsonii (Hook.) Gray". Flora of Alaska. Retrieved February 8, 2023.
  17. ^ "Boykinia richardsonii Hook. (Rothr.)". Global Biodiversity Information Facility. July 7, 2022. Retrieved February 7, 2023.
  18. ^ a b Pielou, E.C. (2012). A Naturalist's Guide to the Arctic. University of Chicago Press. p. 136. ISBN 9780226148670. Retrieved February 5, 2023.
  19. ^ a b Hultén, Eric (1968). Flora of Alaska and Neighboring Territories: A Manual of the Vascular Plants. Stanford University Press. p. xx. ISBN 9780804706438. Retrieved February 6, 2023.
  20. ^ McHutchon, A. Grant; Wellwood, Debbie (2003). "Grizzly Bear Food Habits in the Northern Yukon, Canada". Ursus. 14 (3): 225–235. JSTOR 3873022. Retrieved February 7, 2023.
  21. ^ a b c Murie, Adolph (1981). The Grizzly Bears of Mount McKinley. U.S. National Park Service. pp. 143–44. Retrieved February 7, 2023.
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