Cerastium arcticum Lange
Publ. & Syn.Cerastium arcticum var. vestitum Hultén, Svensk Bot. Tidskr. 50: 453 (1956). Described from northern and northeastern Canada, Greenland, Iceland, Jan Mayen, Svalbard, Bear Island, and Novaya Zemlya. Hundreds of syntypes cited.
NotesBrysting and Elven: Cerastium arcticum is a polymorphic and genetically variable high polyploid species, but the intricate system of subspecific categories proposed by Hultén (1956) - and his hypothesis of widespread introgression - is not supported by later investigations (Brysting and Elven 2000). Neither are the subspecies proposed by Böcher (1977) supported. Cerastium arcticum is best treated as one variable species that reaches eastwards in Canada from Banks Island, across Greenland, Jan Mayen, and Svalbard, and at least to Novaya Zemlya in northeastern European Russia. The varieties of Lange and Hultén represent morphologically different plants but transitions are very frequent and the pattern appears as a continuum.
Chromosomes(1) 108 (6x). - Europe (Svalbard), Greenland. - At least four reports, see Brysting (2000) with references to previous reliable counts.
(2) 130-132. - Greenland. - Brysting (2000, possibly an aneuploid number found in several plants in one population).
Not included: Mosquin and Hayley (1966) reported 2n = ca. 72, ca. 83, and ca. 98 for this species from Ellesmere and Melville islands in Canada. These numbers rather suggest C. beeringianum and some hybrids between that species and C. arcticum.
GeographyNorth American (N) - amphi-Atlantic - European (N): NOR RUS CAN GRL.
Distribution A = F     B = F     C = F     GW = f     D = F     Ic = r     E = S     CC = s     HL = f     EP = f     UN = s     GE = f     SF = f     [ key ]
Parent taxonCerastium L.
PAF ID420207
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Panarctic Flora Editor-in-Chief: Reidar Elven (Natural History Museum, University of Oslo)
Editorial Committee: Reidar Elven, David F. Murray (Museum of the North, University of Alaska), Volodya Yu. Razzhivin (Komarov Botanical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences), Boris A. Yurtsev [deceased] (Komarov Botanical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences)