Pulsatilla pratensis
Pulsatilla pratensis, the small pasque flower, is a species of flowering plant in the family Ranunculaceae, native to central and eastern Europe, from southeast Norway and western Denmark south and east to Bulgaria. It grows from near sea level in the north of the range, up to in the south of its range.
Name
The Latin specific epithet pratensis means "from the meadow", referring to one of its typical habitats.Description
It is a herbaceous perennial plant growing to tall. The leaves are finely divided and thread-like, and densely covered with silvery hairs. The flowers are long, pendulous, bell-like, the tepals with reflexed tips; flower colour varies from purple in the north of the species' range to greenish-violet in the south. The flowers are hermaphrodite, and are pollinated by bees; flowering is from early to mid spring.Subspecies
There are a number of subspecies:- Pulsatilla pratensis subsp. pratensis
- Pulsatilla pratensis subsp. bohemica
- Pulsatilla pratensis subsp. hungarica
- Pulsatilla pratensis subsp. nigricans
- Pulsatilla pratensis subsp. ucrainica
- Pulsatilla pratensis nothosubsp. zichyi