Tiarella austrina
Tiarella austrina is a species of flowering plant in the family Saxifragaceae. The specific name austrina means "from the south". Being endemic to the southeastern United States, it is sometimes referred to as the southern foamflower. It is one of two species of Tiarella that spread by stolons.
Description
Tiarella austrina is a perennial, herbaceous plant with a short, slender rhizome. It has a leafy flowering stem and relatively large basal leaves with an extended terminal lobe. Most importantly, the species has the ability to produce stolons.Identification
To positively identify Tiarella austrina, all of the following key features must be verified :- Stolon present
- Basal leaves usually longer than wide
- Basal leaf lobes usually acute-acuminate with the terminal lobe prominently extended
- Flowering stem usually with 1-2 leaves or foliaceous bracts
Taxonomy
In 1937, Olga Lakela described Tiarella cordifolia var. austrina, a variety of T. cordifolia with stolons. Guy Nesom raised this variety to species rank in 2021. Consequently, Tiarella cordifolia var. austrina is a basionym for Tiarella austrina.Distribution
In eastern North America, Tiarella austrina is narrowly endemic to the southeastern United States where it occurs mainly in the southern Blue Ridge Mountains of southwestern North Carolina, southeastern Tennessee, northeastern Georgia, and northwestern South Carolina.Counties where the species is known to occur include:
- Alabama: Jackson, Madison
- Georgia: Dawson, Habersham, Rabun, Stephens, Towns, White
- North Carolina: Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, Macon, Polk, Swain, Transylvania
- South Carolina: Greenville, Oconee, Pickens
- Tennessee: Blount, Cocke, Franklin, Monroe, Sevier