Meadow Buttercup



  1. Unlike the creeping buttercup the meadow variety doesn’t produce runners. The stalks are smooth and unfurrowed, to further distinguish the meadow buttercup from the creeping or bulbous varieties, whose stalks are hairy and furrowed. The flowers are 15-25mm in diameter, with green sepals held upright against the flower heads.
  2. Our meadow buttercups (also known as 'Tall buttercups') can grow anywhere between 20-90 cm tall, as they stand erect with their glossy yellow flowers held at the tips of the tall stems. They are happiest amongst long grass in slightly damp, chalky soils, where they can grow so dense that they forms yellow meadows that dazzle in the sunshine.
  3. Buttercups are sometimes classified as short-lived perennials, but often grow as winter annuals. Buttercup is toxic to all species of livestock. The toxin protanemonin is released when the plant is chewed or otherwise wounded and is present in all parts of the plant.
  4. Meadow buttercup is an upright plant growing up to 60cm tall. It’s leaves are deeply lobed into narrow segments with pointed tips. The golden yellow flowers are carried in branching sprays; unlike creeping buttercup (R. Repens) and bulbous buttercup (R. Bulbosa) the flower stems don’t have a groove along their length.

Medicinal use of Meadow Buttercup: The whole plant is acrid, anodyne, antispasmodic, diaphoretic and rubefacient. The plant has been crushed and applied as a poultice to the chest to relieve colds and chest pains. The fresh leaves have been used as a rubefacient in the treatment of rheumatism etc.



General Information
Symbol: RAAC3
Group: Dicot
Family: Ranunculaceae
Duration: Perennial
Growth Habit: Forb/herb
Native Status: AK I
CAN I
GL N?
L48 I,N
SPM I
Data Source and Documentation
NativeIntroducedBothAbsent/Unreported
Native, No County DataIntroduced, No County DataBoth, No County Data
Native Status:
L48 AK HI PR VI NAV CAN GL SPM NA
click on a thumbnail to view an image, or see all the Ranunculus thumbnails at the Plants Gallery

Meadow Buttercup Flower

Steve Hurst. Provided by ARS Systematic Botany and Mycology Laboratory. United States, VA, Clarendon. Usage Requirements.

Patrick J. Alexander. Usage Requirements.

Patrick J. Alexander. Usage Requirements.

Britton, N.L., and A. Brown. 1913. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British Possessions. 3 vols. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York. Vol. 2: 111. Provided by Kentucky Native Plant Society. Scanned by Omnitek Inc. Usage Requirements.

slideshow Click on a scientific name below to expand it in the PLANTS Classification Report.
RankScientific Name and Common Name
KingdomPlantae – Plants
SubkingdomTracheobionta – Vascular plants
SuperdivisionSpermatophyta – Seed plants
DivisionMagnoliophyta – Flowering plants
ClassMagnoliopsida – Dicotyledons
SubclassMagnoliidae
OrderRanunculales
FamilyRanunculaceae – Buttercup family
GenusRanunculus L. – buttercup
SpeciesRanunculus acris L. – tall buttercup

The Plants Database includes the following 3 subspecies of Ranunculus acris . Click below on a thumbnail map or name for subspecies profiles.

Ranunculus acris L. var. acris ' vspace='4' hspace='4' border='0' width='168px' height='168px' onerror='this.src='/images/NoNativity.png' />
Ranunculus acris var. acris
showy buttercup
Ranunculus acris L. ssp. friesianus (Jord.) Rouy & Foucaud' vspace='4' hspace='4' border='0' width='168px' height='168px' onerror='this.src='/images/NoNativity.png' />
Ranunculus acris ssp. friesianus
Ranunculus acris L. var. frigidus Regel' vspace='4' hspace='4' border='0' width='168px' height='168px' onerror='this.src='/images/NoNativity.png' />
Ranunculus acris var. frigidus
tall buttercup
Noxious Weed Information
This plant is listed by the U.S. federal government or a state. Common names are from state and federal lists. Click on a place name to get a complete noxious weed list for that location, or click here for a composite list of all Federal and State Noxious Weeds.
Montana
Category 2 noxious weed
U.S. Weed Information
meadow buttercup
This plant can be weedy or invasive according to the authoritative sources noted below.This plant may be known by one or more common names in different places, and some are listed above. Click on an acronym to view each weed list, or click here for a composite list of Weeds of the U.S.
STATEAssorted authors. State noxious weed lists for 46 states. State agriculture or natural resource departments.
WSWSWhitson, T.D. (ed.) et al.. 1996. Weeds of the West. Western Society of Weed Science in cooperation with Cooperative Extension Services, University of Wyoming. Laramie, Wyoming.
Interpreting Wetland Status
Seeds
North America
AlaskaFACW
Arid WestFACW
Atlantic and Gulf Coastal PlainFACW
Eastern Mountains and PiedmontFAC
Great PlainsFACW
MidwestFAC
Northcentral & NortheastFAC
Western Mountains, Valleys, and CoastFAC
More Accounts and Images
ARS Germplasm Resources Information Network (RAAC3)
CalPhotos (RAAC3)
Flora of North America (RAAC3)
Integrated Taxonomic Information System (RAAC3)
Jepson Interchange (University of California - Berkeley) (RAAC3)
Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center Native Plant Information Network (RAAC3)
Native American Ethnobotany (University of Michigan - Dearborn) (RAAC3)
University of Tennessee Herbarium (Distribution) (RAAC3)
University of Wisconsin - Stevens Point Freckmann Herbarium (RAAC3)
Related Websites
Swedish Virtual Flora: images & text (in Swedish) (RAAC3)
University of Northern British Colombia: image (RAAC3)

Food

Meadow Buttercup Seeds

SourceLarge MammalsSmall MammalsWater BirdsTerrestrial Birds

Cover

SourceLarge MammalsSmall MammalsWater BirdsTerrestrial Birds

Description of Values

Value ClassFoodCover

Phylum: Magnoliophyta - Class: Equisetopsida - Order: Ranunculales - Family: Ranunculaceae

Who is not stopped in their tracks by the sight of a beautiful buttercup meadow? Children today still play the game of finding out if their playmates like butter by holding a buttercup flower under their chin; if the golden yellow is reflected on the skin, the answer is 'Yes!'

Meadow

Description

Meadow Buttercup Scientific Name

One of the best known of wildflowers, the Meadow Buttercup is tall and stately, and quite the perfect yellow for playing 'Do you like butter?'

Meadow Buttercup usually grows to a height of about 75cm but can reach a metre or more. This hairy perennial has toothed, palmate lower leaves and a few lanceolate leaves at flower stalk junctions. Flowers are borne singly on unfurrowed stalks branching from stems, with a terminal flower on a stem rather longer than the others. Each flower usually has five rounded sepals - there are no true petals, but most people use the term petals when describing these flowers - forming a shallow cup 1.5 to 2.5cm across that gradually flattens out. Seeds are produced in star-like achenes (segmented seed pods).

Distribution

Widespread and common throughout Britain, Ireland and most of northern and central mainland Europe, Ranunculus acris is also native to parts of asia. This buttercup is also present in Australia, New Zealand and North America.

Habitat

It's in the common name, of course: these are wildflowers of damp permanent-pasture meadows, but they can also produce impressive stands on grassy roadside verges.

Blooming Times

Tall Buttercup Ranunculus Acris

Ranunculus acris blooms in Britain and Ireland from April until October and is generally at its best from May to July.

Uses

Buttercups contains an irritant latex that can cause very unpleasant reactions in farm animals and in people. The acrid taste of Meadow Buttercups (and indeed to a degree nearly all common buttercup species except the Goldilocks Buttercup Ranunculus auricomus) seems to be sufficient deterrent, as there have been only a few cases of serious poisoning.

There is a risk to farm animals if they are left too long in a buttercup meadow, because when there is no grass left they might have to settle for buttercups, and become very 'unsettled' as a result. Despite these safety concerns, buttercups are sometimes used in herbal treatments for arthritis, bronchitis and several other ailments. (We strongly advise against eating or using as medicines any plants without first obtaining qualified professional advice.)

Etymology

The genus name Ranunculus comes from the Latin rana, meaning frog, while the suffix -culus indicates the diminutive form - hence Ranunculus means 'little frog'. The most likely explanation is that both frogs and Ranunculus wildflower species are usually found in damp places. The specific epithet acris means bitter tasting (as in acrid). Folklore has it that, because of the yellow of the buttercups, cows grazing in buttercup-richmeadows provided the finest butter.

Similar Species

There are many other buttercup species. Creeping buttercup Ranunculus repens is often found in lawns and gardens, while the bulbous buttercup Ranunculus bulbosus is another farmland species.

The pictures of Meadow Buttercup shown on this page were taken in West Wales and in Somerset during May.

We hope that you have found this information helpful. If so we are sure you would find our books Wonderful Wildflowers of Wales, vols 1 to 4, by Sue Parker and Pat O'Reilly very useful too. Buy copies here...

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