Data provided by the participants of the Consortium of California Herbaria

View additional distribution information on the Jepson eflora

Lewisia pygmaea is a species of flowering plant in the purslane family known by the common name alpine lewisia and pygmy bitterroot. It is native to western North America from Alaska and Alberta to California and New Mexico, where it grows in many types of moist, rocky mountain habitat, such as gravel beds and sandy meadows. This is a highly variable species with a wide distribution, and it often hybridizes with other Lewisia species, making identification difficult. In general, this is a petite perennial herb growing from a taproot and caudex unit, and producing a basal rosette of several leaves 2 to 8 centimeters long. The leaves are narrow but thick and fleshy, blunt-tipped, and linear to lance-shaped. The flower cluster is usually made up of a few very short stems each bearing one or more flowers which appear to be sitting on or within the basal leaf rosette. Each flower has 5 to 9 white, pink or red petals which may or may not have dark veining or striping. The petals are 4 millimeters to one centimeter long.

Plant type

Perennial herb

Size

0.8 - 3 in Tall

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Color

Pink, White, Red

Special uses

Containers

Sun

Partial Shade

Soil drainage

Fast

Site type

Rocky slopes, wet granite sand or gravel, moist meadows, stream edges

Plant communities

Alpine Fell-Fields, Subalpine Forest, Wetland-Riparian