Data provided by the participants of the Consortium of California Herbaria

View additional distribution information on the Jepson eflora

Ranunculus hebecarpus is a species of buttercup known by the common name delicate buttercup. It is native to western North America, including several of the western United States and Baja California, where it grows in grassland, woodland, and chaparral habitat. It is an annual herb producing a slender, hairy stem a few centimeters high or up to 30 centimeters tall. The hairy leaves are borne on long petioles. Their blades are deeply lobed or divided into three leaflets, often with toothed or lobed edges. Flowers have 3 to 5 tiny yellow petals just 1 or 2 millimeters long studded on the bulbous nectary; some flowers lack petals. The plant is most easily identified in its fruiting stage, when the infructescence is a spherical cluster of several tiny disc-shaped achenes with compressed, bristly sides.

Plant type

Annual herb

Size

1 - 12 in Tall

Calscape icon
Color

Yellow

Water

Moderate

Plant communities

Chaparral, Foothill Woodland

Bees
Butterflies

Pollinators supported

0 confirmed and 91 likely

  • Likely

  • Confirmed

Adela flammeusella

Adela septentrionella

Adela trigrapha

Angelic Sweat Bee

Agapostemon angelicus

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Plums & Prunes

Prunus

Elderberries

Sambucus