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Comarum palustre

Comarum palustre, known by the common name marsh cinquefoil, also purple marshlocks and swamp cinquefoil, is a waterside rhizomatous subshrub. It has a circumboreal distribution, occurring throughout cool temperate Asia, Europe, and North America, particularly in northern regions. It is most commonly found on lake shores, marshy riversides and stream margins, often partly submerged with foliage floating. It is a parent of some Fragaria–Comarum hybrids, ornamental plants produced by crossing with strawberries.

Description
The stem is green to reddish-brown, finely hairy at first, low sprawling and vine-like, with long trailing stems up to long or more, scrambling over other plants and occasionally reaching a height of but usually lower. The stems root readily at the base and higher up wherever they are in contact with the ground or water. The leaves are glaucous green with three to seven (mostly five) narrow leaflets long with coarsely toothed margins. The flowers are produced in loose clusters at the apex of the stems; they vary from red to purple, and are in diameter. They have five (occasionally six) large sepals and five (occasionally six) smaller, darker petals, and a ring of spatula-shaped stamens surrounding the receptacle. Flowering is in late spring to summer, from late May to July. The fruit is like a small dry strawberry. ==Cultivation==
Cultivation
Marsh cinquefoil prefers peaty soils but can also grow in moist sandy areas. It flourishes in USDA Zones 3–9. Kveten pp matensky rybnik 32.jpg|Foliage in spring, Czech Republic Apis mellifera on Potentilla palustris.JPG|Flower after pollen harvest (with honey bee), Finland Marsh Cinquefoil (Comarum palustre) seeds, Trolla Water, Baltasound - geograph.org.uk - 5862296.jpg|Dried seed heads with seeds, Shetland, UK Comarum palustre 15-p.bot-poten.palus-18.jpg|Stem showing rooting along its length. Quebec, Canada ==References==
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