In 1753, Swedish botanist
Carl Linnaeus established
genus Tiarella by recognizing two
species,
Tiarella cordifolia and
Tiarella trifoliata. A third species,
Tiarella polyphylla, was described by
David Don in 1825. Together these three species form the taxonomic backbone of the genus. In 1840, in the first critical treatment of
Tiarella since Linnaeus,
John Torrey and
Asa Gray described two new sections: •
Tiarella sect.
Anthonema : flowering stem leafy with alternate leaves; flowers
paniculate; petals
filiform or
subulate; western North America •
Tiarella sect.
Eutiarella : flowering stem naked; flowers
racemose; petals oblong with a small claw or stalk; eastern North America.
Olga Lakela highlighted the section names in 1937, but they have since fallen out of favor with botanists, mainly because
Tiarella polyphylla is inconsistent with the dichotomy, but perhaps also because there are taxa with leafy flowering stems in both western and eastern North America. In Asia, the genus is represented by one species (
Tiarella polyphylla). In North America, there have been numerous major treatments of genus
Tiarella, with taxonomies recognizing from two to six species, some including
infraspecific taxa. Currently accepted taxonomies are based on three sources: •
Tiarella polyphylla in
Flora of China •
Tiarella trifoliata and related taxa in
Flora of North America •
Tiarella cordifolia and related taxa in a paper published by
Guy Nesom in 2021 The treatment in the first source is near-universally accepted, the second is widely recognized, while the third is new and growing in acceptance. A few authorities (with global scope) accept all three.
Infrageneric taxa All names used in this section are taken from the
International Plant Names Index, except where noted. The geographical locations are taken from
Plants of the World Online (POWO). , POWO accepts 7 species and 3 infraspecies: •
Tiarella austrina : Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee •
Tiarella cordifolia sensu stricto: Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia •
Tiarella nautila : Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee •
Tiarella polyphylla : Assam, China, East Himalaya, Japan, Korea, Myanmar, Nepal, Taiwan, Tibet •
Tiarella stolonifera : Connecticut, Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Brunswick, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Nova Scotia, Ohio, Ontario, Pennsylvania, Québec, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin •
Tiarella trifoliata •
Tiarella trifoliata var.
laciniata : British Columbia, Oregon, Washington •
Tiarella trifoliata var.
trifoliata: Alaska, Alberta, British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington •
Tiarella trifoliata var.
unifoliata : Alaska, Alberta, British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington •
Tiarella wherryi : Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee ==Distribution==