Cardamine dissecta is a species of flowering plant in the mustard family Brassicaceae.
Cardamine dissecta was first described as Dentaria dissecta by the American botanist Melines Conklin Leavenworth in 1824. The American botanist Ihsan Ali Al-Shehbaz placed Dentaria dissecta in genus Cardamine in 1988. The name Cardamine dissecta is widely used today.
Cardamine dissecta is a member of the Cardamine concatenata alliance, a monophyletic group of eastern North American species that includes Cardamine angustata, Cardamine concatenata, Cardamine diphylla, Cardamine dissecta, Cardamine incisa, and Cardamine maxima. All members of the alliance were previously placed in genus Dentaria, which is now considered to be a synonym for Cardamine
Cardamine dissecta is native to eastern North America. Its range extends north to Ohio and Indiana, and south to Virginia and Alabama. It is known to occur in the following states:
Its distribution is centered in Kentucky, Tennessee, and Alabama.
The global conservation status of Cardamine dissecta is apparently secure (G4).