Getting Madders

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Houstonia caerulea (azure bluet)

If you go botanizing during growing season, year after year, you notice trends. For example, there’s almost always something in the Asteraceae (daisy family) blooming, but the family really gets going in high summer and into autumn. Plants in the Violaceae (violet family) bloom in early spring and are done by the time the earliest Lamiaceae (mint family) start. And so on.

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Cephalanthus occidentalis (buttonbush)

This is the time of year for the Rubiaceae, or madder family. Worldwide, it is the fourth largest flowering plant family in terms of number of species (Asteraceae, Orchidaceae (orchid family), and Fabaceae (pea family) are first, second, and third). Depending on which authority you consult, there are about 13,500 species in more than 600 genera.

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Galium concinnum (shining bedstraw); the flowers are about 3/16″ wide

The Rubiaceae is a cosmopolitan family, with species found worldwide except in the polar regions, but most are in the tropics or subtropics. The plants can be trees, shrubs, lianas, or herbs. Some are well-known garden ornamentals (pentas, ixora, gardenia), and some are economically important, producing dyes (like madder), or drugs (like quinine), or beverages (coffee!).

Here in North America, Rubiaceae ranks 18th, with 264 native species. (Asteraceae is first, Fabaceae second, and Orchidaceae ranks 13th.)

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Diodia virginiana (Virginia buttonweed)

In Maryland, Rubiaceae is tied with Onagraceae for 13th place, with 39 species. (Asteraceae is first, Fabaceae second, and Orchidaceae is tied with Plantaginaceae for 9th place.)  I gleaned this information from the Maryland Biodiversity Project but did not weed out the aliens, so if you count only natives the rank may change. But you get the idea.

Geez, this is starting to read like baseball stats.

Anyway, the Maryland species fall into eight genera:

  • Cephalanthus (one species, C. occidentalis, aka buttonbush, found almost statewide)
  • Diodia (two species, D. teres and D. virginiana, both found primarily in the Coastal Plain and Piedmont)
  • Gallium (as many as 24 species depending on taxonomy; distribution varies)
  • Houstonia (five species; see previous post)
  • Mitchella (one species, M. repens, aka partridgeberry, found statewide except Washington County)
  • Oldenlandia (one species, O. uniflora, aka clustered mille-grains; coastal plain)
  • Sherardia (one species, O. arvensis, aka field madder, alien found in the coastal plain)
  • Spermacoce (one species, S. glabra, aka smooth false buttonweed, listed S1/endangered, found in Montgomery County)
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Houstonia purpurea (purple bluet)

Looking at just the sampling of species here in Maryland, you can see traits that characterize the family: flowers consist of four petals, often pointed, partly fused into a tube; there are two leaves or more per node on the stem (opposite or whorled arrangement), the leaves usually entire, and often there are stipules. Most are herbaceous, except partridgeberry, which hugs the ground and never gets more than an inch tall yet has a woody stem, and buttonbush, which is a shrub. I should note, though, that there are many exceptions to these traits in the worldwide accounting of species.

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Mitchella repens (partridgeberry)

 

Two Years Old

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Happy 2nd Birthday to my blog! I’m celebrating by changing the look. Also by upgrading the account. OK, actually it’s not celebrating; I’ve uploaded so many pictures that I ran out of space, so I had to upgrade.

young fronds of ebony spleenwort

 

I’m also celebrating by re-posting some favorite photos.  Enjoy.

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wild stonecrop

 

 

 

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partridgeberry

 

 

 

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flowering dogwood

 

 

 

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enchanter’s nightshade

 

 

 

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miterwort

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lopseed

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cranefly orchid

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purple-headed sneezeweed

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bee leaving goldenrod

 

 

Back to regular blog posts tomorrow!

Flower of the Day: Partridgeberry. Again.

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Mitchella repens
Rubiaceae

I’ve written about partridgeberry before, I know. But it’s such a neat little plant, I can’t resist posting about it. And it’s in full bloom now.
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It’s a trailing vine that can grow many feet long but rarely more than an inch tall.

(<—pinkie finger shot to give sense of scale)

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Amusing fact: you’ll find it in the Peterson Field Guide “Trees and Shrubs”, I suppose because it’s woody (barely) and evergreen.

Partridgeberry ranges from Quebec to Florida and west to Texas, and is threatened in Iowa.  No other species of Mitchella grow in North America. It likes moist, acidic soils and can often be found trailing along rocks.

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The plants produce pairs of blossoms; if both are pollinated, the ovaries will fuse to produce a single oval, red berry with two dimples.

 

 

 

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Other common names include squawberry, running box, twinberry, and pigeon plum.

(You know how people squeal over puppies and kittens?  I could almost squeal over partridgeberry.  I mean really, isn’t it just precious?)

What’s Green Now? Partridgeberry

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Mitchella repens; Rubiaceae

Last one for the “what’s green now’ feature.  Growing in tiny pockets of soil, cascading along rocks, never more than an inch tall (but often many feet long), partridgeberry is one of my favorites.  Look for the twin blossoms

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in late May, and the two-eyed fruit

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in late July.

How can you not love this plant?  It’s adorable.  And tough.

What’s Blooming Now?

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American bladdernut

In the Potomac Gorge, in January?  The answer, of course, is nothing.  But some plants are still displaying old seedheads or pods: wingstem, asters, goldenrods, a few grasses, American bladdernut (Staphylea trifolia). The wind rustles the beech tree leaves, which will stay on the trees for a few more months.  A faint green blush signals the presence of invasive exotics.

20141231-_DSC0015partridgeberry, rock polypody, oak leaf; December 31, 2014 

Looking ’round you can see green on a few native plants: wild ginger (Asarum canadense), round-lobed hepatica (Hepatica nobilis var obtusa), and the succulent leaves of wild stonecrop (Sedum ternatum) hanging on; a few broad-leaved waterleaf (Hydrophyllum canadense) and alumroot (Heuchera americana); evergreen leaves of partridgeberry (Mitchella repens); the new leaves of puttyroot (Aplectrum hyemale) and cranefly (Tipularia discolor); Christmas fern (Polystichum acrostichoides) and polypody (Polypodium virginianum).  And of course the evergreen shrubs and trees: American holly (Ilex opaca), eastern redcedar (Juniperus virginiana), and mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia).

Depending on the weather, the first new blossoms of 2015 will be out in two or three months.

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Virginia bluebells (Mertensia virginica) budding up
March 21, 2014