American bugleweed (Lycopus americanus) flowers. Left: the upper portion of a plant in flower. Upper right: a close-up of a single, recently-opened, flower; the deep purple anthers fade in older flowers. Lower right: a cluster of flowers in the leaf axils.
American bugleweed flowers form in whorls of the axils of the middle and upper leaves. Individual flowers are 1/8″ across, white with pinkish-purple spots, with a calyx about as long as floral tube with five teeth; the distal end of the short tubular corolla has five sharply-pointed, narrowly-triangular lobes. The two stamens with purple anthers and single style project well outside the mouth of the corolla. The fruits are four, flat-topped nutlets that form in the cup of the calyx. The deep, narrow lobes of the lower leaves are a characteristic of this species; they are not present in the other Lycopus species in Jackson Park.
American bugleweed reaches heights of 1-3 feet, usually unbranched. The stem is green or reddish-green, four-angled (square) in section and ridged. The leaves are opposite, up to 3″ long and 3/4″ across, lance-shaped with deep, narrow, rounded teeth, and sessile; lower leaves have short petioles and are narrowly lobed or even pinnatifid. The deep, narrow lobes of the lower leaves are a characteristic of this species; they are not present in the other Lycopus species in Jackson Park.
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