Mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum) flowers and fruit. Upper left: a mature flower exposed by lifting the canopy of leaves. Upper right: the back side of a flower showing the flower stalk and it’s attachment at the branch point of a stem. Lower left: a fertilized flower in which the ovary has begun to swell but the stigma remains attached. Lower right: a full-sized fruit, not yet mature (or edible) because it retains its green color.
Mayapple produces a single, hairless stem that branches no more than once; each stem thus has either a single leaf (infertile stems) or two leaves (fertile stems). Fertile stems produce a solitary nodding flower, 2-3″ across, that is hidden beneath the leaves where the two leaves branch on the stem. The flowers contain 6-9 brilliant white petals and a ring of 12-18 tan stamens with large, banana-shaped anthers, all surrounding a surprisingly large, yellow ovary topped with a button of a stigmata. The fruit is a large (1.5″ long), ellipsoidal berry, yellow when ripe. All parts of the plant are poisonous including the green fruit, but the ripe (yellow) fruit is edible (in small quantities).
Mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum) leaves. Mayapple produces a single, hairless stem that branches no more than once; each stem thus has either a single leaf (infertile stems) or two leaves (fertile stems). Here you can see the (paired) fertile stems of two plants, one in the center of the image and the other on the upper right.
Mayapple produces a single, hairless stem that branches no more than once; each stem thus has either a single leaf (infertile stems) or two leaves (fertile stems). The leaves are up to 16″ across with 5-6 deep, palmate lobes (infertile) or 6-9 deep, palmate lobes (fertile stems). Fertile stems produce a solitary nodding flower, 2-3″ across, that is hidden beneath the leaves where the two leaves branch on the stem.
Two mayapple (Podophyllum peltatum) colonies/clones north of Bobolink Meadow. The bottom pair of images shows the mayapple sprouts first emerging in mid-April (left) and a week later when the leaves have unfurled (right). The image at the top shows the same clone seen in the lower images 2-3 weeks later; the smaller colony/clone in the background has gradually expanding. I look forward to seeing what happens when the colonies finally contact.
Mayapple is the only species in the genus Podophyllum. It often forms monospecific stands of 1.5 foot tall plants that look like cartoon palm trees but the overall effect is “spooky” not “funny” — clearly mayapple efficiently eliminates all competitors. Mayapple’s unique form and habit can’t be confused with any other plant in the Midwest. Mayapple produces a single, hairless stem that branches no more than once; each stem thus has either a single leaf (infertile stems) or two leaves (fertile stems). The leaves are up to 16″ across with 5-6 deep, palmate lobes (infertile) or 6-9 deep, palmate lobes (fertile stems). Fertile stems produce a solitary nodding flower, 2-3″ across, that is hidden beneath the leaves where the two leaves branch on the stem. The fruit is a large (1.5″ long), ellipsoidal berry, yellow when ripe. All parts of the plant are poisonous including the green fruit, but the ripe (yellow) fruit is edible (in small quantities).
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