Cup plant (Silphium perfoliatum) flowerheads. Top: two examples of cup plant flowerheads in full bloom with hald the disk florets open. Bottom: close-up of half the central disc and the bases of a number of ray florets on a cup plant flowerhead. Each ray floret (“petal”) has a single style with a bifurcated tip at the base; these styles are attached to fertile ovaries that produce the seeds after fertilization. On the central disk, about two-thirds of the disk florets are open. Each disk floret is yellow, tubular, with a five-lobed rim. Protruding from the disk florets are brown, cylindrical, fertile stamens and a single yellow style (which is not functional) running through the stamens.
A cup plant may have 10-30 flowerheads in bloom at one time. Behind the flowerhead are two or three layers of green bracts; the outer layer is egg shaped with a triangular, pointed, recurving tip. Each sunflower-like flowerhead is about 3-4″ across; it has 18-40 yellow ray florets (e.g., the petals) and 85-150 yellow disk florets. The ray florets have a bifurcated but functional style protruding from a short yellow tube at the base of the petal; the disc florets are initially green but transform into yellow, tubular corollas with a non-functional style protruding through the fully-functional stamen. (True throughout the genus Silphium. The opposite is true in the sunflowers, genus Helianthus, where the ray florets are functionally male and the disk florets are fertile, functional females.) The cup-like leaves and square stem distinguish cup plants from other prairie wildflowers.
Cup plant (Silphium perfoliatum) stems and leaves. Top: the upper parts of half a dozen cup plants with their large leaves well-displayed. Bottom: close-up of the fused bases of two opposite leaves surrounding the stem of a cup plant. This photo was taken the taken the day after a heavy rain; the “cup” was full when I found it.
Cup plant is another imposing prairie native, one that can grow up to 10 feet tall. The stem is unbranched except near the inflorescence, hairless, robust, green or reddish, and distinctly four-angled. The basal leaves wither and fall off before the plant blooms. The stem leaves are very large (up to 8″ long and 5″ wide), lance-shaped, and coarsely toothed around their margins; each pair of opposite leaves join their bases around the square stem to form a distinct cup-like depression (that does indeed hold water after a rain).
A group of cup plants (Silphium perfoliatum) growing on the west side of Wooded Island. The inset in the upper left corner shows an enlarged flowerhead.
Cup plant is another imposing prairie native, one that can grow up to 10 feet tall. The stem is unbranched except near the inflorescence, hairless, robust, green or reddish, and distinctly four-angled. The basal leaves wither and fall off before the plant blooms. The stem leaves are very large (up to 8″ long and 5″ wide), lance-shaped, and coarsely toothed around their margins; each pair of opposite leaves join their bases around the square stem to form a distinct cup-like depression (that does indeed hold water after a rain). A cup plant may have 10-30 flowerheads in bloom at one time. Behind the flowerhead are two or three layers of green bracts; the outer layer is egg shaped with a triangular, pointed, recurving tip. Each sunflower-like flowerhead is about 3-4″ across; it has 18-40 yellow ray florets (e.g., the petals) and 85-150 yellow disk florets. The ray florets have a bifurcated but functional style protruding from a short yellow tube at the base of the petal; the disc florets are initially green but transform into yellow, tubular corollas with a non-functional style protruding through the fully-functional stamen. (True throughout the genus Silphium. The opposite is true in the sunflowers, genus Helianthus, where the ray florets are functionally male and the disk florets are fertile, functional females.) The cup-like leaves and square stem distinguish cup plants from other prairie wildflowers.
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