White meadowsweet (Spiraea alba) flowers and fruit. Left: An inflorescence covered with white meadowsweet flowers. Top right: three white meadowsweet flowers with their numerous long stamens, five follicles in the center of the flower (each with an apical pistil) and a ring of tissue (here pink) marking the location of the nectaries. Middle right: same as above, but here with an orange-colored ring marking the nectaries. The stigmas are particularly obvious on the flower in the center, close to the bottom of the image. Bottom right: white meadowsweet flowers, post-fertilization. The fruit — the cluster of about five enlarged follicles — still bear the remnants of their styles.
White meadowsweet’s branches end in 2-6″ long, oblong or pyramidal (1-4 times longer than wide) panicles of densely packed flowers that open from the top down. The flowers are about 1/4″ across and are very similar to Eastern Meadowsweet (Spiraea latifolia) except for color (white rather than pink, although often pink as buds). Individual flowers consist of five triangular, light-green sepals; five white petals narrowest at their base, longer than the sepals; numerous (15-50) long, white stamens with white or pink anthers; and five light green or white pistils. The long stamens on the flowers give the flowerhead a fuzzy outline. The fruit is a cluster of 4-6 follicles, each containing one seed. When ripe, the top of the follicle splits, allowing the seed to fall out when the stem is shaken. Surrounding the pistils is a ring of pink, orange, or yellow tissue that marks the location of the nectaries. White meadowsweet prefers wet areas along the lagoons in Jackson Park.
White meadowsweet (Spiraea alba) stems and leaves. (1) A typical white meadowsweet plant with a brown, woody stem and a series of alternate leaves. (2, 3) The upper surfaces (2a, 3a) of white meadowsweet leaves and the underside (2b, 3b) of the same leaves. (4) The upper surface of a third leaf. The leaves shown in 2-4 illustrate the range in size, length to width ratio, and marginal teeth density and sharpness among white meadowsweet leaves.
White meadowsweet (aka, narrowleaf meadowsweet) is nominally a shrub because it has woody branches and multiple stems, but it is a fairly small (2-6 feet tall), sparsely branched plant with spikes of small (1/4″ across) flowers. Young stems and branches are green and hairless but become woody and brown with age. The leaves are hairless, alternate, 3″ long and 3/4″ wide with short (1/8-3/8″) petioles; they are narrowly ovate with sharply serrated margins, medium green on top, pale green on their underside.
Two white meadowsweet (Spiraea alba) plants growing at different points along the shore of West Lagoon. The insert in the lower right corner shows an enlarged view of a single white meadowsweet flower.
White meadowsweet (aka, narrowleaf meadowsweet) is nominally a shrub because it has woody branches and multiple stems, but it is a fairly small (2-6 feet tall), sparsely branched plant with spikes of small (1/4″ across) flowers. Young stems and branches are green and hairless but become woody and brown with age. The leaves are hairless, alternate, 3″ long and 3/4″ wide with short (1/8-3/8″) petioles; they are narrowly ovate with sharply serrated margins, medium green on top, pale green on their underside. The branches end in 2-6″ long, oblong or pyramidal (1-4 times longer than wide) panicles of densely packed flowers that open from the top down. The flowers are about 1/4″ across and are very similar to Eastern Meadowsweet (Spiraea latifolia) except for color (white rather than pink, although often pink as buds). Individual flowers consist of five triangular, light-green sepals; five white petals narrowest at their base, longer than the sepals; numerous (15-50) long, white stamens with white or pink anthers; and five light green or white pistils. The long stamens on the flowers give the flowerhead a fuzzy outline. The fruit is a cluster of 4-6 follicles, each containing one seed. When ripe, the top of the follicle splits, allowing the seed to fall out when the stem is shaken. Surrounding the pistils is a ring of pink, orange, or yellow tissue that marks the location of the nectaries. White meadowsweet prefers wet areas along the lagoons in Jackson Park.
