A velvetleaf (Abutilon theophrasti) flower and seedpod on the west side of West Lagoon.
Velvetleaf is a ubiquitous, graceless plant loved by few but with a long history (see below). The stems can reach up to seven feet tall and are covered with short hairs. Flowers develop singly on 1″ stalks arising from a leaf axil. Each flower is 3/4″ across; it has five light-green, lance-shaped sepals covered in fine hairs and shorter than the petals, five golden yellow petals widest at their tips, numerous stamens with golden-yellow anthers, and a single pistil with multiply-branched styles. Velvetleaf was deliberately introduced to North America (by Ben Franklin) sometime before 1754 as a fiber crop, but soon escaped cultivation; before the introduction of herbicides, it was a serious agricultural pest, especially in corn fields. Native to Asia.
The heart-shaped leaf of velvetleaf (Abutilon theophrasti)
The leaves are of velvetleaf are alternate, dull-green, heart-shaped, and up to 8″ long and across with a 4″ long petiole. Both the petiole and leaf blade are covered with short hairs. True to its name, the leaves feel like fine velvet.
Velvetleaf (Abutilon theophrasti) on the west shore of West Lagoon.
Velvetleaf is a ubiquitous but graceless plant loved by few but with a long history (see below). The stems can reach up to seven feet tall and are covered with short hairs. The leaves are alternate, dull-green, heart-shaped, up to 8″ long. True to its name, the leaves feel like fine velvet. The fruit is a short, stout cylinder, about 3/4″ across, composed of 10-15 segments (seedpods) arranged like slices cut from a cake; each segment has a distal, pointed, upsweeping “beak”. The fruit is initially green but turns brown with maturity; each segment breaks open on the upper surface to release the seeds when the plant is shaken by the wind. Velvetleaf was deliberately introduced to North America sometime before 1754 as a fiber crop to supplement the limited hemp crap, but soon escaped cultivation; before the introduction of herbicides, it was a serious agricultural pest, especially in corn fields. Native to Asia.
