Mugwort’s Inflorescence consists of leafy spikes covered with inconspicuous flowerheads, initially whitish-green, later yellowish- or purplish-green; the flowerheads are egg-shaped, very small (1/8″ across) and bear only disc florets (ray florets absent).
Mugwort (Artemisia vulgaris) leaves from low on the plant (left) or near the top of the stem (right). In each case the upper image shows the top surface of the leaf; the lower image shows the underside of the same leaf.
Mugwort’s leaves are alternate; their upper surface is green and hairless while the lower surface is densely covered with fine white hairs and appears powdery white or silvery. Lower and middle leaves have one or two pairs of deep lobes, with an additional pair of lobes near the leaf base that produce elongate “ears.” Upper leaves are unlobed or the lobes are poorly developed.
A dense stand of mugwort (Artemisia vulgaris) near Jackson Park Inner Harbor.
Mugwort reaches 2-4 feet tall with lots of branches in the upper half of the plant. Stems are grooved, lower stems tend to turn reddish and appear woody. The plants are wind-pollinated; they are considered invasive. The foliage of mugwort might be confused with that of motherwort (Leonurus cardiaca), but the leaves of motherwort have long petioles while those of mugwort are sessile or (on the lowermost parts) on short stalks; the flowers of the two species look nothing like each other. Mugwort contains toxic chemicals and should not be ingested.
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