The height of the stem and the leaves of Sullivant’s milkweed are similar to common milkweed. Each plant produces 1-3 (total) flower clusters from the stem apex and adjacent leaf axils; each cluster is 2-4″ across and has 15-25 flowers, each about 1/2″ across. The flower petals are pink to rich purple, with white bases; the hoods are usually noticeably lighter. The horns are laterally compressed (sickle-shaped) and their tips clearly overlap over the column.
Top and underside of Sullivant’s milkweed (Asclepias sullivantii) leaves.
The height of the stem and the leaves of Sullivant’s milkweed are similar to common milkweed with (usually) a pink or purple leaf midvein and minor veins that stop short of the leaf edge, but the underside of the leaves is NOT downy (no whitish bloom). The leaves point up (rather than droop) and have a very small petiole or are sessile; the base of the leaf is often indented while the tip is rounded but with a tiny sharp point.
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