Common boneset (Eupatorium perfoliatum) flowers. Top: an inflorescence seen from the side. Bottom: close-up of flowerheads (and part of a leaf). Note the florets’ tubular corollas with five apical lobes, long, bifurcated, white styles, and brown stamens with white anthers at their tips.
Common boneset’s upper stem and branches bear clusters 2-8″ across of white flowerheads. Each flowerhead is about 4-6 mm across consisting of ~15-20 dull white disk florets (ray florets are absent); florets have a tubular corolla with five triangular lobes at the apical end and a long, bifurcated style surrounded at its base with a brown column of five stamens with purplish anthers. Ironically, “common” boneset is less common than late boneset or tall boneset in Jackson Park.
Common boneset (Eupatorium perfoliatum) leaves. Upper right: top surface of a leaf (above) and enlarged view of bottom, hairy surface (below). Leaves fuse at their bases so the stem appears to penetrate the leaves. Top left: view of a “perfoliate” leaf from above; views from the side (bttom left) and a close up from the side (bottom right) help make the anatomy clear.
Common boneset is a single-stemmed, native herbaceous plant 2-4′ tall, unbranched except near the tip. The stems are round in section and profusely covered with, white hairs. The leaves are up to 8″ long and 1/4 as wide, light- or yellowish-green, lance-shaped with long tips and serrated margins. This is the only Illinois boneset with perfoliate (apparently pierced by the stem) leaves — i.e., opposite leaf bases are fused around stem. (Fusion occasionally involves three leaves in a whorl.) The leaves are hairy on both upper and lower surfaces and the leaf lamina (blade) bulges between veins giving the leaf a textured, “quilted air-matress” or “wrinkly” appearance. Ironically, “common” boneset is less common than late boneset or tall boneset in Jackson Park.
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