Gypsywort (Lycopus europaeus) flowers and fruit. Top left: a gypsywort stem with whorls of flowers. Top right: a flower viewed from slightly above. The purple and white striped structures are the anthers; the white column midway between them is the style. Bottom right: two flowers viewed from the side and from above. In both cases, the white style can be seen to have a bifurcated tip. Left bottom: remnant calyxes with developing fruit (nutlets).
Gypsywort (aka, European bugleweed) is another species native to Europe and Asia. How it came to the New World is unknown, but it has a long history in the botanical literature in Europe (back to the sixteenth century). It strongly prefers wetlands and can often be found in muds. The stem can be as much as 2.5 feet tall, usually unbranched, light- or yellowish-green, square in section, hairy, and finely grooved. Flowers occur in whorls in the axils of the upper leaves. Each flower is 1/8″ across consisting of a green calyx with 4-5 teeth, each longer than the calyx tube, giving the mass of flowers a bristly appearance; a white tubular corolla with four apical lobes, usually with a few pink or purple spots on the lower lip; two stamens; and a style with a bifurcated tip (which can be difficult to see). The fruits are four, concave-topped nutlets cupped in the calyx. This species is known to hybridize with American bugleweed (Lycopus americanus). The medicinal properties of gypsywort are quite controversial; resist the urge to nibble.
Gypsywort (Lycopus europaeus) leaves. The bottom and upper right images show typical leaves. The two images in the upper left are close-ups of the upper surfaces of the leaves of two different plants; note the pits (glandular depressions) diagnostic for this species.
Gypsywort stems can be as much as 2.5 feet tall, usually unbranched, light- or yellowish-green, square in section, hairy, and finely grooved. The leaves are opposite, 1-3″ long and half as wide, oval or elongate-oval, with coarse, rounded teeth in the upper leaves, pinnatifid with deep lobes in the lower leaves. Leaves are either sessile or with very short (1/4″) stout petioles. Unique to this species are minute glandular depressions in the upper surfaces of the leaves, best seen with some magnification. This species is known to hybridize with American bugleweed (Lycopus americanus). The medicinal properties of gypsywort are quite controversial; resist the urge to nibble.
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