Northern evening primrose gets up to 5′ tall, although most plants are shorter. The basal leaves and the lower stem leaves are 4-12″ long and 3/8-1.5″ wide with short petioles. Stem leaves are alternate, smaller, and tend towards sessile attachment higher in the plant; the midvein of the leaf may be red or white or both. Leaf margins are smooth or minutely toothed. The flowers are 3/4-1.5″ across, have four yellow, heart-shaped petals, eight yellow stamens, and a cross-shaped stigma on a modest style; the stamens are as long or longer than the petals and the stigma is nearly fills the floral opening. At the base of the flower are four sepals 1/2-1″ long, that bend back along the 3/4-1.5″ long floral tube as the flower develops with pairs of sepals attached along one edge until the flower opens. Only northern evening primrose with a distinct ridge or knob near the tips of the sepals. The seed capsule develops from the ovary; it is 3/4-1.5″ long, cylindrical but tapering slightly towards the tip, with four robust, flaring lobes at the tip. There are (at least) three evening primroses in Jackson Park — common evening primrose (
Oenothera biennis), northern evening primrose (
Oenothera parviflora), and hairy evening primrose (
Oenothera villosa). They are easily confused with each other. (Judging by the conflicts between the accounts on
Illinois Wildflowers,
Minnesota Wildflowers, and
Missouri Plants, even the experts are confused.) All three species have yellow flowers with an X-shaped stigma, reflected sepals, petals with a small notch in their apex, stems that may be red or green, and lance-shaped leaves with short, widely-spaced teeth. Northern evening primrose is distinguished by (1) the presence of a knob or ridge at the tip of each sepal which the other two species lack (2) a seed capsule with four robust, flaring lobes with rounded tips at the apex of the seed capsule, and (3) a stigma that is very robust and almost fills the opening of the flower. Northern evening primrose has green to yellowish-green sepals. Hairy evening primrose (often but not always) has (1) striped or reddish-tinged sepals (check the buds where this character is often easier to see), (2) flowers that turn orange as they begin to senesce (although the reliability of this character is uncertain), and (3) always has glandular hairs covering the ovary that have “pimple-like” bright-red bases; these red pimples may also occur on the stems. All three species are somewhat similar to prairie sundrop (
O. pilosella); the latter has very hairy stems and leaves, and translucent lines that radiate from the base of the petals in the flowers.