Ditch stonecrop (Penthorum sedoides) flowers on the shore of Columbia Basin. Top: flower stalks from two different cymes. Bottom: close-up of individual flowers in profile (left) and face-on (right). Note the basal sepals, ten stamens with yellow anthers, and the five carpels, each with a stout style and a flat, greenish terminal stigma. There are no petals.
Ditch stonecrop is native to North America; its range includes the majority of the states in the U.S. and the provinces in Canada. It is a small (1-2 feet tall) plant with green or red stems, usually unbranched. Cymes of flowers 1-3″ across arise from the upper stems, each cyme with 2-4 spreading flowering stalks; flowers are restricted to only one side of the flower stalks. Individual 1/4″ flowers are yellowish-green to white, have five spreading, green sepals, ten stamens with cream-colored or yellow-orange anthers, and five beaked carpels, each with a single style and a green stigma; petals are completely absent. (The carpels look rather like a teapot with no handle and a very wide spout, or like a “duck” wine decanter. Look it up.) The carpels become the seed capsules; they turn bright red when mature. Ditch stonecrop prefers wet habitats (like ditches). It is completely unrelated to biting stonecrop (Sedum acre).
Ditch stonecrop (Penthorum sedoides) stem and leaves. Left: the alternate, sessile robust leaves host cymes of flowers in the axils of the upper leaves. Right: the upper surface (top image) and underside (bottom image) of the same leaf.
Ditch stonecrop is native to North America; its range includes the majority of the states in the U.S. and the provinces in Canada. It is a small (1-2 feet tall) plant with green or red stems, usually unbranched; other stem characters are highly variable. The leaves are alternate, 4″ long and 1″ across, an elongated oval in shape, with finely serrated margins, prominent midveins, and with either short, slender petioles or with sessile attachments. Cymes of flowers 1-3″ across arise from the upper stems or leaf axils, each cyme with 2-4 spreading flowering stalks; flowers are restricted to only one side of the flower stalks. Ditch stonecrop prefers wet habitats (like ditches). It is completely unrelated to biting stonecrop (Sedum acre).
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