Common plantain (Plantago major) flowers and fruit. A flower spike covered with mature flowers is presented on the far left; a “fruit spike” (a flower spike after all flowers have been fertilized) is presented on the far right. In the middle of the image, the upper image is a close-up of the flowers: the stamens have very thin filaments that are easy to overlook but bear large, tan-colored anthers, while the styles (actually, their stigmas) have an obvious feathery appearance. Similarly, the lower image is a close-up of the developing fruit: note the general “egg-shape” of the fruit (confirming it is P. major) and the remnants of the stigmas still attached to the fruit.
Common plantain is an introduced plant commonly found in lawns and disturbed areas. The flower stalks are erect, 4-20″ long; the lower third is green and unadorned while the upper two-thirds is densely covered with 1/8″ green flowers. Individual flowers consist of four green sepals with a green keel and membranous margins above a single green bract, four filamentous stamens with tan to purplish anthers, a single white style, and a four small, papery, petals. The flowers are wind-pollinated. The fruits are rounded, egg-shaped capsules about 1/8″ long. Common plantain is nearly indistinguishable from (the native) black-seeded plantain (Plantago rugelii); the two species differ only in the details of the sepals and seed pods. (Common plantain’s seed capsule is egg-shaped and splits around the middle; black-seeded plantain’s seed capsule are 2-3 times longer than wide splits nearer the bottom.) One, more ephemeral, character may help distinguish the two species in the field. According to Minnesota Wildflowers, the base of the leaf stalks of the native species (Rugel’s plantain, P. rugelii) are dark red or purple in color; the base of the leaf stalks of the exotic common plantain (P. major) are uniformly green. Rugel’s plantain is probably as common and tolerant of a range of habitats as common plantain, but specimens of this plant tend to be reflexively referred to as “common plantain.”
A common plantain (Plantago major) plant on a lawn in Jackson Park. Note the large leaves with five veins, the three flower spikes (now bearing developing fruit), and the green bases of the leaf petioles. The latter character indicates that this specimen is indeed common plantain (P. major) and not the native Rugel’s plantain (P. rugelii).
Common plantain is an introduced plant commonly found in lawns and disturbed areas. The leaves are oval with five veins radiating from the leaf base; the petioles are about the same length as the leaf blade, grooved along the upper surface. The leaves lie low and parallel to the ground. The flower stalks are erect, 4-20″ long; the lower third is green and unadorned while the upper two-thirds is densely covered with 1/8″ green flowers. Common plantain is nearly indistinguishable from (the native) black-seeded plantain (Plantago rugelii); the two species differ only in the details of the sepals and seed pods. (Common plantain’s seed capsule is egg-shaped and splits around the middle; black-seeded plantain’s seed capsule are 2-3 times longer than wide splits nearer the bottom.) One, more ephemeral, character may help distinguish the two species in the field. According to Minnesota Wildflowers, the base of the leaf stalks of the native species (Rugel’s plantain, P. rugelii) are dark red or purple in color; the base of the leaf stalks of the exotic common plantain (P. major) are uniformly green. Rugel’s plantain is probably as common and tolerant of a range of habitats as common plantain, but specimens of this plant tend to be reflexively referred to as “common plantain.”
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