Jetbead (Rhodotypos scandens) flowers and fruit. Top: a jetbead flower viewed from the side. Note that the flower arises from leaf axils on a distinct flower stalk; the stipules that flank the base of the leaf petioles are also marked. Bottom left: a jetbead flower viewed face-on. Note the four rounded petals, and the numerous stamens on a green background in the center of the flower. Bottom right: four immature jetbead seeds still attached to the persistant sepals. When fully mature, these seeds would be shiny black.
Jetbead flowers are solitary, arising on the tips of the green twigs. Flowers are elevated on 1/4-1/2″ long stalks. There are four green sepals at the base of the flower, each with a bractlet half the length of the sepals that is located below the intersection of each pair of sepals. Four white, nearly circular petals alternate in position with the sepals. A greenish hypanthium covers the center of the flower with a four-lobed ridge marking its edges. Numerous (30-60) stamens with white filaments and yellow anthers, usually in four distinct clusters, lie inside the ridge; the stamens surround four pistils, each with a single style and a circular, terminal stigma. After fertilization, 1-4 fruits develop in the center of the flower that turn shiny black at maturity (the “jetbead”); the seeds remain attached to the persistent sepals until late in the fall and may persist through the winter.
Jetbead (Rhodotypos scandens) stems and leaves. Top: a jetbead flower on its flower stalk. The flower stalks arise from the axils of the opposite leaves. Note the strongly plicated (folded) leaf blades. Bottom left: one of a pair of leaves; the stipules that flank the base of the petioles are indicated by arrows. Bottom right: another flower arising from the leaf axils. The flower stalk (fs) is marked. In all three images, note that the stems to which the leaves are attached are green, indicating that the stems are this year’s new growth.
Jetbead is a rounded shrub 20″ to over six feet tall that can have from 5-20+ reddish-brown arching, woody stems that branch occasionally; the twigs are green. The leaves are opposite, oval, up to 3″ long and half as wide, with a rounded base and a sharply pointed, narrow tip. The leaf blade is sharply plicate (i.e., folded back and forth like an old-fashioned hand fan). The leaf margin is doubly-toothed, with larger teeth alternating with a series of 1-3 smaller teeth; the leaf blade is covered on both surfaces with sparse short, fine, silky hairs. The petiole is 3-10 mm long; a pair of narrow stipules 2-4 mm long flank the base of the petiole where it attaches to the stem.
A jetbead (Rhodotypos scandens) shrub on the east side of Wooded Island, in the woods south of Japanese Garden.
Jetbead is an exotic that is native to northern Asia; it is considered invasive. Jetbead is a rounded shrub 20″ to over six feet tall that can have from 5-20+ reddish-brown arching, woody stems that branch occasionally; the twigs are green. The leaves are opposite, oval, up to 3″ long and half as wide, with a rounded base and a sharply pointed, narrow tip. The leaf blade is sharply plicate (i.e., folded back and forth like an old-fashioned hand fan). The leaf margin is doubly-toothed, with larger teeth alternating with a series of 1-3 smaller teeth; the leaf blade is covered on both surfaces with sparse short, fine, silky hairs. The petiole is 3-10 mm long; a pair of narrow stipules 2-4 mm long flank the base of the petiole where it attaches to the stem. Flowers are solitary, arising on the tips of the green twigs. Flowers are elevated on 1/4-1/2″ long stalks. There are four green sepals at the base of the flower, each with a bractlet half the length of the sepals that is located below the intersection of each pair of sepals. Four white, nearly circular petals alternate in position with the sepals. A greenish hypanthium covers the center of the flower with a four-lobed ridge marking its edges. Numerous (30-60) stamens with white filaments and yellow anthers, usually in four distinct clusters, lie inside the ridge; the stamens surround four pistils, each with a single style and a circular, terminal stigma. After fertilization, 1-4 fruits develop in the center of the flower that turn shiny black at maturity (the “jetbead”); the seeds remain attached to the persistent sepals until late in the fall and may persist through the winter.
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