Brown-eyed susan (Rudbeckia triloba) flowers. Top: a single newly-opened brown-eyed susan bloom in the middle of a number of flower buds just deploying their ray florets. Bottom right: the disc florets open from the base of the central cone towards the tip. The yellow-tipped structures are the stamens with their yellow anthers. Bottom left: a later stage in the opening of the disc florets. The thin, circular structures visible (especially at the uppermost left of the cone) are the bifurcated stigmas of the disc floret styles. In all three images, note the reddish-brown, hairy stem.
Brown-eyed susan is a native bushy plant up to five feet tall that branches at the leaf axils and produces prodigious numbers of small flowers. The stems are deep reddish brown and covered with long white hairs. The leaves are alternate, twice as long as wide, lance-shaped, up to 4″ long and covered by short, stiff hairs that give it a rough texture. Some lower leaves are three-lobed, sometimes deeply, and halberd- or trident-shaped. Upper stems terminate in one or two flowerheads, 1-2″ across. Each flowerhead has an underlying inner and outer series of eight (total) green bracts with hairs along the margins; 6-13 golden-yellow, sterile ray florets, often with a small notch in the tips of the oval petals; and a central cone of 150 to over 300 purplish-brown, cylindrical disc florets with five stamens and short, blunt, bifurcated stigma. If in doubt, brown-eyed susan tends to be taller than black-eyed susan, with fewer petals (6-13 vs. 8-20) and smaller flowers.
Brown-eyed susan (Rudbeckia triloba) stems and leaves. Upper right: the top surface (upper image) and the underside (bottom image) of the same trident-shaped, three lobed leaf of brown-eyed susan. Bottom right: the trident-shaped leaves in situ on the plant. Note the hairy, reddish-brown stems in the background. Upper left: a portion of a brown-eyed susan plant with trident-shaped leaves present in the lower parts of the image and unlobed, lance-shaped leaves above. Bottom left: a portion of the upper part of a brown-eyed susan showing the unlobed upper stem leaves and an excellent view of the very hairy, reddish-brown stems.
Brown-eyed susan is a native bushy plant that branches at the leaf axils and produces prodigious numbers of small flowers, up to five feet tall. The stems are deep reddish brown and covered with long white hairs. The leaves are alternate, twice as long as wide, lance-shaped, up to 4″ long and covered by short, stiff hairs that give it a rough texture. Some lower leaves are three-lobed, sometimes deeply, and halberd- or trident-shaped. Upper stems terminate in one or two flowerheads, 1-2″ across. Each flowerhead has an underlying inner and outer series of eight (total) green bracts with hairs along the margins; 6-13 golden-yellow, sterile ray florets, often with a small notch in the tips of the oval petals; and a central cone of 150 to over 300 purplish-brown, cylindrical disc florets with five stamens and short, blunt, bifurcated stigma. If in doubt, brown-eyed susan tends to be taller than black-eyed susan, with fewer petals (6-13 vs. 8-20) and smaller flowers.
A dense cluster of brown-eyed susan (Rudbeckia triloba) plants in full bloom in Bobolink Meadow.
Brown-eyed susan is a native bushy plant that branches at the leaf axils and produces prodigious numbers of small flowers, up to five feet tall. The stems are deep reddish brown and covered with long white hairs. The leaves are alternate, twice as long as wide, lance-shaped, up to 4″ long and covered by short, stiff hairs that give it a rough texture. Some lower leaves are three-lobed, sometimes deeply, and halberd- or trident-shaped. Upper stems terminate in one or two flowerheads, 1-2″ across. Each flowerhead has an underlying inner and outer series of eight (total) green bracts with hairs along the margins; 6-13 golden-yellow, sterile ray florets, often with a small notch in the tips of the oval petals; and a central cone of 150 to over 300 purplish-brown, cylindrical disc florets with five stamens and short, blunt, bifurcated stigma. If in doubt, brown-eyed susan tends to be taller than black-eyed susan, with fewer petals (6-13 vs. 8-20) and smaller flowers.

