Soapwort (Saponaria officinalis) flowers. Left: two soapwort plants with clusters of flowers on every stem and branch tip. Top right: a pink variant of a soapwort flower seen in lateral view. Note the long, green calyx, the reflected petals and stamens, and the divided white style (arrow). Bottom right: a white variant of a soapwort flower. In the upper part of the image the density of packing of the calyxes is apparent; in the lower left a flower can be seen face-on.
Soapwort produces clusters of 3/4-1″ flowers from the tips of terminal stems and branches. Individual flowers have a 1″ long, green or reddish, sometimes hairy, cylindrical calyx; a corolla with five spreading (later reflexed), pink to white, oblong petals/lobes with a notched tip; 10 white stamens with pale yellow anthers that protrude from the throat of the flower; and a similarly protruding, divided white style. The calyx persists as an inflated seed capsule filled with 15-75 tiny dark brown, kidney-shaped seeds. Soapwort might be mistaken for a phlox, but the stamens and style in phlox are always hidden in the calyx tube, never protruding as in soapwort, and soapwort has leaves with three obvious longitudinal veins. Soapwort contains saponins in both the foliage and (especially) the seeds that make a frothy soap-like lather when boiled (and were once used as a soap substitute), but caution is recommended — the saponins are toxic. Herbivores generally avoid this plant.
Soapwort (Saponaria officinalis) stems and leaves. Bottom right: a single soapwort leaf with its three longitudinal veins — a midvein and two lateral veins that run subparallel to the leaf margins. Note the two accessory leaves perpendicular to the leaf axis at the base of the petiole. Bottom left: a lateral view of a main soapwort stem with a series of the opposite leaves along its length. Note that the orientation of leaf pairs rotates 90° between pairs. The accessory leaves are prominent here, too. Top: Looking down a stem at an angle. Especially on the lower leaves, the subdivision of the leaf blades into four sections is apparent.
Soapwort (a.k.a., bouncing bet) is a weedy exotic plant originally from Europe that ranges throughout North America — the lower 48 states in the U.S. and the lower seven provinces in Canada. It is an attractive plant that ranges from 1-2.5 feet tall; the round, hairless stems rarely branch. The leaves are opposite, a bit over twice as long as wide, oval, hairless, with three conspicuous main veins (midvein and two lateral veins) dividing the leaf into quarters (approximately) and with smooth margins. The leaves are sessile or have a short, stout winged petiole, sometimes with smaller accessory leaves growing at right angles to the base of the leaf.
A soapwort (Saponaria officinalis) in full bloom in a colony of the species growing beside the trail that parallels DuSable Lake Shore Drive about 75 m north of the 63rd St. Beach underpass. The insert in the upper right corner shows two soapwort flowers, one in lateral view, one face-on.
Soapwort (aka, bouncing bet) is a weedy exotic plant originally from Europe that ranges throughout North America — the lower 48 states in the U.S. and the lower seven provinces in Canada. It is an attractive plant that ranges from 1-2.5 feet tall; the round, hairless stems rarely branch. The leaves are opposite, a bit over twice as long as wide, oval, hairless, with three conspicuous main veins (midvein and two lateral veins) dividing the leaf into quarters (approximately) and with smooth margins. The leaves are sessile or have a short, stout winged petiole, sometimes with smaller accessory leaves growing at right angles to the base of the leaf. Clusters of 3/4-1″ flowers are produced from the tips of terminal stems and branches. Individual flowers have a 1″ long, green or reddish, sometimes hairy, cylindrical calyx; a corolla with five spreading (later reflexed), pink to white, oblong petals/lobes with a notched tip; 10 white stamens with pale yellow anthers that protrude from the throat of the flower; and a similarly protruding, divided white style. The calyx persists as an inflated seed capsule filled with 15-75 tiny dark brown, kidney-shaped seeds. Soapwort might be mistaken for a phlox, but the stamens and style in phlox are always hidden in the calyx tube, never protruding as in soapwort, and soapwort has leaves with three obvious longitudinal veins. Soapwort contains saponins in both the foliage and (especially) the seeds that make a frothy soap-like lather when boiled (and were once used as a soap substitute), but caution is recommended — the saponins are toxic. Herbivores generally avoid this plant.
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