Common chickweed (Stellaria media) flowers and fruit. (1) A common chickweed flower. Note the deeply indented five (apparently ten) petals, the five very large, hairy sepals and the three styles. (2) Two more common chickweed flowers. The anthers on the stamens are visible as reddish-brown oblongs. (3) A common chickweed stem with two isolated flowers. Note the single line of hairs on the stem (arrow), a character as unusual as the bifid petals. (4) A common chickweed seed capsule nestled in the hairy sepals.
Common chickweed’s flower stems arise from the axils of outer pairs of leaves; the flower stems terminate in small cymes of flowers. Individual flowers are about 1/4″ across, consisting of five green sepals longer than the petals, tapering to a point, hairy on the outside; five white, widely-spaced, bifid (deeply notched, each appearing double) petals; 2-10 (usually 3-5) stamens with reddish-violet anthers; and a central green ovary with three styles fused except at their flaring tips. The fruits are light brown, cylindrical, 4-6 mm long seed capsules nestled in the embrace of the (hairy) sepals with six small teeth around their upper ends. Common chickweed is usually self-pollinating (autogamous) but is occasionally cross-pollinated by flies. Chickweeds of the genus Stellaria (like common chickweed) have three styles; chickweeds of the genus Cerastium (like mouse-eared chickweed) have five styles. The flowers of whitlow-grass (Draba verna) are superficially similar to common chickweed in size and color but have only four bifid petals rather than five. One odd (but distinguishing) characteristic of common chickweed — if you bend the stem back and forth, the epidermis and parenchyma will split, leaving a central vascular bundle which will stretch elastically if you then pull the broken segments apart.
Common chickweed (Stellaria media) stems and leaves. The main image shows a dense mat of common chickweed with reddish-brown stems and oval leaves that tend to get larger towards the apex of the stems. A typical flower is present in the middle of the image. The inset presents an even-more magnified image of the stems and two leaves; the arrows point to solitary lines of hairs on the stems, an unusual character of common chickweed.
Common chickweed is a low growing annual with 6-12″ long stems that you may recognize from your lawn. It is an exotic from Eurasia that generally prefers shady areas with a history of disturbance. The stems are dark reddish-brown, sprawling, often bearing a single line of white hairs; they are strongly reminiscent of succulents. The leaves are opposite, 3/4″ long and 1/2″ wide, oval with a sharp tip and smooth margins, mostly sessile above, stalked below, tending larger towards the apex of the stems; they are hairless on the upper surface and hairy on the undersides and margins.
A mat of common chickweed (Stellaria media) by the path east of the Driving Range and west of DuSable Lake Shore Drive.
Common chickweed is a low growing annual with 6-12″ long stems that you may recognize from your lawn. It is an exotic from Eurasia that generally prefers shady areas with a history of disturbance. The stems are dark reddish-brown, sprawling, often bearing a single line of white hairs; they are strongly reminiscent of succulents. The leaves are opposite, 3/4″ long and 1/2″ wide, oval with a sharp tip and smooth margins, mostly sessile above, stalked below, tending larger towards the apex of the stems; they are hairless on the upper surface and hairy on the undersides and margins. Flower stems arise from the axils of outer pairs of leaves; the flower stems terminate in small cymes of flowers. Individual flowers are about 1/4″ across, consisting of five green sepals longer than the petals, tapering to a point, hairy on the outside; five white, widely-spaced, bifid (deeply notched, each appearing double) petals; 2-10 (usually 3-5) stamens with reddish-violet anthers; and a central green ovary with three styles fused except at their flaring tips. The fruits are light brown, cylindrical, 4-6 mm long seed capsules nestled in the embrace of the (hairy) sepals with six small teeth around their upper ends. Common chickweed is usually self-pollinating (autogamous) but is occasionally cross-pollinated by flies. Chickweeds of the genus Stellaria (like common chickweed) have three styles; chickweeds of the genus Cerastium (like mouse-eared chickweed) have five styles. The flowers of whitlow-grass (Draba verna) are superficially similar to common chickweed in size and color but have only four bifid petals rather than five. One odd (but distinguishing) characteristic of common chickweed — if you bend the stem back and forth, the epidermis and parenchyma will split, leaving a central vascular bundle which will stretch elastically if you then pull the broken segments apart.
