Early meadow-rue (Thalictrum dioicum) flowers. Top: male flowers on an early meadow-rue plant that is just leafing out. Bottom right: closer view of male flowers with their prominent stamens and a cap of five sepals. The filaments of the stamens may be tan or brownish purple; the anthers are yellow unless spent. Note that the male flowers tend to have a greater “droop” than the female flowers. Bottom left: female early meadow-rue flowers with their multiple pistils and long, fuzzy styles.
Early meadow-rue’s main stem terminates in a panicle up to a foot long and wide; each branch in the panicle has a corymb of about five flowers at its tip. Early meadow-rue is dioecious — some plants produce only staminate (male) flowers, each with 10+ stamens; other plants bear only pistillate (female) flowers, each with up to 15 pistils. Both male and female flowers droop from their stems, but the male flowers have a longer droop than do the female flowers. Both male and female flowers are about 1/2″ long and 1/4″ across with 4-5 pale green sepals with white margins (which often fall off). Neither male nor female flowers have petals; pollination is via the wind. Fertilized female flowers produce ellipsoid, dry seeds that are pointed at both ends; the surface bears strong ribbing. Early meadow-rue prefers shady woodlands. It has more lobes on its leaves (usually 3-5), and the lobes are more rounded than purple meadow-rue (Thalictrum dasycarpum), the other Thalictrum species in Jackson Park, does (2-3 pointed lobes).
Early meadow-rue (Thalictrum dioicum) stems and leaves. Top: the multi-compound leaves of early meadow-rue can be visually confusing. The most important character is the number of lobes on the leaflets. In this image, the leaflets commonly have five to seven lobes, distinct from purple meadow-rue’s three. Bottom right: an early meadow-rue leaf with seven groups of three leaflets, most with five or seven lobes. Note the purple color of the rachis, petiole, and stems. Bottom left: another example of early meadow-rue’s leaflets, including some very young, pale green, leaflets in the foreground.
Early meadow-rue stems are pale green to pale purplish green, hairless, often with a waxy bloom, and round in section. The leaves are alternate, double or triple odd-pinnate, and up to a foot long and wide. Each branch of the compound leaf has three or five hairless leaflets up to 1.75″ long and across with 3-9 rounded or bluntly pointed lobes (usually five or more); each leaflet has a slender petiolule.
A cluster of male early meadow-rue (Thalictrum dioicum) plants on the west side of Wooded Island in mid-April.
Early meadow-rue is a native perennial that gets up to 2.5 feet tall, much shorter than its later-blooming cousin, purple meadow-rue (Thalictrum dasycarpum). The stems are pale green to pale purplish green, hairless, often with a waxy bloom, and round in section. The leaves are alternate, double or triple odd-pinnate, and up to a foot long and wide. Each branch of the compound leaf has three or five hairless leaflets up to 1.75″ long and across with 3-9 rounded or bluntly pointed lobes (usually five or more); each leaflet has a slender petiolule. The main stem terminates in a panicle up to a foot long and wide; each branch in the panicle has a corymb of about five flowers at its tip. Early meadow-rue is dioecious — some plants produce only staminate (male) flowers, each with 10+ stamens; other plants bear only pistillate (female) flowers, each with up to 15 pistils. Both male and female flowers droop from their stems, but the male flowers have a longer droop than do the female flowers. Both male and female flowers are about 1/2″ long and 1/4″ across with 4-5 pale green sepals with white margins (which often fall off). Neither male nor female flowers have petals; pollination is via the wind. Fertilized female flowers produce ellipsoid, dry seeds that are pointed at both ends; the surface bears strong ribbing. Early meadow-rue prefers shady woodlands. It has more lobes on its leaves (usually 3-5), and the lobes are more rounded than purple meadow-rue (Thalictrum dasycarpum) does (2-3 pointed lobes).

