Rue anemone (Thalictrum thalictroides) flowers and fruit. Bottom right: rue anemone flowers rising from a whorl of trilobed leaves. Top right: a single rue anemone flower with eight white sepals, numerous stamens with yellow anthers, and a central core of green pistils. Top left: another rue anemone flower, this one with seven lavender petals. This color variant is much less common than the white form. Bottom left: a cluster of over a dozen rue anemone’s ribbed, green seed pods, each containing a single seed.
Immediately above the terminal stem leaves or leaflets of rue anemons is an umbel of one to six 1/2-1″ flowers on 1.5″ long pedicels. Each flower has 5-10 white or pinkish-white, petal-like sepals and a striking green center made of 1-16 pistils surrounded by 7-30 stamens with yellow anthers. There are no true petals. The fruit is a cluster of 5-15 strongly ribbed spindles about 8 mm long, pointed at both ends; each contains a single seed. Rue anemone prefers woodlands with dappled sunlight in the spring but tolerates shade in the summer months. The leaflets/leaves of rue anemone are similar to the leaflets of purple meadow-rue (Thalictrum dasycarpum), but you’ll never confuse the two; purple meadow-rue blooms six weeks later and is seven feet taller than rue anemone.
Rue anemone (Thalictrum thalictroides) leaves. Bottom right: an early rue anemone bloom atop a whorl of only four, small leaves arising from the tip of the stem. Top right: later in the season, the leaf petioles are longer and the number of leaves in the whorl is larger. Top left: still later in the season, a view of the whorl of leaves in which the structure of the whorl can be better seen. Bottom left: the apical whorl in a rue anemone plant in which all the flowers have been fertilized and the pistils replaced with ridged seed pods.
Rue anemone is a native perennial that is listed as “threatened” in Illinois. It is one of the “spring ephemerals” that typically blooms in April and May in Jackson Park; it is only 4-8″ tall when in bloom. Before blooming, rue anemone produces a whorl of trifoliate basal leaves on slender, light green to reddish purple, hairless, long and slender stems. The leaflets of the basal leaves are oblong, 1.5″ long and 1″ across, each purplish green, hairless leaflet with three blunt lobes and a 1/4″ long petiolule. Stems similar to the stems of the basal leaves arise from the basal whorl; stem leaves similar to the basal leaves may appear mid-stem, but the stem leaves are usually restricted to a whorl of trifoliate leaves, single leaflets, or a combination of the two at the tip of the stem.
Several rue anemone (Thalictrum thalictroides) plants growing in a cluster on the west side of Wooded Island. Here you can clearly see that the flower stalks and the whorl of leaves both arise from the tip of the single stem.
Rue anemone is a native perennial that is listed as “threatened” in Illinois. It is one of the “spring ephemerals” that typically blooms in April and May in Jackson Park; it is only 4-8″ tall when in bloom. Before blooming, rue anemone produces a whorl of trifoliate basal leaves on slender, light green to reddish purple, hairless, long and slender stems. The leaflets of the basal leaves are oblong, 1.5″ long and 1″ across, each purplish green, hairless leaflet with three blunt lobes and a 1/4″ long petiolule. Stems similar to the stems of the basal leaves arise from the basal whorl; stem leaves similar to the basal leaves may appear mid-stem, but the stem leaves are usually restricted to a whorl of trifoliate leaves, single leaflets, or a combination of the two at the tip of the stem. Immediately above the terminal stem leaves or leaflets is an umbel of one to six 1/2-1″ flowers on 1.5″ long pedicels. Each flower has 5-10 white or pinkish-white, petal-like sepals and a striking green center made of 1-16 pistils surrounded by 7-30 stamens with yellow anthers. There are no true petals. The fruit is a cluster of 5-15 strongly ribbed spindles about 8 mm long, pointed at both ends; each contains a single seed. Rue anemone prefers woodlands with dappled sunlight in the spring but tolerates shade in the summer months. The leaflets/leaves of rue anemone are similar to the leaflets of purple meadow-rue (Thalictrum dasycarpum), but you’ll never confuse the two; purple meadow-rue blooms six weeks later and is seven feet taller than rue anemone.

