Erect hedge-parsley (Torilis japonica) flowers. Top: two umbels of erect hedge-parsley blooms. The umbel on the left has most of its flowers open; the umbel on the right is still in early bud stage. Bottom: closer views of erect hedge-parsley’s flowers. Note the unequal, pink-tinged petals and the stamens with purplish pink anthers.
Erect hedge-parsley’s main stem and side stems give rise to umbels 1.5-2″ across of 10-20 umbellets of flowers. Each flower is about 1/8″ across consisting of five white petals (often markedly unequal in size), and a creamy white center surrounded by five pink to white stamens. The fruit is an 1/8″ long oval covered in hooked hairs to aid in bur-like dispersal; it contains two seeds. (The fruit of common hedge-parsley (Torilis arvensis, not found in Jackson Park) has straight or only slightly curved hairs, not hooked, but the hairs are barbed.)
A compound leaf of erect hedge-parsley (Torilis japonica). The upper side of the leaf is shown in the top image; the underside of the same leaf is shown in the bottom image.
Erect hedge-parsley (aka, Japanese hedge-parsley) is an aggressive invasive species native to western Europe and Asia that gets over three feet tall. It is almost indistinguishable from the native common hedge-parsley (Torilis arvensis), which I’ve not seen in Jackson Park. Erect hedge-parsley has one or more long linear bracts at the base of each umbel and up to eight at the base of each umbellet, but you must look closely to see them. (I did not know this when I encountered this plant, so I have no helpful pictures. I’m not certain which species is figured here but Seek identified it as erect hedge-parsley.) The stems are ridged and branched. The leaves and stems are covered in stiff, appressed hairs that give both a rough feel. The basal and lower stem leaves are up to 5″ long and 4″ wide, odd-compound in groups of three to five; the stem leaves have a sheath where the leaf petiole joins the stem. In the lower regions of the stem, the leaflets are fern-like, feathery, and narrow at the base; leaflets near the flowers are both smaller and less deeply divided.
