Alsike clover (Trifolium hybridum) flowerheads. Lower right: a typical alsike clover flowerhead with white blooms on the top of the flowerhead, red below. The florets open in order from the bottom of the flowerhead towards the top. Note the sharply pointed standard (the most vertical petal), regardless of flower color, and the lack of grooves on the standard. Upper right: another alsike clover flowerhead, this one with the balance tilted towards red florets. Upper left: an older alsike clover flowerhead; the lower, red florets are beginning to look worn and turning brown. Bottom left: an alsike clover flower in which the lower florets are pink rather than red.
Alsike clover is an exotic perennial native to Europe. Despite the specific name (“hybridum“), it is not a hybrid. (Linnaeus thought it was a hybrid of red and white clover. It isn’t.) The plant is 6-24″ tall, with occasional branches along the stems. One- to three-inch-long flower stalks arising from the leaf axils terminate in a flowerhead 1/2-3/4″ across; florets tend to be white on the top of the flowerhead and reddish-purple to pink on the bottom, but may all be reddish. Individual florets are 1/4” long with five petals in a pea-like bloom. They have a sharply pointed standard (the major vertical petal, perpendicular to the keel), two petals that make up the keel, and two lateral petals that flank the keel. Ten stamens and a single pistil are hidden inside the keel. Unlike red clover (T. pratense) and white clover (T. repens), there are no pale chevron-shaped markings on the leaflets.
Alsike clover (Trifolium hybridum) stems and leaves. Top: An alsike clover leaf with a flower stalk growing out of the leaf axil. Note the small but sharply-pointed teeth on the leaflets. A portion of the hairless stem and one of the two stipules are also visible. Bottom: two more examples of alsike clover leaves.
Alsike clover is an exotic perennial native to Europe. Despite the specific name (“hybridum“), it is not a hybrid. (Linnaeus thought it was a hybrid of red and white clover. It isn’t.) The plant is 6-24″ tall, with occasional branches along the stems. The stems are green, round in section, and usually hairless. The leaves are alternate, palmately compound with three leaflets, and hairless; the leaves have 1/2″ long petioles and a pair of stipules that flank the insertion of the leaf petiole on the stem. The stipules are triangular or teardrop-shaped, fused to the stem for about a third of their length, tapering to a sharp point at the distal end, and thin with parallel green venation. The leaflets are about 1/2” long with sharply serrated edges, oblong or egg-shaped, each leaflet with a 1 mm long (or less) petiolule connecting it to the tip of the petiole. Unlike red clover (T. pratense) and white clover (T. repens), there are no pale chevron-shaped markings on the leaflets.


