Stinging nettle (Urtica dioica) flowers. Right: knobby clusters of flowers that have arisen from the leaf axils. Each knob is an individual flower, either male (staminate) or female (pistillate). Top left: an enlarged portion of a stinging nettle flower panicle. One of the open flowers is further enlarged in the insert on the right; it is a staminate flower with four equal sepals cupping four stubby stamens. Bottom left: another enlarged portion of a stinging nettle flower panicle. Again, two flowers can be seen to be staminate flowers (as are all the other flowers on this plant). It is almost impossible to see these details in the field so I have no images of pistillate stinging nettle flowers.
Stinging nettle plants are dioecious (unisexual) with male (staminate) and female (pistillate) flowers on separate plants. Flowers occur in knobby clusters (panicles) that arise from the leaf axils. Neither pistillate nor staminate flowers have any petals. Staminate flowers have four light green, identical sepals cupping four short stamens. Pistillate flowers also have four sepals but two are narrowly lance-shaped, about a millimeter long, and free, alternating with two sepals that are 1.4-1.8 mm long and cupped around the ovary; styles are absent but the single stigma is long and feathery. The fruit is a flattened, oval to egg-shaped, seed less than 1/16″ long.
Stinging nettle (Urtica dioica) stems and leaves. Top: a stinging nettle plant that conveniently lost has most of its leaves to display the upper surface of a leaf with the characteristic deeply sunken veins. However, the two leaves on the right side of the stem display the underside of those leaves; the raised veins are obvious.
Stinging nettle’s stem is square (four-angled) in section, up to 6.5 feet tall, usually unbranched, and may have bristly stinging hairs. The leaves are opposite, oblong or lance-shaped, tapering to a pointed tip, 3-6″ long and 1/2-1.5″ across, not varying much in size with position on the stem. They have coarsely and sharply serrated margins and the veins are sunken on the upper surface of the blade, raised on the underside. Both leaf petioles and the stems may bear bristle-like stinging hairs.
A stinging nettle (Urtica dioica) plant growing on the east side of the woods behind the old tennis courts (now Jackson Bark). The plant has fallen over under its own weight. The insert on the upper right is of the upper part of another stinging nettle, this one still upright. Both plants shown have prolifically produced panicles of flowers.
Stinging nettle (aka, tall nettle) has a complicated biogeographic history. The subspecies “Urtica dioica gracilis” is native, while the subspecies “Urtica dioica dioica” is an exotic that is native to Europe and Asia. Thus, you may see stinging nettle listed as either “native” or “exotic.” Both subspecies are perennials, and both occur in Illinois, but I won’t even try to sort them out here — most features are the same for both subspecies. The stem is square (four-angled) in section, up to 6.5 feet tall, usually unbranched, and may have bristly stinging hairs. The leaves are opposite, oblong or lance-shaped, tapering to a pointed tip, 3-6″ long and 1/2-1.5″ across, not varying much in size with position on the stem. They have coarsely and sharply serrated margins and the veins are sunken on the upper surface of the blade, raised on the underside. Both leaf petioles and the stems may bear bristle-like stinging hairs. The plants are dioecious (unisexual) with male (staminate) and female (pistillate) flowers on separate plants. Flowers occur in knobby clusters (panicles) that arise from the leaf axils. Neither pistillate nor staminate flowers have any petals. Staminate flowers have four light green, identical sepals cupping four short stamens. Pistillate flowers also have four sepals but two are narrowly lance-shaped, about a millimeter long, and free, alternating with two sepals that are 1.4-1.8 mm long and cupped around the ovary; styles are absent but the single stigma is long and feathery. The fruit is a flattened, oval to egg-shaped seed, less than 1/16″ long.
