Yellow bellwort (Uvularia grandiflora) flowers. Bottom left: yellow bellwort early blooms in Jackson Park (April, 2022). Bottom right: a mature yellow bellwort plant in May. Note the drooping flowers, partially hidden by the foliage, and arching stems. Top right: a yellow bellwort flower, looking into the flower. The large anthers hide the stigma and pistil. Top left: looking into the blooms of two adjacent yellow bellwort flowers. Note that the large anthers here are obviously densely covered in pollen.
Each side stem of yellow bellwort produces a single, elongate bell-shaped flower at its tip. The flowers droop on their stem-like pedicels (about 1 ” long) such that they open downwards and are often partially hidden by the leaves. Each flower is 1-2″ long and consists of six yellow tepals twisted along their length (often with greenish bases), six white stamens with elongated yellow anthers, and a pistil with a three-lobed stigma. The fruit is a three-section capsule that looks (vaguely) like three fat triangles with oval bases, stuck base to base to base. Seeds are freed when the capsule splits. Seed dispersal is added by the attraction of ants to a fleshy, nutrient-rich appendage (an elaiosome) on the seed; the ants carry the seed back to their nest where they eat the elaiosome and abandon the seed.
Yellow bellwort (Uvularia grandiflora) stems and leaves. Top: a mature yellow bellwort plant. Note that the leaves are perfoliate, i.e., the stems appear to penetrate the leaves. (In reality, the leaves clasp and grow around the stems.) Bottom: a single yellow bellwort leaf showing the upper surface of the leaf (left image) and the underside of the same leaf (right image). Note the parallel venation.
Yellow bellwort (aka, large-flowered bellwort) is a native perennial, a member of the spring ephemerals; it grows only 1-2 feet tall but makes up for its short stature with drooping leaves and flowers, giving it a peek-a-boo charm. Young plants have a single main stem; mature plants divide into 2-3 secondary (side) stems. The stems are round in section, hollow, hairless, light green or pale reddish green, and have a waxy or powdery bloom (like a plum or a grape). The leaves are alternate, oval, 6″ long and 2″ wide, sharply pointed, and (as the plants are monocots) parallel-veined; the base of each leaf completely surrounds the stem so the leaves appear to be penetrated (perfoliate) by the stalk.
A dense stand of yellow bellwort (Uvularia grandiflora) in the woods north of Bobolink Meadow. Note the single flower, low among the stems, that happens to be oriented face-on to the camera (arrow).
Yellow bellwort (aka, large-flowered bellwort) is a native perennial, a member of the spring ephemerals; it grows only 1-2 feet tall but makes up for its short stature with drooping leaves and flowers, giving it a peek-a-boo charm. Young plants have a single main stem; mature plants divide into 2-3 secondary (side) stems. The stems are round in section, hollow, hairless, light green or pale reddish green, and have a waxy or powdery bloom (like a plum or a grape). The leaves are alternate, oval, 6″ long and 2″ wide, sharply pointed, and (as the plants are monocots) parallel-veined; the base of each leaf completely surrounds the stem so the leaves appear to be penetrated (perfoliate) by the stalk. Each side stem produces a single, elongate bell-shaped flower at its tip. The flowers droop on their stem-like pedicels (about 1 ” long) such that they open downwards and are often partially hidden by the leaves. Each flower is 1-2″ long and consists of six yellow tepals twisted along their length (often with greenish bases), six white stamens with elongated yellow anthers, and a pistil with a three-lobed stigma. The fruit is a three-section capsule that looks (vaguely) like three fat triangles with oval bases, stuck base to base to base. Seeds are freed when the capsule splits. Seed dispersal is added by the attraction of ants to a fleshy, nutrient-rich appendage (an elaiosome) on the seed; the ants carry the seed back to their nest where they eat the elaiosome and abandon the seed.
