Purpletop vervain (Verbena bonariensis) flowers. Top: a lateral view of a cluster of purpletop vervain flowers. Bottom left: a lateral view of purpletop vervain flowers illustrating the small green calyx and long tubular, hairy corolla. Bottom right: face-on view of purpletop vervain flowers; neither the stamens nor the style extends outside the throat of the flowers.
Purpletop vervain flowers occur in dense, flat-topped clusters 1-3″ across. Individual flowers are about 1/4″ (5-6 mm) long and 8-9 mm long. The flowers contain a short, tubular, hairy calyx with five teeth; a pinkish purple, tubular corolla with five spreading lobes that have notched tips; four stamens which do not extend beyond the throat of the flower; and a pistil with a single style. The fruit is four nutlets, cupped in the remnants of the calyx as they mature.
Purpletop vervain (Verbena bonariensis) stems and leaves. Top: the opposite stem leaves of purpletop vervain are olive-green and sessile. The main stem is hairy and four-angled, as are the branches. Bottom: a single purpletop vervain stem leaf showing the upper surface of the leaf (left image) and the underside of the same leaf (right image).
Purpletop vervain is an exotic annual in Illinois but, in its native South America, the species is a perennial. Here it grows 1.5-4 feet tall, most of that the light green, coarsely hairy, four-angled central stem. Branches occur only in its upper regions of the stem. The stem leaves are opposite and mostly restricted to the lower half of the stem; only a few leaves are scattered across the upper half. The leaves range from 1.5-4″ long and 1/4-3/4″ wide, the smaller leaves occur higher on the stem. The stem leaves are elongate oblongs, often curved laterally along their long axis, with coarsely dentate margins, gray-green or olive-green in color, hairless, and wrinkled. The leaf base clasps the stem.

