Wild pansy (Viola arvensis) flowers. Bottom: two flowers viewed face-on. Note the yellow petal with white borders and dark nectar guides that functions as a platform for pollinators, two petals with a “beard” at their base that occludes the throat, and the final pair of petals behind these three. The tips of several sepals can be seen protruding beyond the petals. Middle right: a wild pansy flower seen from above. Note the arrangement of the petals and the sepals. Top right: a wild pansy flower with an ant visitor. The spur (labeled) is partly hidden behind the flower stalk. Top left: lateral view of another wild pansy flower, this one with the spur (labeled) well displayed. Middle left: a view of a wild pansy flower from above and slightly behind; two of the five triangular sepals are apparent.
Wild pansy’s flower stalks are long, hairless, and bend like a shepherd’s crook just below the base of the flower so the flower axis is approximately horizontal. Individual flowers have five 7-15 mm long, lance-shaped sepals that are longer than the petals and are sharply pointed at their tips; a 4-12 mm long corolla with five white or pale cream-colored petals, a yellow throat with a few dark purple lines, the lateral petals bearded on their upper surface, and a 1-1.5 mm long spur; two stamens not visible externally; and a single style enlarged into a hollow, globose stigma. The fruit is a spherical or ellipsoidal three-valved capsule, 5-10 mm long containing 6-75, 1.5 mm long, brown seeds.
Wild pansy (Viola arvensis) stems and leaves. Left: two wild pansy flower stalks with terminal flowers. A series of alternate leaves with large stipules where the petioles join the stem can be seen on these plants. Top right: one mature stem leaf (above) and a smaller immature leaf (below) on a flower stalk; the stipules of the lower leaf are labeled. Lower right: two more floral stalks, with a jumble of leaves and stipules visible at the base of the flower stalks.
Wild pansy (aka, field pansy) is an exotic annual native to the Old World, now naturalized in the U.S.; it can reach heights of 35 cm, but the ones I’ve seen in Jackson Park were on lawns and were 5 cm tall, just under a lawnmower’s blades. The stems are round to oval in section, green to purplish brown, up to 35 cm long, and fuzzy; multiple stems may arise from a single taproot. The leaves are alternate, 1/2-1″ long, egg-shaped in outline with a few notches around the margins and a blunt tip. The petioles are about as long as the leaf blades and are flanked on the stem by leafy, deeply lobed stipules (which distinguishes those Viola sp. called pansies from those called violets).
A stand of wild pansy (Viola arvensis) growing on a lawn due west of Columbia Basin. The lawn is mown frequently so the height of these plants is limited.
Wild pansy (aka, field pansy) is an exotic annual native to the Old World, now naturalized in the U.S.; it can reach heights of 35 cm, but the ones I’ve seen in Jackson Park were on lawns and were 5 cm tall, just under a lawnmower’s blades. The stems are round to oval in section, green to purplish brown, up to 35 cm long, and fuzzy; multiple stems may arise from a single taproot. The leaves are alternate, 1/2-1″ long, egg-shaped in outline with a few notches around the margins and a blunt tip. The petioles are about as long as the leaf blades and are flanked on the stem by leafy, deeply lobed stipules (which distinguishes those Viola sp. called pansies from those called violets). The flower stalks are long, hairless, and bend like a shepherd’s crook just below the base of the flower so the flower axis is approximately horizontal. Individual flowers have five 7-15 mm long, lance-shaped sepals that are longer than the petals and are sharply pointed at their tips; a 4-12 mm long corolla with five white or pale cream-colored petals, a yellow throat with a few dark purple lines, the lateral petals bearded on their upper surface, and a 1-1.5 mm long spur; two stamens not visible externally; and a single style enlarged into a hollow, globose stigma. The fruit is a spherical or ellipsoidal three-valved capsule, 5-10 mm long containing 6-75, 1.5 mm long, brown seeds.

