Yellow violet (Viola pubescens) flowers and fruit. Bottom right: a face-on view of a yellow violet. Note the purple nectar guides on the lower petal and the “beards” on the base of the lower paired petals. Top right: lateral view of a yellow violet showing the attachment of the floral stalk and a partial view of the sepals. Top left: the immature fruit of yellow volet, a capsule that retains the remnants of the style at its tip and the sepals at its base. Bottom left: a closer view of an immature yellow violet seed capsule.
Yellow violet is a native perennial, the only yellow violet species in Jackson Park (indeed, in all of Illinois). One or more stems arise from an axil of a stem leaf; they are up to 6″ tall with a single 3/4″ long flower at their tips. Each flower consists of five light green sepals, five yellow petals, five stamens, and a single style; the stamens and style cannot be seen from the exterior. On the lower petal, the flowers have purple lines (nectar guides) and a spur reduced to a small pouch. The two lower, lateral petals have small tufts of hair that obscure the throat of the flower and hide the stamens and style; the two upper, lateral petals are beardless and have only faint lines (nectar guides), if any. The fruit of this species is a bullet-shaped (hairless in the Jackson Park forms) capsule nestled in the calyx with the remnant of the style at its tip, initially green but turning brown as it matures; it ultimately splits along three suture lines to fling the seeds away from the plant.
Yellow violet (Viola pubescens) stems and leaves. Bottom: an array of yellow violet leaves. Top left: a yellow violet plant with a remaining basal leaf (bottom center) and several stem leaves (upper half of the image). Note that the basal and stem leaves are virtually identical. Top left: close-up of a single leaf arising from the top of a stem (S). The axil of the leaf petiole (P) hosts a floral stem (FS).
Yellow violet is a native perennial. There are two named subspecies of Viola pubescens which are very difficult to differentiate — one is hairy (var. pubescens), one not so hairy (var. eriocarpa); both have heart-shaped leaves, but in one the leaf comes to a sharper tip than in the other. Usually. Deeply fascinating if you have a passion for violets and love evolutionary complications, but awkward if you just want a convenient name for your mental filing system. Let’s not get into the subspecies quicksand; even John Hilty says the described “subspecies” intergrade. Thus, we’ll just call this yellow violet “Viola pubescens“. It’s the only yellow violet species in Jackson Park (indeed, in all of Illinois). It has a small basal rosette of leaves, each up to 3″ long and about the same across with long (about 3” petioles). The stem leaves are alternate, similar to the basal leaves but smaller. Yellow violet has heart-shaped, virtually hairless or hairy, leaves with scalloped margins.
A stand of yellow violets (Viola pubescens) in the woods just north of Bobolink Meadow at the end of April. The insert shows an enlarged single flower.
Yellow violet is a native perennial. There are two named subspecies of Viola pubescens which are very difficult to differentiate — one is hairy (var. pubescens), one not so hairy (var. eriocarpa); both have heart-shaped leaves, but in one the leaf comes to a sharper tip than in the other. Usually. Deeply fascinating if you have a passion for violets and love evolutionary complications, but awkward if you just want a convenient name for your mental filing system. Let’s not get into the subspecies quicksand; even John Hilty says the described “subspecies” intergrade. Thus, we’ll just call this yellow violet “Viola pubescens“. It’s the only yellow violet species in Jackson Park (indeed, in all of Illinois). It has a small basal rosette of leaves, each up to 3″ long and about the same across with long (about 3″ petioles). The stem leaves are alternate, similar to the basal leaves but smaller. Yellow violet has heart-shaped, virtually hairless or hairy, leaves with scalloped margins. One or more stems arise from an axil of a stem leaf; they are up to 6″ tall with a single 3/4” long flower at their tips. Each flower consists of five light green sepals, five yellow petals, five stamens, and a single style; the stamens and style cannot be seen from the exterior. On the lower petal, the flowers have purple lines (nectar guides) and a spur reduced to a small pouch. The two lower, lateral petals have small tufts of hair that obscure the throat of the flower and hide the stamens and style; the two upper, lateral petals are beardless and have only faint lines (nectar guides), if any. The fruit of this species is a bullet-shaped (hairless in the Jackson Park forms) capsule nestled in the calyx with the remnant of the style at its tip, initially green but turning brown as it matures; it ultimately splits along three suture lines to fling the seeds away from the plant.


