American wisteria (Wisteria frutescens) flowers and fruit. (1) An American wisteria inflorescence. (2) Close-up of the tip of an inflorescence. The pedicels and calyxes are not visible except at the base of the unopened buds, but the showy pea-like flowers with an upright standard are obvious. The two lateral petals cover the keel like a hood. The tip of the inflorescence is crowded with unopened buds. (3) Immature fruits of American wisteria. The pealike pods are attached to the stalk of the raceme by the flower pedicels; the remnants of the calyxes are visible as dried up, tan, fragments at the base of each pod. (4) Mature American wisteria pods swollen with ripe fruit, still attached to the raceme. (5) A mature American wisteria seed pod with my left hand for scale.
American wisteria’s flowers occur in showy terminal racemes. The flowers have 1/2″ long pedicels that are densely covered with stiff hairs and some club-shaped, stalked glands. Individual flowers consist of a 1/4-3/8″white to pale green, hairy calyx and 15-20 mm long bluish-purple, pea-like, hairless flowers. The expanded portion of the banner (or standard) is bent backwards so it is perpendicular to the axis of the rest of the flower; the two lateral petals cover the keel like a hood. There are 10 stamens with tiny anthers, an ovary encircled by a nectar gland, and a single style hidden within the keel; nine of the 10 stamens are fused to each other, the tenth is free. The fruits are 2.75-4″ long pea-like, hairless green pods containing 4-8 kidney-shaped or oval seeds, each about 8 mm wide; the pods are brown and the seeds are black when mature. The seeds contain an alpha-amino acid called canavanine which is structurally similar to L-arginine and the pods contain a saponin called wisterin; neither is a good thing to ingest. I’ve only seen American wisteria growing on the fence west of Japanese Garden. Periodically, the Park District cuts it down, I suspect because they fear for the fence’s structural integrity (it’s a heavy plant), but I wish a better solution could be found given American wisteria’s rarity.
American wisteria (Wisteria frutescens) stems and leaves. Top: an American wisteria stem with several alternate compound leaves attached; a small inflorescence is present at the tip of the stem. Bottom: A single compound leaf of American wisteria attached to a stem on the right. The leaflets are large and distinctive with a long, tapering tip; the lateral leaflets on this leaf have a stalk about a third the length of the stalk on the terminal leaflet.
American wisteria is a native perennial vine 25-30 feet long; it is fairly rare in Illinois, occurring in only about a dozen (mostly southern) counties. It is a woody, high-climbing vine, twining counterclockwise (viewed from the tip) as it grows. The stalk is virtually hairless, with tan to brown bark. The leaves are alternate, odd-pinnate compound with 7-13 leaflets, each 1.5-3″ long, ovate to elliptical, sharply pointed at the tip, more rounded at the base, with smooth margins; the petiole is short. The lateral leaflets have a short stalk or are nearly stalkless; the terminal leaflet has a 1/2-1″ long stalk (petiolule). The upper surface of the leaflets is hairless; the underside is hairy
American wisteria (Wisteria frutescens) growing on the fence that marks the western boundary of Japanese Garden. The inflorescences are large and striking.
American wisteria is a native perennial vine 25-30 feet long; it is fairly rare in Illinois, occurring in only about a dozen (mostly southern) counties. It is a woody, high-climbing vine, twining counterclockwise (viewed from the tip) as it grows. The stalk is virtually hairless, with tan to brown bark. The leaves are alternate, odd-pinnate compound with 7-13 leaflets, each 1.5-3″ long, ovate to elliptical, sharply pointed at the tip, more rounded at the base, with smooth margins; the petiole is short. The lateral leaflets have a short stalk or are nearly stalkless; the terminal leaflet has a 1/2-1″ long stalk (petiolule). The upper surface of the leaflets is hairless; the underside is hairy. The flowers occur in showy terminal racemes. The flowers have 1/2″ long pedicels that are densely covered with stiff hairs and some club-shaped, stalked glands. Individual flowers consist of a 1/4-3/8″white to pale green, hairy calyx and 15-20 mm long bluish-purple, pea-like, hairless flowers. The expanded portion of the banner (or standard) is bent backwards so it is perpendicular to the axis of the rest of the flower; the two lateral petals cover the keel like a hood. There are 10 stamens with tiny anthers, an ovary encircled by a nectar gland, and a single style hidden within the keel; nine of the 10 stamens are fused to each other, the tenth is free. The fruits are 2.75-4″ long pea-like, hairless green pods containing 4-8 kidney-shaped or oval seeds, each about 8 mm wide; the pods are brown and the seeds are black when mature. The seeds contain an alpha-amino acid called canavanine which is structurally similar to L-arginine and the pods contain a saponin called wisterin; neither is a good thing to ingest. I’ve only seen American wisteria growing on the fence west of Japanese Garden. Periodically, the Park District cuts it down, I suspect because they fear for the fence’s structural integrity (it’s a heavy plant), but I wish a better solution could be found given American wisteria’s rarity.
