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Brief Summary

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Also known as simpler's joy and blue verbena, blue vervain is a native perennial plant found throughout New England and the United States. The entire plant grows 2 to 6 feet high, with multiple, small, blue-violet flowers emerging from spikes about five inches long. The tubular blossoms have five lobes that open 1/8 inch wide. The plant has a tall, square-edged stem with stalks that terminate into the spikes. The stalks may be green or reddish, and may be covered in fine white hairs. Narrow and rough serrated leaves, about 6 inches long and 1 inch across, grow in an opposite pattern up the stems, attached to the stalk by short petioles. The root system of the plant is fibrous. Blue vervain can be easily distinguished from other types of vervain because of its distinctive color. Blue vervain is a perennial plant that grows each year from the root stock of the year before. It is also a biennial, so it does not begin to bloom until the second year of its life. The flowers bloom for about a month and a half from July to September. Four nutlets are produced from each flower. Blue vervain attracts a lot of wildlife: many different species of insects and bees, particularly bumblebees, collect nectar and pollen; cotton-tailed rabbits eat the young plants; and many birds, such as sparrows and cardinals, eat the seeds. Prefers moist habitats with full or partial sunlight. Because of this it is found in damp thickets, shores, roadsides, pastures, and other places near ponds and streams. This plant easily adapts to areas from degraded wetlands to high quality habitats. Very common plants in moist areas, some states even consider it a weed. Still, blue vervain is thought to be a medicinal cure-all in many cultures. The Latin name, verbena hastate, translates to "sacred plant.
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Verbena hastata

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Verbena hastata, commonly known as American vervain,[1] blue vervain,[2] simpler's joy,[3] or swamp verbena,[4] is a perennial flowering plant in the vervain family Verbenaceae. It grows throughout the continental United States and in much of southern Canada.

Description

V. hastata grows as a stiffly erect stem, occasionally branching in the upper half, reaching up to 1.5 m (5 ft) tall. The stems are four-angled (square), hairy, and green to reddish in color. Leaves are opposite, simple, and measure up to 15 cm (6 in) long and 3 cm (1 in) across.[5] They have doubly-serrate margins and a variety of shapes, from lanceolate to ovate, and may have 2 lateral lobes.[6]

The inflorescence is a panicle, or group, of flowering spikes, up to 30 cm (1 ft) long at the end of the upper stems. Each flowering spike in the panicle is up to 13 cm (5 in) long, with densely packed, numerous 5-lobed flowers, which measure up to 1 cm (0.25 in) long.[5] The flowers are violet or deep purple, rarely white.[6] They open from the bottom of the spike upward, with only a ring of a few flowers open at a time.[7]

Phytochemicals

Verbena hastata contains Lophirone C, Lophirone B, Verbenalin, Verbascoside, Luteolin, Oleanolic acid, Ursolic acid and the naphthoquinone derivative 4,9-dihydroxy-α-lapachone[8]

Taxonomy

This species is a member of the diploid North American vervains which have 14 chromosomes altogether. Hybridization seems to have played some role in its evolution, presumably between some member of a group including the white vervain (V. urticifolia), V. lasiostachys or V. menthifolia, and V. orcuttiana or a related species.

In the recent evolutionary past, there has been an incident of chloroplast transfer of one of the latter or the swamp verbena to the mock vervain Glandularia bipinnatifida which is a close relative of the genus Verbena. It is unknown by what mechanism this happened, but it is suspected that hybridization is not responsible.[9]

Etymology

The Latin specific epithet hastata means "spear-shaped".[10]

Distribution and habitat

V. hastata is native in the United States in all states except Alaska and Hawaii. In Canada, it is native in the provinces of British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island.[4] The plant prefers moist conditions and typically grows in wet meadows, wet river bottomlands, stream banks, slough peripheries, fields and waste areas.[7] It is adapted to wetlands and can spread to form small colonies.[11]

Ecology

The flowers bloom from mid- to late summer.[5]

It attracts bees and is a larval host to the common buckeye butterfly (Junonia coenia),[12] the verbena moth (Crambodes talidiformis), and the verbena bud moth (Endothenia hebesana).[11]

Footnotes

  1. ^ BSBI List 2007 (xls). Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland. Archived from the original (xls) on 2015-06-26. Retrieved 2014-10-17.
  2. ^ "NatureServe Explorer 2.0". explorer.natureserve.org.
  3. ^ "Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center - The University of Texas at Austin". www.wildflower.org.
  4. ^ a b "USDA Plants Database". plants.usda.gov.
  5. ^ a b c "Blue Vervain (Verbena hastata)". www.illinoiswildflowers.info.
  6. ^ a b Denison, Edgar (2017). Missouri Wildflowers (Sixth ed.). Conservation Commission of the State of Missouri. p. 103. ISBN 978-1-887247-59-7.
  7. ^ a b "Verbena hastata - Plant Finder". www.missouribotanicalgarden.org.
  8. ^ https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1934578X211009727
  9. ^ Yuan & Olmstead (2008)
  10. ^ Harrison, Lorraine (2012). RHS Latin for Gardeners. United Kingdom: Mitchell Beazley. ISBN 184533731X.
  11. ^ a b Xerces Society (2016). 100 Plants to Feed the Bees. Storey Publishing. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-61212-886-3.
  12. ^ The Xerces Society (2016), Gardening for Butterflies: How You Can Attract and Protect Beautiful, Beneficial Insects, Timber Press.

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Verbena hastata.

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Verbena hastata: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Verbena hastata, commonly known as American vervain, blue vervain, simpler's joy, or swamp verbena, is a perennial flowering plant in the vervain family Verbenaceae. It grows throughout the continental United States and in much of southern Canada.

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