Where can I buy Prairie Bundleflower?

Where can I buy Prairie Bundleflower?

It is a legume, so prairie mimosa enriches soil with nitrogen. You’ll mostly see Illinois bundleflower growing in meadows or prairies, in disturbed areas, along roadsides, and generally in any type of grasslands. They prefer full sun and soil that drains well and is dry to medium dry.

How do you identify Desmanthus Illinoensis?

Small, ball-shaped clusters of greenish flowers occur on axillary stalks. An erect plant with ball-like clusters of small, whitish or greenish flowers on tall stalks rising in axils of compound leaves. Flat, leathery, twisted seedpods follow.

What does Illinois Bundleflower look like?

An erect plant with ball-like clusters of small, whitish or greenish flowers on tall stalks rising in axils of compound leaves. Flat, leathery, twisted seedpods follow. The somewhat similar Prairie Acacia (Acaciella angustissima) has fruit 1 1/2-3″ (4-8 cm) long.

What does a bundleflower plant look like?

Illinois Bundleflower (Desmanthus illinoensis) Description: This is a herbaceous perennial plant about 2-4′ tall that is either unbranched or sparingly so. The central stem is light green, grooved, and either glabrous or sparsely pubescent. The alternate compound leaves are bipinnate and up to 8″ long; they have a ferny appearance.

What is Illinois bundleflower?

Illinois bundleflower is a native warm-season, perennial leguminous forb adapted to the central and eastern regions of the United States extending from Mexico into Canada.

What is the shape of a flower head?

Each flowerhead is up to ½” across and ovoid-globoid in shape; it consists of a dense head of 25-50 florets that are oriented in nearly all directions. Each floret consists of a short-campanulate calyx with 5 teeth (less than 1 mm. in length), 5 white petals (about 1 mm. in length), an ovary with a single style, and 5 strongly exerted stamens.

What does a starburst flowerhead look like?

The stamens have white filaments and pale yellow anthers. When they are fully developed, these flowerheads have a starburst appearance that is typical of compound flowers in the Mimosa family, but they appear more lumpy than spherical because the florets bloom from the bottom to the top gradually, rather than all at once.

Begin typing your search term above and press enter to search. Press ESC to cancel.

Back To Top