The green links below add additional plants to the comparison table. Blue links lead to other Web sites.
enable glossary links

Blue Ridge catchfly, ovate-leaf campion or catchfly, ovate-leaf catchfly

Siberian catchfly

Habit Plants perennial, rhizomatous; rhizome creeping. Plants perennial, producing several decumbent, short, woody, underground shoots bearing perennating buds and terminated by erect flowering shoots; taproot stout, woody; caudex crown branched.
Stems

erect, usually simple, 30–150 cm, with short, dense, eglandular pubescence, sparsely so toward base.

simple but with short axillary leafy shoots, leafy, 40–60 cm, glossy, ± glabrous, with 10–20 nodes proximal to inflorescence.

Leaves

sessile, 2 per node;

blade prominently 3–5-veined, ovate-acuminate, round at base, (4–)6–10(–13) cm × (20–)30–50(–90) mm, appressed-pubescent on both surfaces.

basal withered at time of flowering;

cauline whorled, appearing fasciculate (more than 4) at each node, connate at base, reduced distally, tapered at both ends, blade linear to very narrowly elliptic-lanceolate, 0.5–8 cm × 1–12 mm, base broadened, margins scabrous, apex acute, subglabrous to minutely puberulent on both surfaces.

Inflorescences

paniculate, narrow, many-flowered, open, bracteate, pedunculate, 10–50 × 3–5 cm, densely puberulent;

bracts narrowly lanceolate, 3–15 mm, apex acuminate;

peduncle ascending.

thyrsate, verticillate, open, with many short, ascending branches bearing large numbers of small, unisexual flowers, bracteate;

bracts connate basally, triangular, 2–10 mm, margins finely ciliate, apex acuminate.

Pedicels

ascending, recurved near apex, ca. equaling calyx.

ascending, straight, fasciculate, wiry, ± equaling calyx, glabrous or sparsely and minutely puberulent.

Flowers

nocturnal;

calyx prominently 10-veined, tubular to narrowly campanulate and 6–9 × 3–4 mm in flower, turbinate and 10–12 × 4–5 mm in fruit, narrowed proximally around carpophore, veins parallel, green, broad, with pale commissures, puberulent, sometimes with few glands, lobes triangular-acute, 2–3 mm;

corolla white, clawed, claw equaling calyx, broadened into limb, limb obtriangular, deeply lobed, 7–9 mm, lobes ca. 8, linear, appendages minute;

stamens slightly longer than corolla;

styles 3, ca. 2 times as long as corolla.

mostly unisexual;

calyx pale green, indistinctly 10-veined, elliptic, constricted near base, umbilicate, ca. 5 × 2 mm, lobes with thickened midrib, ovate-obtuse, 0.2 mm, margins crenate, membranous;

corolla greenish white, clawed, claw and limb not differentiated, narrowly oblong, unlobed, less than 2 times length of calyx, appendages absent;

stamens exserted, longer than corolla;

styles 3, exserted, longer than corolla.

Capsules

narrowly ovoid, slightly longer than calyx, opening by 3 (splitting into 6) ascending teeth;

carpophore 2–2.5 mm.

green, ovoid-conic, longer than calyx, opening by 6 teeth;

carpophore shorter than 1 mm.

Seeds

dark brown, reniform, 0.8–1.5 mm, shallowly tuberculate.

brown, winged, reniform, ca. 1 mm, faces with shallow radiating ridges.

2n

= 48.

Silene ovata

Silene sibirica

Phenology Flowering late summer–fall. Flowering summer.
Habitat Rich woods Arable land, pastures, roadsides, sand dunes
Elevation 1000-1900 m (3300-6200 ft) 300-500 m (1000-1600 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AL; AR; GA; KY; MS; NC; SC; TN; VA
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
SK; Europe (Ukraine); Asia (Mongolia) [Introduced in North America]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Of conservation concern.

Silene ovata is a very distinctive species with large, ovate, acuminate, sessile, paired leaves, and very narrowly lobed white petals. The flowers open at night and are moth-pollinated.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Silene sibirica is a very distinct species with masses of small flowers on stiffly erect stems, and narrow, fascicled leaves. It was abundant and persisted for a number of years in the 1950s near Duck Lake and Bladworth in central Saskatchewan.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Source FNA vol. 5. FNA vol. 5, p. 206.
Parent taxa Caryophyllaceae > subfam. Caryophylloideae > Silene Caryophyllaceae > subfam. Caryophylloideae > Silene
Sibling taxa
S. acaulis, S. antirrhina, S. aperta, S. armeria, S. bernardina, S. bridgesii, S. campanulata, S. caroliniana, S. chalcedonica, S. conica, S. coniflora, S. conoidea, S. coronaria, S. csereii, S. dichotoma, S. dioica, S. douglasii, S. drummondii, S. flos-cuculi, S. gallica, S. grayi, S. hitchguirei, S. hookeri, S. invisa, S. involucrata, S. kingii, S. laciniata, S. latifolia, S. lemmonii, S. marmorensis, S. menziesii, S. nachlingerae, S. nivea, S. noctiflora, S. nuda, S. occidentalis, S. oregana, S. ostenfeldii, S. parishii, S. parryi, S. pendula, S. petersonii, S. plankii, S. polypetala, S. pseudatocion, S. rectiramea, S. regia, S. repens, S. rotundifolia, S. sargentii, S. scaposa, S. scouleri, S. seelyi, S. serpentinicola, S. sibirica, S. sorensenis, S. spaldingii, S. stellata, S. subciliata, S. suecica, S. suksdorfii, S. thurberi, S. uralensis, S. verecunda, S. virginica, S. viscaria, S. vulgaris, S. williamsii, S. wrightii
S. acaulis, S. antirrhina, S. aperta, S. armeria, S. bernardina, S. bridgesii, S. campanulata, S. caroliniana, S. chalcedonica, S. conica, S. coniflora, S. conoidea, S. coronaria, S. csereii, S. dichotoma, S. dioica, S. douglasii, S. drummondii, S. flos-cuculi, S. gallica, S. grayi, S. hitchguirei, S. hookeri, S. invisa, S. involucrata, S. kingii, S. laciniata, S. latifolia, S. lemmonii, S. marmorensis, S. menziesii, S. nachlingerae, S. nivea, S. noctiflora, S. nuda, S. occidentalis, S. oregana, S. ostenfeldii, S. ovata, S. parishii, S. parryi, S. pendula, S. petersonii, S. plankii, S. polypetala, S. pseudatocion, S. rectiramea, S. regia, S. repens, S. rotundifolia, S. sargentii, S. scaposa, S. scouleri, S. seelyi, S. serpentinicola, S. sorensenis, S. spaldingii, S. stellata, S. subciliata, S. suecica, S. suksdorfii, S. thurberi, S. uralensis, S. verecunda, S. virginica, S. viscaria, S. vulgaris, S. williamsii, S. wrightii
Synonyms Cucubalus sibiricus
Name authority Pursh: Fl. Amer. Sept. 1: 316. (1813) (Linnaeus) Persoon: Syn. Pl. 1: 497. (1805)
Web links