Images
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Morphology
- Stem
- Shrub
- Leaves
- Alternate: petioles 1/6 to 1/2 inch; blade 3-veined from near base, oblong to broadly oblong-ovate, 2/5 to 4 inches long, 1/5 to 2.4 inches wide, base broadly wedge-shaped to rounded or nearly cordate, margins serrate to serrulate, tip acute or obtuse, lower surface densely puberulent, upper surface sparsely puberulent, especially along veins.
- Inflorescence
- Elongate panicles with scattered corymbs, terminal on short axillary shoots of the year; peduncles 1.6 to 4 inches, those of proximal inflorescences longer than subtending leaves, naked or occasionally with 1-2 distal leaf-like bracts.
- Flower
- Sepals 5, white, incurved between petals, deciduous, 1/50 to 1/25 inch; petals 5, white, 1/16 to 1/10 inch, longer than sepals, long-clawed, spreading, apex not notched; stamens 5, exserted at flowering; style 3-lobed.
- Fruit
- Drupes black, capsule-like, 1/6 to 1/5 inch, subtended by persistent hypanthium, 3-lobed, each lobe crested; stones usually 3; seeds 1 per stone, reddish brown, smooth, glossy, ca. 1/12 inch.
Ecology
- Habitat
- Rocky tallgrass and mixed-grass prairies, and woodlands
- Distribution
- East 1/2 of Kansas
Practical Information
- Uses
- Native Americans used the leaves to make a tea-like beverage and took infusions of the roots for constipation, pulmonary troubles, colds, and stomach troubles. Great Plains tribes used the woody roots as fuel when on buffalo hunts when there was a scarcity of timber. The leaves were used as a tea substitute during the Revolutionary War.
Additional Notes
Comments
Ceanothus, from the Greek name of spiny plant not of this genus.
Special Notes: See also Inland ceanothus
Quick Facts
- Plant Type
- Wildflower
- Family
- Rhamnaceae - Buckthorn Family
- Life Span
- Perennial
- Height
- 16-40 inches
- Origin
- Native
- Last Updated
- 2014-05-24
Color Groups
White, Green & Greenish White Wildflowers
Flowering Period
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Blooms: May, June