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Common ground-cherry

Also known as: long-leaf ground-cherry

Physalis longifolia Nutt.

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Common ground-cherry habit
Common ground-cherry flower
Common ground-cherry leaf
Common ground-cherry leaf
Common ground-cherry
Common ground-cherry habit
Common ground-cherry flower and anthers
Common ground-cherry calyx
Common ground-cherry fruiting calyces
Common ground-cherry leaf
Common ground-cherry stem
Common ground-cherry habit
Common ground-cherry flower
Common ground-cherry calyx

Morphology

Stem
Erect, branched distally, glabrate or with simple, non-glandular, antrorse hairs.
Leaves
Cauline, alternate, simple; petiole .4 to 2.4 inches; blade lanceolate, elliptic, or narrowly rhombic, lanceolate-ovate, or ovate, (.8)1.2 to 3.2(6) inches long, .3 to 2.2 inches wide, base cuneate, margins entire or sinuate-dentate, apex obtuse.
Inflorescence
Flowers solitary, axillary. Pedicels .2 to .6 inch in flower, .4 to 1 inch in fruit.
Flower
Radially symmetric, nodding at anthesis; calyx campanulate, 5-lobed, .4 to .6 inch, sparsely antrorsely appressed-pubescent proximally, sometimes nearly glabrous, lobes .2 to .35 inch; corolla yellow, center dark-spotted, campanulate to nearly rotate, 5-angled to entire; stamens 5, included; .4 to .6 inch; anthers yellow, blue, or gray, .08 to .16 inch; pistil 1; style 1.
Fruit
Calyx .8 to 1.2 inch, 10-angled, inflated; fruits berries, yellow to red, globose, .3 to .6 inch diam. Seeds numerous, reniform to ovate, somewhat flattened, minutely pitted.

Ecology

Habitat
Tallgrass, mixed-grass, shortgrass, sand, and sandsage prairies, woodland, stream valleys, roadsides, fields, waste areas.
Distribution
Throughout Kansas

Practical Information

Uses
Native Americans used the berries for food (Moerman 1998).

Additional Notes

Comments

Physalis bladder, alluding to the inflated calyx and longifolia long and leaf. Physalis is a challenging genus due to variability within and among and subtle morphological differences among some species. Longevity, corolla and anther colors, and pubescence usually are needed for proper identification. Plants with yellow anthers, leaves lanceolate to elliptic or narrowly rhombic, thick and firm, and with margins mostly entire are var. longifolia; it occurs statewide. Plants with blue or gray anthers, and leaves lanceolate-ovate to ovate, thin, and with margins sinuate-dentate are var. subglabrata (Mack. & Bush) Cronquist; it occurs primarily east of the Flint Hills.

Quick Facts
Plant Type
Wildflower
Family
Solanaceae – Nightshade Family
Life Span
Perennial
Height
16-32 inches
Origin
Native
Last Updated
2021-11-14
Color Groups
Yellow Wildflowers
Flowering Period
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Blooms: May, June, July, August, September