Obedient Plant, False Dragonhead, Obedience - Physostegia virginiana
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Physostegia virginiana - Obedient Plant, False Dragonhead, Obedience. Physostegia virginiana is found in moist sunny areas in much of the eastern and central United States, as well as eastern Canada. It is protected in Rhode Island (Special Concern) and Vermont (Threatened.)
The attractive blossoms last well when cut. They have been used in flower arrangements and stay in position when moved, resulting in the Obedient Plant common name. They bloom in mid to late summer.
Found in: AL, AR, CT, DC, DE, FL, GA, IA, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MA, MD, ME, MI, MN, MO, MS, MT, NC, ND, NE, NH, NJ, NM, NY, OH, OK, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, VT, WI, WV
Leave comments on Physostegia virginiana at this link. | Distribution of Physostegia virginiana in the United States and Canada: Map courtesy of The Biota of North America Program. Map color key Search Our Database: Enter any portion of the Scientific, Common Name, or both.
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| Site: Heintooga Ridge Road (Blue Ridge Parkway spur), Haywood County, NC Date: 2011-August-01 | Photographer: Cindy Williamson Nikon D40
| The blossom is pink and has darker stripes and/or dots. It is 2-lipped. The lower lip has three lobes; the larger central lobe usually has dark pink spots. The purple anthers are visible near the upper lip, and the pistil may appear to hang down from the upper lip, looking to me something like a snake's tongue. | |
| Site: Heintooga Ridge Road (Blue Ridge Parkway spur), Haywood County, NC Date: 2011-August-01 | Photographer: Gerald C Williamson Nikon D7000 | Bumblebees are the most common pollinators of Physostegia virginiana, using the central lobe of the lower lip as a landing pad. | | Click on the photo for a larger image
| Site: Heintooga Ridge Road (Blue Ridge Parkway spur), Haywood County, NC Date: 2011-August-01 | Photographer: Gerald C Williamson Nikon D7000 | Obedient Plant is up to 4 feet tall and usually unbranched except occasionally near the inflorescence. Each branch will terminate in an inflorescence. | | Click on the photo for a larger image
| Site: Heintooga Ridge Road (Blue Ridge Parkway spur), Haywood County, NC Date: 2011-August-01 | Photographer: Gerald C Williamson Nikon D7000 | The leaves are opposing, sessile, lanceolate, and toothed. They can be up to 5 inches long, reduced in size as they approach the inflorescence. The stem is four-sided (roughly square in cross section,) as is typical of members of the mint family. | | Click on the photo for a larger image
| Site: Heintooga Ridge Road (Blue Ridge Parkway spur), Haywood County, NC Date: 2011-August-01 | Photographer: Gerald C Williamson Nikon D7000 | The "Obedient Plant" moniker doesn't apply to the plant in cultivated gardens - it can be an aggressive colonizer. This photo, however, is of a natural colony in (or just outside) the Great Smoky Mountain National Park. | | Click on the photo for a larger image
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