Glaucium corniculatum (L.) Rudolph
Family: Papaveraceae
Black-Spot Horn-Poppy,  more...
[Chelidonium corniculatum Donn]
Glaucium corniculatum image
Kurt Stueber  

Plants annual or occasionally biennial, to 5 dm. Stems branching. Leaves to 25 cm; basal few, blade glabrate to moderately pubescent; basal and proximal cauline with blade lyrate, 7-9-lobed; distal with blade ovate, not distinctly clasping stem (sometimes slightly cordate-clasping); margins deeply dentate. Flowers: pedicels stout, to 5 cm; sepals 15-30 mm; petals orange to reddish orange, usually with blackish basal spot, obovate, to 40 mm. Capsules sublinear, straight or slightly curved, to 25 cm, appressed- to ascending-pubescent or glabrate.

Flowering late spring-summer. Open shores, fields, pastures, and canyon slopes; 0-1600 m; introduced; Kans., Mont., Nev., N.Y., Oreg., Pa., Tex.; Europe; sw Asia.

Glaucium corniculatum has been widely introduced outside its native Eurasian range as a crop weed and ballast waif. It can persist in a fairly broad range of climates and probably is established in North America more widely than existing herbarium records indicate.

Glaucium corniculatum image
Kurt Stueber  
Glaucium corniculatum image
Steve Hurst  
Glaucium corniculatum image
José María Escolano  
Glaucium corniculatum image
José María Escolano  
Glaucium corniculatum image
José María Escolano