Asclepias verticillata L.
Family: Apocynaceae
Whorled Milkweed
Asclepias verticillata image
Frank Mayfield  
From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam

Infrequent in dry, sandy soil or in moist, prairie habitats in the lake area, mostly along roadsides and railroads, becoming rarer southward. In the southern part of the state it is found on washed slopes, sandy, wooded ridges, along roadsides in clay or on sand hills, and in the hard, clay flats. In 1935 I noted this species to be abundant in the old Beaver Lake bottom in Newton County.

Stems slender, erect from a cluster of fibrous roots, 2-5 dm, simple to the infl, pubescent in lines; lvs very numerous in whorls of 3-6, narrowly linear, 2-5 cm נ1-2 mm, revolute; umbels several from the upper nodes; peduncles 1-3 cm; fls white or greenish; cor-lobes 4-5 mm; hoods somewhat divergent, 1.5-2 mm, about equaling the gynostegium, their margins entire; horns subulate, much surpassing the hoods, inflexed over the gynostegium; fr slender, erect on erect pedicels, 7-10 cm; 2n=22. Fields, roadsides, upland woods, and prairies; Mass. to Fla., w. to Sask., Kans., and Ariz. June-Aug.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

Asclepias verticillata image
Frank Mayfield  
Asclepias verticillata image
Asclepias verticillata image
Asclepias verticillata image
Asclepias verticillata image
Asclepias verticillata image
Asclepias verticillata image
Asclepias verticillata image
Asclepias verticillata image
John Hilty  
Asclepias verticillata image
John Hilty  
Asclepias verticillata image
Robert Sivinski  
Asclepias verticillata image
Frank Mayfield  
Asclepias verticillata image
Frank Mayfield  
Asclepias verticillata image
Frank Mayfield  
Asclepias verticillata image
Steve Hurst