Plantago psyllium L. (redirected from: Plantago arenaria)
Family: Plantaginaceae
[Plantago arenaria Waldst. & Kit.,  more...]
Plantago psyllium image
Jose Hernandez  

Short-lived, mostly annual, 1-6 dm, evidently hirsute and tending to be a little viscid; lvs numerous, cauline, opposite, linear or nearly so, entire, 2-8 cm נ1-3 mm; peduncles axillary, 2-8 cm; spikes 0.5-1.5 cm, dense, nearly 1 cm thick; bracts broad, rounded, conspicuously scarious-margined; the lowermost abruptly and firmly foliaceous-caudate; cor-lobes 1.5-2 mm, soon reflexed; seeds 1 or 2, brown, 2-3 mm; 2n=12. A weed in waste places, especially along railroad tracks; native to the e. Mediterranean region, now well established in e. U.S. (P. indica; P. arenaria) The name has often been misapplied to a related sp. without caudate tips on the bracts.

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.

Annual herb 10 cm - 0.6 m tall

Stem: elongate, hairy, slightly sticky.

Leaves: opposite, numerous, 2 - 8 cm long, 1 - 3 mm wide, linear with a pointed tip, more or less parallel-veined, and hairy.

Inflorescence: a long-stalked, dense spike of many flowers, head-like, 0.5 - 1.5 cm long, about 1 cm wide, hairy, subtended by hairy bracts. Stalk of each inflorescence axillary and 2 - 8 cm long.

Flowers: stalkless or nearly stalkless, whitish, subtended by hairy bracts. Stamens four, exserted, alternate with corolla lobes. Style one.

Sepals: four, green, elliptic to reverse egg-shaped with a blunt apex.

Fruit: a dehiscent capsule (circumscissile). Seeds one or two, shiny brown, 2 - 3 mm long.

Corolla: four-lobed, whitish, scarious (dry, thin, membranous). Lobes becoming reflexed, 1.5 - 2 mm long.

Similar species: This is the only Plantago in the Chicago Region with stem leaves. The leaves of the others are all basal.

Flowering: late July to early October

Habitat and ecology: Introduced from Eurasia. Occurs in waste ground and along railroads.

Occurence in the Chicago region: non-native

Etymology: Plantago comes from the Latin word planta, meaning footprint. Arenaria means "growing in sandy areas."

Author: The Morton Arboretum

Plantago psyllium image
Jose Hernandez  
Plantago psyllium image
Luigi Rignanese  
Plantago psyllium image
Luigi Rignanese  
Plantago psyllium image
Luigi Rignanese  
Plantago psyllium image
Luigi Rignanese  
Plantago psyllium image
Luigi Rignanese  
Plantago psyllium image
Luigi Rignanese