great blue lobelia

(Lobelia siphilitica var. ludoviciana)

Conservation Status
great blue lobelia (var. ludoviciana)
 
  IUCN Red List

not listed

     
  NatureServe

NNR - Unranked

SNR - Unranked

     
  Minnesota

not listed

     
           
Wetland Indicator Status
     
  Great Plains

OBL - Obligate wetland

     
  Midwest

OBL - Obligate wetland

     
  Northcentral & Northeast

FACW - Facultative wetland

     
           
 
Description
 
 

Great blue lobelia (var. ludoviciana) is a 12 to 48 tall, erect or strongly ascending, perennial forb that rises from a taproot.

The stems are erect, stout, leafy, and angular, at least near the top. They are usually unbranched, sometimes there are a few branches toward the top. They are mostly hairless but may be sparsely covered with short hairs on the angles.

The leaves are alternate, thin, lance-shaped to elliptic or inversely lance-shaped, ¾ to 6 long, and ¾ to 2 wide. They taper to a point at the tip and are tapered or angled at the base. They are stalkless or on short leaf stalks. The upper and lower surfaces are hairless. The margins are finely, irregularly toothed.

The inflorescence is a spike-like, unbranched, elongated, 4 to 12 long cluster of usually 6 to 20 flowers at the end of the stem. The flowers are on ascending, hairless, to 5 16 long stalks. The stalks have a pair of bracts at or above the middle and a pair of minute bracteoles at the base of or just below the calyx. The bracts are leaf-like in the lower part of the inflorescence, gradually becoming smaller as they ascend the stem.

The flowers are to 1¼ long and about ½ wide. At the base there are 5 are lance-shaped, hairless, 5 16 to 11 16 long sepals that are fused at their base into a bell-shaped, 1 16 to long tube, then separated into 5 slender, ¼ to 9 16 long lobes. At the base of each lobe of the calyx is a pair of long, conspicuous projections (auricles).

There are 5 blue to bluish-purple petals fused at their base into a 7 16 to ¾ long corolla tube, then separated into an upper and lower lip with spreading, 3 16 to ½ long lobes. The tube has slit-like openings and is sometimes striped with white. The lower lip is large with 3 lobes, the upper lip is smaller and split nearly to the base into 2 spreading lobes. There are 5 stamens. The filaments are fused from just above the base into a ½ to long tube surrounding the style. The anthers are fused into a to 3 16 long ring around the style. The style and filament tube protrudes from between the 2 lobes of the upper lip and bends downward near the tip. The flowers are not fragrant.

The fruit is a yellowish-brown, 3 16 to long capsule, ellipse-shaped lengthwise, round in cross section.

 
     
 

Height

 
 

12 to 48

 
     
 

Flower Color

 
 

Blue to bluish-purple

 
     
 

Similar Species

 
  Great blue lobelia (Lobelia siphilitica var. siphilitica), the eastern variety of this species, has hairy leaves that are mostly more than ¾ wide. The inflorescence has 20 to 60 flowers. The flower stalks and calyces are hairy. Minnesota lies where the ranges of these two varieties meet. The plant characteristics that identify each variety intergrade in this area and the varieties may not always be distinguishable (or even valid).  
     
 
Habitat
 
 

Wet to moist. Meadows, streambanks, river banks, bottomland forests, edges of lakes and ponds, swamps, fens, roadsides. Full sun.

 
     
 
Biology
 
 

Flowering

 
 

August to September

 
     
 
Use
 
 

 

 
     
 
Distribution
 
 

Distribution Map

 

Sources

4, 7, 28.

 
         
         
 

Nativity

 
 

Native

 
         
 

Occurrence

 
 

 

 
         
 
Taxonomy
 
  Kingdom Plantae (green algae and land plants)  
  Subkingdom Viridiplantae (green plants)  
  Infrakingdom Streptophyta (land plants and green algae)  
  Superdivision Embryophyta (land plants)  
  Division Tracheophyta (vascular plants)  
  Subdivision Spermatophytina (seed plants)  
  Class Magnoliopsida (flowering plants)  
  Superorder Asteranae  
 

Order

Asterales (sunflowers, bellflowers, fanflowers, and allies)  
 

Family

Campanulaceae (bellflower)  
  Subfamily Lobelioideae  
 

Genus

Lobelia (Lobelia)  
  Species Lobelia siphilitica (great blue lobelia)  
       
 

Subordinate Taxa

 
 

 

 
       
 

Synonyms

 
 

 

 
       
 

Common Names

 
 

blue cardinal-flower

blue lobelia

great blue lobelia

great lobelia

 
       

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Glossary

Auricle

A small, ear-like projection at the base of a leaf or at the junction of a grass blade and stem.

 

Bract

Modified leaf at the base of a flower stalk, flower cluster, or inflorescence.

 

Bracteole

A small, often secondary bract within an inflorescence; a bract that is borne on a petiole instead of subtending it; bractlet.

 

Calyx

The group of outer floral leaves (sepals) below the petals, occasionally forming a tube.

 

Corolla

A collective name for all of the petals of a flower.

 

Sepal

An outer floral leaf, usually green but sometimes colored, at the base of a flower.

       
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Inflorescence

  great blue lobelia (var. ludoviciana)   great blue lobelia (var. ludoviciana)
       
       

 

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