Stellaria L.
Chickweeds, Stitchworts, Starworts.
Sp. Pl. 421. 1753.
Vegetative morphology. Plants (0.5)110(15) cm high; vegetatively proliferating by bulbils or fragmentation (loose stem fragmentation), or not vegetatively proliferating by bulbils or fragmentation. Taproot absent. Caudex absent. Ground-level or under-ground stems horizontal; stoloniferous; elongate; 0.31.5 mm wide. Aerial stems erect, or ascending, or decumbent, or prostrate; glabrous, or sparsely hairy; stem hairs spreading, or erect. Leaves distributed along the stems. Leaf blade bases attenuate. Blades 115(40) mm long; 0.55 mm wide. Blades spreading; herbaceous, or somewhat fleshy; elliptic, or lanceolate, or ovate; flat, or strongly keeled; appearing single-veined, or with inconspicuous veins. Blades adaxial surface dull, or glaucous; glabrous. Blades abaxial surface glabrous. Blade margins glabrous. Leaf apices acute.
Reproductive morphology. Flowering stems glabrous (usually), or hairy (sparingly). Flowering stem hairs pubescent; white or translucent. Flowers solitary, or in inflorescences. Inflorescence a dichasium; terminal, or axillary. Flowers per inflorescence 16; small, less than 5 mm in diameter or length, or medium-sized, 515 mm in diameter or length. Calyx sepals 5; free; 26 mm long. Calyx green, or green and purple; herbaceous, or herbaceous and scarious (on the margins); glabrous, or hairy. Calyx hairs glandular, or non-glandular; white or translucent (if applicable). Petals longer than the calyx; 5; white; obovate; deeply cleft (almost to the base); 2.58 mm long. Stamens 10. Anthers yellow, or red; ellipsoid; 0.11 mm long. Carpels 3. Ovaries ovate. Styles 3; 13 mm long. Ovules 1025. Fruit ovoid; teeth 6. Fruit 36 mm long; 1.23 mm wide; black, or straw coloured. Seeds 0.51 mm long; brown; with surfaces smooth, or verrucose, or rugose.
Chromosome information. 2n = 26, 52107.
Distribution. Northern hemisphere distribution: circumpolar and circumboreal; Greenland, Canada, United States, Eurasia.
Economic uses. A species of chickweed (S. media) is widely used as a pot herb, salad herb, flavoring and medicinal herb. It was not traditionally used by the Inuit (Burt 2000).
Illustrations. Stellaria crassifolia. Flowering plant, delicate and glabrous in all parts with freely branching and densely matted, slender stems. N.W.T., Tuktoyaktuk, near Pingo Park Lodge, 69°26'N, 133°01'W. Aiken and Brysting 01116. CAN. Stellaria humifusa. Plants growing prostrate on and sprawling across imperfectly drained mud flats in extensive salt meadow. Manitoba, Churchill, Beech Bay, in the tidal estuary of the Churchill River, south of the Port, 58°44'N, 94°10'W. Aiken and Brysting 01022. CAN. Stellaria longipes. Plant similar in appearance to S. monantha but fresh green and shiny. Nunavut, Rankin Inlet, adjacent to the graveyard, 62°48'N, 92° 06'W. Aiken and Brysting 01057. CAN.
Cite this publication as: ‘A.K. Brysting, P.J. Scott, and S.G. Aiken 2001 onwards. Caryophyllaceae of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago: Descriptions, Illustrations, Identification, and Information Retrieval. Version: 29th April 2003. http://www.mun.ca/biology/delta/arcticf/’. Dallwitz (1980), Dallwitz, Paine and Zurcher (1993, 1995, 2000) , and Aiken, Dallwitz et al. (1999) should also be cited (see References).