Hairy Solomon's Seal

Polygonatum pubescens

Polygonatum pubescens is a flowering plant in the family Asparagaceae.
Hairy Solomon's Seal Hairy Solomon's Seal is distinguished from King Solomon's Seal by the pubescence on the veins of the underside of the leaves. The leaves are alternate with one leaf per node. The flowers are produced individually or in groups of 2-3 from the axils of the leaves, and they are suspended below the leaves.  Geotagged,Hairy Solomon's Seal,Polygonatum pubescens,Solomon's Seal,Spring,United States

Appearance

Leaf arrangement: alternate: there is one leaf per node along the stem

Leaf blade shape: the leaf blade is elliptic and ovate

Leaf blade length: 40–150 mm

Flower petal color: Green to brown

Inflorescence type: The flowers grow out of the axil singly or in groups of 2-3.

Fruit type: The fruit is a berry with lengths of 6–9 mm
Hairy Solomon's Seal Hairy Solomons Seal is distinguished from King Solomon's Seal by the pubescence on the veins of the underside of the leaves.  The leaves are alternate with one leaf per node.  The flowers are produced individually or in groups of 2-3 from the axils of the leaves, and they are suspended below the leaves. Geotagged,Hairy Solomon's Seal,Polygonatum,Polygonatum pubescens,Solomon's Seal,Spring,United States

Habitat

Forest edges, forests, talus, and rocky slopes

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

https://gobotany.newenglandwild.org/species/polygonatum/pubescens/
Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassMonocots
OrderAsparagales
FamilyAsparagaceae
GenusPolygonatum
SpeciesPolygonatum pubescens