Virginia Bluebell

Mertensia virginica

"Mertensia virginica" is a spring ephemeral plant with bell-shaped sky-blue flowers, native to eastern North America.
Virginia Bluebells - Mertensia virginica This is a beautiful ephemeral that I rarely see and in small numbers. There was only one plant in this area. The buds are pink and the flowers are blue, white, or pink.

Habitat: Swampy, deciduous forest
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/133656/virginia_bluebells_-_mertensia_virginica.html Geotagged,Mertensia virginica,Spring,United States,Virginia Bluebell,ephemeral,mertensia,spring ephemeral

Appearance

Virginia bluebell has rounded and gray-green leaves, borne on stems up to 24 in tall. They are petiolate at the bottom of the flower stem and sessile at the top.

Flowerbuds are pink. Flowers have five petals fused into a tube, five stamens, and a central pistil. They are borne in mid-spring in nodding spiral-shaped cymes at the end of arched stems. Flowers are usually blue, but white or pink flowers occur rarely.

The stamens and stigma are spaced too far apart for self-fertilization. The flower can be pollinated by bumblebees but, due to its funnel shape bumblebees must hover, making the bumblebee a rare pollinator. Butterflies are the most common pollinators because they can easily perch on the edges and still enjoy the nectar.

In early summer, each fertilized flower produces four seeds within wrinkled nuts, and the plant goes dormant till the next spring.

Plants are hardy to hardiness zone 3: −40 °C.

In cultivation, "M. virginica" has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderBoraginales
FamilyBoraginaceae
GenusMertensia
SpeciesM. virginica