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The botanical easy-button has been pressed for this one. This is one of the most easily recognized of all American wildflowers. Whether you know it or not, you’ll surely be seeing red.

Cardinal flower, Red Betty, Lobelia cardinalis, is very widespread over near all of the eastern United States, east of a line drawn somewhere between the upper Midwest and eastern Texas. It is seen in a variety of habitats, too: usually damp.

It likes a mountain streamside, in the shade, but it also does well in freshwater tidal marshes near the coast. Otherwise, you can find it blooming away in bogs or damp meadows. This species is a member of a rather large genus, with about 300 or so different species widely scattered around the world. Some of these species make great garden plants.

These species are more or less allied to the bluebells, which are collectively known as members of the genus Campanula, and most botanical treatments have them as members of the bluebell family. There is a considerable amount of controversy as to their accurate family placement; they may deserve recognition as their own, distinctive family. 

Our showy red Mystery Plant is a perennial, coming up from a leafy base. The stems on vigorous individuals may be 4 feet tall, or even taller, and smooth, or slightly hairy. The bright green leaves are alternate and lance-shaped, either smooth-margined or with a few jaggedy teeth. The flowers are always at the top of the stem, in a raceme.

Each flower has a short stalk, and a green calyx. The calyx is bowl-shaped at the base, but soon flares out into 5 sharp-pointed, spreading lobes. The corolla is easily among the reddest of all wildflowers, anywhere, and up to nearly 2 inches long. These are extremely vibrant, sometimes almost seeming to glow.

The shade of red is somewhat variable, but this is a kind of red that the artists will tell you is a “cool” shade rather than a “warm” one. Every now and then, these plants feature pink or even white corollas. The corolla is made up of five fused petals which form a tube, and at the upper end are two prominent lips.

The lower lip is deeply divided into three sharp-pointed lobes. The upper lip is deeply split down the middle, or “cleft.” Through this cleft arises a distinctive stamen tube, with 5 stamens more or less fused together. The anthers are a pale blue-gray. Various sorts of bees often visit these flowers, but they probably don’t do any pollination. In general, bee’s tongues are probably too short for these flowers.

It is hummingbirds that are likely the most effective pollinators. Now, if you study plant/pollinator interactions much, you will probably learn that hummingbirds tend to go for red flowers, or at least brightly colored ones, especially those that are tubular. Like this one.  

John Nelson is the retired curator of the A. C. Moore Herbarium at the University of South Carolina, in the Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia SC 29208. As a public service, the Herbarium offers free plant identifications. For more information, visit www.herbarium.org or email johnbnelson@sc.rr.com.

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