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Verbena bracteata

Lag. & Rodr.

Bracted verbena

Verbenaceae Edible: Seeds, Leaves, Flowers 9,385 iNaturalist observations

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(c) Jerry Oldenettel, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC-SA)

iNaturalist· cc-by-nc

(c) Paul Marcum, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC)

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Verbena bracteata is a species of verbena known by the common names bracted vervain, bigbract verbena, prostrate vervain, and carpet vervain. It is native to North America where it is widespread, occurring throughout the continent except for northern Canada and southern Mexico. It occurs in many types of habitat, especially disturbed areas. It typically blooms between the months of May and October. This annual or perennial herb produces several hairy, spreading stems up to 30 centimeters long forming a low mat on the ground. The hairy leaves are toothed or lobed. The inflorescence is a spike of flowers which is dense with long, pointed, leaflike bracts each up to 8 millimeters long. Each small tubular flower is about half a centimeter wide and white to pale purple in color.

Description

A branched plant that lies along the ground. It is 10-60 cm long. The leaves are 2-5 cm long. They are deeply divided into segments. There are long sterile bracts under the flowers.

Edible Uses

The flowers and leaves are used as a tea substitute. The seeds are also edible.

Traditional Uses

The flowers and leaves are used as a tea substitute.

This uses section is brief — help expand it

Distribution

It is a temperate plant. It grows in dry sandy sites. It grows in wasteland near sea level.

Where It Grows

Asia, Canada, China, North America,

References (2)

  • http://www.stoller-eser.com/Flora/ethnobotany_table.htm
  • MacKinnon, A., et al, 2009, Edible & Medicinal Plants of Canada. Lone Pine. p 290

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