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Plant
Profile: The So-Called Porterweeds
By
Roger Hammer
Reprinted from the Miami-Dade Chapter's newsletter, The Tillandsia, Jul.-Aug.
1994
(Illustration
© Cathy Vogelsong)
The genus Stachytarpheta is comprised
of 65 species of annual herbs or low, perennial shrubs mostly
of the New World tropics but also with representatives in southeast
Asia and on Pacific Islands. They are members of the well-known
Verbena Family, or Verbenaceae, and are highly regarded as butterfly
attractors. In the tropical Americas, they attract hummingbirds
as well. It is for this very reason why many species have found
their way into cultivation in tropical and warm temperate regions
of the world.
Throughout the Caribbean, and in Florida,
these plants are commonly called "porterweeds" in reference
to the medicinal properties bestowed upon them. A foaming, porter-like
brew, much like beer, is made from at least one species in the
Bahamas. This concoction is used as a drink for fever, for "the
cooling of the blood," as a wash for skin irritations, to
relieve constipation and for worms in children. Whether it works
or not is open to conjecture. Other local names include "snakeweed,"
"rat's tail" and "vervain." The generic name
is taken from the Greek stachys, meaning "spike,"
and tarphys, meaning "thick," referring to the
thickened flowerspike typical of the genus.
There
are no recent monographs of this genus, which has resulted in
a plethora of misapplied names in areas where they are cultivated
or naturalized. Plants offered in many Florida nurseries and
garden shops are either mislabeled or sold under names with no
botanical standing. This adds to the taxonomic confusion surrounding
the genus. There is but a single species native, or presumably
native, to Florida, and that is Jamaica porterweed, Stachytarpheta
jamaicensis, sometimes referred to as "blue porterweed."
This is a sub shrub growing to a typical height of only one or
two feet with a sprawling or decumbent habit. It often forms
a dense mound of stems in cultivation. Leaves are dull, light
green or gray-green, although some plants may be entirely blushed
with purple. The leaf margins are coarsely serrate and the teeth
are generally forward-pointing (towards the leaf tip). The leaves
are usually glabrous (smooth) above, but may also be pilose (slightly
hairy) on the lower surface, and there are no prominent raised
areas between the leaf veins. One to several small, blue flowers
are borne on green, quill-like spikes. With each passing day,
flowers appear slowly up the stem, but each flower lasts only
a single day.
Jamaica porterweed is generally considered
to be a Florida native, although some botanists believe that
this species arrived in Florida along with early Bahamian settlers
who brought seeds of medicinal plants with them. This is a species
of roadsides and other disturbed sites, seldom being found in
undisturbed native plant communities.
All other species of the genus found in
Florida are clearly exotic. The most prominent species that is
fast becoming established as an escaped exotic in southern and
central Florida is Stachytarpheta urticifolia (or S.
urticaefoli). This a four- to six-foot woody shrub with violet
to purple flowers that, like the flowers of S. jamaicensis,
only last a single day. A flowering specimen is quite attractive
and is an excellent butterfly attractor. There is a highly-prized
white-flowered form (forma albiflora) cultivated on Guadaloupe
and Martinique in the Lesser Antilles. Leaves are dark green,
somewhat glossy, with acute, marginal teeth that are more numerous
and outward-pointing with S. jamaicensis. When comparing
these two species, look closely at the leaves and growth habit.
The leaves of S. urticifolia have distinct raised areas
between the leaf veins, giving the leaf a quilted (bullate) appearance.
Growth habits are entirely different; S. jamaicensis is
always low and sprawling, while S. urticifolia forms an
upright woody shrub with a distinct trunk. S. urticifolia
is native to tropical Asia.
Native plant nurseries in central and southern
Florida should ensure that they are only offering Stachytarpheta
jamaicensis, Jamaica porterweed.
Hopefully, a modern monograph of this genus
will help us better understand this interesting group of plants,
the so-called porterweeds.
Porterweeds Revisited
By
Roger Hammer
Reprinted from the The Tillandsia [date unknown]
It recently came to my attention that certain
FNPS chapters are continuing to sell the nonnative species of
porterweeds (Stachytarpheta spp.) at their plant sales.
So I thought that I should revisit this group of plants in case
there is still some misunderstanding out there in Native Plant
Land. Telling the native species from the exotic species isn't
all that difficult. Our native blue porterweed, Stachytarpheta
jamaicensis, is a low-growing plant with branches that typically
spread horizontally, forming a short central stem. The height
of the plant, not counting the bloom spikes, averages about 10"
high, sometimes mounding. The leaves are coarsely toothed and
the teeth generally point toward the tip. The leaves are dull
green or sometimes with a purplish blush. Small blue flowers
are produced either singly or 2-3 in a cluster on a thickened
spike to 12" long or more, somewhat resembling a rat's tail.
It is called "rat tail" in the Bahamas. Individual
flowers last a single day.
A commonly cultivated exotic species, and
one that is often touted as native to Florida, is nettleleaf
vervain, Stachytarpheta urticifolia. It is native to tropical
Asia. Nearly all other species are from the Americas. This plant
has an upright, shrubby growth habit to about 5' tall. The leaves
are dark green, more finely toothed than our native species,
and the teeth are more numerous and outward-pointing. The leaves
also have a distinct quilted appearance on the upper surface.
The flower spikes are narrower than on S. jamaicensis; the flowers
are slightly smaller and are distinctly darker blue with a white
center. Individual flowers last a single day.
Another commonly cultivated species is
pink porterweed, Stachytarpheta mutabilis, a native of
South America. This species has a shrubby, somewhat sprawling
growth habit to about 7' tall. It has light green pubescent leaves
that are larger than the previous two species, ranging to about
4" long and 2" wide. The thick flower spikes bear 3-12
or more light pink to bright rosy pink flowers that last for
several days each. There is also a violet-flowered variety of
S. mutabilis called var. violacea and both have
even made it into the garden shops of Home Depot and KMart.
Here's a big part of the problem. In the
book The Guide to Florida Wildflowers by Walter Kingsley
Taylor (Taylor Publishing Company, Dallas, TX, 1992), the photo
that accompanies the description for blue porterweed, Stachytarpheta
jamaicensis, is actually S. urticifolia, the exotic
species. In the recently published book Your Florida Guide
to Butterfly Gardening: A Guide for the Deep South by Jaret
C. Daniels (University Press of Florida, Gainesville, FL, 2000),
there is a photo labeled "Porter Weed" and the photo
is correctly identified as Stachytarpheta urticifolia.
I thought that someone had finally gotten it right until I read
the text that states, "perennial, native, cultivar."
I don't know where the author got the cultivar part because this
is not a cultivated variety. And, as stated before, it's not
native; it's an exotic species from tropical Asia.
To make matters worse, there are hybrids
of our native S. jamaicensis and the exotic S. urticifolia.
The hybrid looks similar to S. jamaicensis but has an
upright growth habit from 2' to 3' tall. This hybrid is called
S. x intercedens, and it does occur in Florida,
especially where the two parents grow in close proximity to each
other. Just what we need.
Photo credit: Jan Allyn
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