View the original page version

Mitchella repens

Mitchella repens L.  

Explore 12 occurrences

Family: Rubiaceae
partridgeberry
Mitchella repens image
Paul Rothrock
Perennial herb, evergreen, mat-forming 10 - 30 cm tall Stem: creeping and rooting at the nodes. Leaves: opposite, stalked, shiny, whitish-veined, 1 - 2 cm long, rounded to egg-shaped. Flowers: mostly terminal, paired, white, 1 - 1.4 cm long, funnel-shaped, bearded within, with four (sometimes three, five, or six) short, spreading lobes. Style one, stigmas four. Fruit: a berry, red, 5 - 8 mm wide, with two side-by-side dimples. Seeds eight.

Similar species: No information at this time.

Flowering: late May to early September

Habitat and ecology: Local in acid woodlands, and often found in swampy forests where rotted logs have formed hummocks, upon which this plant grows. Has also been found on old dune slopes and in mesic woods.

Occurence in the Chicago region: native

Etymology: Mitchella is named after Dr. John Mitchell (1680-1768), a colonial botanist, physician, and scientist from Virginia. Repens means creeping.

Author: The Morton Arboretum