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Shining Blue Star (Ozark Bluestar)

 

 

 

Amsonia illustris

Family: 

Apocynaceae (dogbanes)

Description: 

A striking, smooth perennial, branching and forming clumps. Flowers star-shaped, light blue, clustered in cymes at the tops of stems; the corolla lobes spreading; with a delicate scent. Blooms April-May. Leaves alternate, narrowly lance-shaped, to 6 inches long, leathery, shiny on the upper surfaces. Sap is milky. Fruits narrow seedpods that hang down, about 4 inches long.

Similar species: There are two other Amsonia species in Missouri. Ciliate blue star (A. ciliata) has very narrow, almost threadlike leaves and is uncommon, found in our southern Ozark counties along the Arkansas border. Willow amsonia (A. tabernaemontana), another blue star, has dull leaves (not shiny), and its seedpods are held upright. It is scattered mostly in the southern half of the state.

Size: 

Height: 18 inches to 3 feet.

Habitat and conservation: 

Occurs on gravelly banks of streams and rivers, ledges and tops of bluffs, and occasionally glades and openings of dry upland forests. It is more commonly found in streamside, gravel-bar habitats than the closely related willow amsonia, which also lives in bottomland forests, dry upland forests, glades, bottomland prairies, pastures, ditches, levees, roadsides, and other disturbed areas.

Distribution in Missouri: 

Scattered in the southern half of the state, mostly in the Ozark division.

Status: 

Amsonias are related to the ubiquitous (and weedy) groundcover common periwinkle (Vinca minor), and to the fragrant tropical frangipani trees (Plumeria spp.). The dogbane family (Apocynaceae) to which these all belong is closely related to the milkweed family. You can see some resemblance in the milky latex, stout, simple leaves, and the seedpods (technically, follicles), which split along a single seam.

Human connections: 

Easily grown from seed and available at most native plant nurseries, blue star makes an outstanding late-spring wildflower for sunny locations in moist, loamy, well-drained soils. In fall, the willow-like leaves often turn an attractive yellow.

Ecosystem connections: 

Few animals, including insects, eat the leaves of this plant, probably because of unpalatable, toxic chemicals in the milky sap. The sweet-smelling flowers attract butterflies, however, especially the zebra swallowtail and other swallowtail.

Shining Blue Star (Ozark Bluestar)

 

Often found on gravelly Ozark streamsides, shining blue star lifts its clusters of showy, light-blue flowers in late spring. A top choice for native wildflower gardening, it is interesting spring, summer, and fall.

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