Plant Image
Flowers


Yavapai County Native & Naturalized Plants

Galium triflorum - fragrant bedstraw

Synonyms: Galium brachiatum, G. pennsylvanicum, G. triflorum var. asprelliforme, G. triflorum var. viridiflorum
Other Common Names: sweet-scented bedstraw, sweet bedstraw, cudweed, three-flower bedstraw
Plant Form: Forb or Subshrub

Family: Rubiaceae


   
 
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Leaves
Paul Rothrock @http://swbiodiversity.org, Usage Rights: CC BY-SA (Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike)
Plant
Paul Rothrock @http://swbiodiversity.org, Usage Rights: CC BY-SA (Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike)
Fruit
Paul Rothrock @http://swbiodiversity.org, Usage Rights: CC BY-SA (Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike)
Forb Plant Description

Origin: Native   Life Cycle: Perennial   Similar Species: Galium aparine, G. asprellum
General Desc: Perennial with upright to trailing stems which are weak often leaning on other plants for support; rounded leaves are whorled in groups of 6; tiny star-like greenish-white flowers often grow in clusters of 3 at the stem tips or between the leaf and stem.
Identification notes: Rhizomatous; stems weak, slightly rough to the touch, simple or branching near ends; leaves rounded, in whorls of 6, underside midrib is hairy; flowers greenish-white, stemmed, not subtended by bracts, generally in groups of 3; fruit bristly, not fleshy.
Height: To about 2-1/2 feet


Habitat

Habitat Description: Moist shady places like woods, under dense stands of trees or tall shrubs (thickets) and shaded forest floors. Also found on the edges of wetlands, swamps, rocky slopes and talus (buildup of broken rock on a steep mountainside or at the base of a cliff).
Plant Communities: Pinyon Juniper Woodland, Montane Conifer Forest, Riparian
Elevation: 4500 - 8500 feet


Flower Characteristics

Color: Greenish-white     Shape: Regular in round clusters     Tubular: N     Flowering Period: Jun - Sep
Description: The flowers within each cluster of 3 (rarely 1 or 2) have very long branching stalks. Each flower is about 1/8 inch across and has 4 greenish-white petals that are egg-shaped tapering to a sharply pointed tip and 4 greenish-white stamens.


Leaf and Stem Characteristics

Leaf Color: Green     Leaf Type: Simple     Leaf Shape: Round or oval     Leaf Margin: Smooth     Leaf Attachment: Whorl     Leaves Clasp: N
Hairs: Leaves and stems     Spines: Y
Leaf Description: Leaves are widest above the middle tapering abruptly to a thin sharp tip. They grow mostly in whorls of 6 and have a vanilla odor when crushed especially when dry. There are stiff hairs on the leaf margins and on the center vein on the leaf underside.


Fruit and Seed Characteristics

Fruit Color: White or brownish   
Fruit Type: Nutlet
Fruit Notes: Fruit is a pair of dry round nutlets which separate when ripe, each containing 1 seed. Fruit is about 1/16 inch wide and is densely covered with stiff white or brownish hooked hairs (bristles) which are about as long as the fruit itself.
Seed Notes: The fruit doesn't split open to release the seeds when ripe. The hooked hairs on the fruit often catch onto animals or people enabling the plant to disperse the seeds.



  Arizona Cooperative Extension
Yavapai County
840 Rodeo Dr #C
Prescott, AZ 86305
(928) 445-6590
Version 8.0  
http://cales.arizona.edu/yavapaiplants/SpeciesDetailForb.php  
Last Updated: Dec 13, 2022
Content Questions/Comments: Email Matt Halldorson  
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