Lysimachia hybrida, common name Mississippi loosestrife or lowland yellow loosestrife, is a plant species widespread in much of the United States and Canada, absent only from the deserts in the west and the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions of the far north. It prefers moist locales such as marshes, swamps, wet meadows, stream banks, etc.[2][3]

Lysimachia hybrida
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Ericales
Family: Primulaceae
Genus: Lysimachia
Species:
L. hybrida
Binomial name
Lysimachia hybrida
Synonyms[1]
  • Lysimachia ciliata var. hybrida (Michx.) Chapm.
  • Lysimachia lanceolata subsp. hybrida (Michx.) J.D. Ray
  • Lysimachia lanceolata var. hybrida (Michx.) A. Gray
  • Nummularia hybrida (Michx.) Farw.
  • Steironema hybridum (Michx.) Raf. ex Small
  • Steironema lanceolatum var. hybridum (Michx.) A. Gray

Lysimachia hybrida is a perennial herb up to 100 cm (40 inches) tall, spreading by means of underground rhizomes. Leaves are narrowly lanceolate or linear, up to 18 cm (7.2 inches) long. Flowers are yellow, borne mostly in the axils of the leaves.[4][5]

References

edit
  1. ^ Tropicos
  2. ^ Flora of North America v 8 p 312
  3. ^ Moss, E. H. 1983. Flora of Alberta (ed. 2) i–xii, 1–687. University of Toronto Press, Toronto.
  4. ^ Michaux, André. Flora Boreali-Americana 1: 126–127. 1803.
  5. ^ Ray, James Davis. Illinois Biological Monographs 24(3–4): 39. 1956.