Carried by 2 nurseries
View Availability at NurseryData provided by the participants of the Consortium of California Herbaria
View additional distribution information on the Jepson eflora
Verbena hastata (American vervain, blue vervain or swamp verbena) is a flowering plant in the vervain family, Verbenaceae. It is a herb with opposite, simple leaves which have double-serate margins, borne on stiffly erect, branching square stems. The flowers appear in summer and are purple. This is a common plant that occurs across North America. They are hardy and drought resistant. This species is a member of the diploid North American vervains which have 14 chromosomes altogether. Hybridization seems to have played some role in its evolution, presumably between some member of a group including the White Vervain (V. urticifolia), V. lasiostachys or V. menthifolia, and V. orcuttiana or a related species. In the recent evolutionary past, there has been an incident of chloroplast transfer of one of the latter or the Swamp Verbena to the mock vervain Glandularia bipinnatifida which is a close relative of the genus Verbena. It is unknown by what mechanism this happened, but it is suspected that hybridization is not responsible.
Perennial herb
5 ft Tall
Blue, Purple
Summer
Deer resistant
Full Sun
Low
Moderate
Fast
For propagating by seed: No treatment. (Emery and Frey 1971).
1, 2, 3, 7*, 8*, 9*, 10*, 14*, 15*, 16*, 18, 19*, 20*, 21*, 22*, 23*, 24
Sandy places, washes, rocky slopes
Weed (disturbed places), Wetland-Riparian
Butterflies and moths supported
0 confirmed and 6 likely
Fine-Lined Sallow
Catabena lineolata
Oblique-Banded Leafroller Moth
Choristoneura rosaceana
Common Buckeye
Junonia coenia
Bilobed Looper Moth
Megalographa biloba