Written by Rhonda Ferree, retired horticulture educator
While hiking recently I got to thinking about the various plants that stick to our sock and pants. Certainly, they are frustrating; but, as a plant geek, I wanted to know more.
Sticky plants attaching to clothes, hair, fur, and feathers to disperse their seeds into new areas. They do this with hooks, spines, barbs, and burrs. Let's look at a few common examples that we find here in central Illinois.
The biggest challenge on my property is Spanish Needles (Bidens bipinnata). This weedy plant grows one to three foot tall in dry, shady areas. Its leaves are finely textured, looking a bit like flat-leaved parsley. The non-showy, yellow flowers develop into 2-4 prong, barbed fruit. They get their name from the fruit's needle-like prongs, each with its own backward pointing barb.
Virginia Stickseed (Hackelia virginiana), also called beggar's lice, has very small prickly bur fruit that clings to clothing. It grows one to four foot tall in dry woods. The burs are less than ¼" in size. Burs are arranged along one side of stems (racemes) that are held 2-8" above the plant.
Probably the most commonly known hitchhikers are burdock and cocklebur. In fact, Velcro is said to have been designed after the burs of the burdock plant. After a hunting trip, the inventor looked closer at the tiny hooks on the bur and created the hook and loop fasteners design.
Burdock (Arctium sp.) is a robust plant. It is also called wild rhubarb due to its large leaves that can reach 20" long. This is a biennial plant that grows rhubarb-like leaves the first year. In the second year, it sends up 2-5 foot stalk with large egg-shaped leaves and ½ to 1" bristly purple flowers. Each fruit is a prickly, clinging bur. Unlike rhubarb whose stems are edible, burdock has an edible taproot.
Cocklebur (Xanthium sp.) is related to burdock. This plant sprouts from seed each year, reaching 2-5 foot by summer's end. Its triangular, lobed leaves are 2-6" long. Cocklebur has both male and female green colored flowers. Female flowers form ½-3/4" burs that are held in the axils of the leaves. The football-shaped burs cling with hook-tipped prickles.
Bedstraw (Gallium sp.) is sometimes called velcro-plant or stickywilly. Bedstraw attached to us in two ways. Its leaves and stems have fine hook-like hairs that cling to clothing and fur. However, it is the extremely small seeds that really create havoc. At less than 1/25 of an inch, the seed burs are covered with small hooked bristles. Because each plant produces hundreds of seeds, they quickly cover large areas of clothing. Their small size and abundance make them difficult to remove.
There are many more, but you get the idea. I have not developed a magic way for removing these from my clothes or pet's hair. Washing clothes does not remove most hitchhiker seeds. They usually need to be picked off individually, though some can be scraped off with a butter knife.
Enjoy a fall hike in the woods, but try to avoid those hitchhikers!
MEET THE AUTHOR
As horticulture educator, Rhonda Ferree inspired citizens in local communities to grow their own food and improve their home landscapes. She focused on high quality, impactful programs that taught homeowners how to create energy-efficient landscapes using sustainable practices that increase property values and help the environment.
After 30 years with University of Illinois Extension, Rhonda retired in 2018. She continues to share her passion for horticulture related topics as “Retro Rhonda” on social media.
ABOUT THE BLOG
ILRiverHort is a blog that helps people connect to nature and grow.