Iris virginica L. is a plant in the Iridaceae family, order Asparagales, kingdom Plantae. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Iris virginica L. (Iris virginica L.)
๐ŸŒฟ Plantae

Iris virginica L.

Iris virginica L.

Iris virginica is a North American native perennial iris, with traditional medicinal uses and inclusion in Ronald Fisher's Iris dataset.

Family
Genus
Iris
Order
Asparagales
Class
Liliopsida
โš ๏ธ Toxicity Note

Insufficient toxicity evidence; avoid direct contact and ingestion.

About Iris virginica L.

Iris virginica L. is a perennial herb that reaches a height of 0.6โ€“0.9 m (2โ€“3 ft). It produces sword-shaped basal leaves that are either erect or sometimes arching; these leaves can grow up to 91 cm (3 ft) long and 2.5 cm (1 in) wide at the base, with smooth margins, a bluish green to green color, and a glabrous (hairless) texture. Flowering stalks grow from the basal leaves, reaching the same total height of 0.6โ€“0.9 m (2โ€“3 ft), and are either unbranched or only sparingly branched. Small alternate leaves grow along these stalks, and 1 to 2 flowers emerge from the axil of each stalk leaf on 3โ€“13 cm (1โ€“5 in) long pedicels. Blooming from May to July, the flowers have a typical iris form, are blue to blue-violet, and measure 3โ€“13 cm (1โ€“5 in) across. Each flower has 3 drooping sepals called "falls", which have white markings and yellow coloration near the flower throat, and 3 upright petals called "standards".

Iris virginica is native to North America. In the United States, its native range extends from Nebraska in the west, Florida and Texas in the south, New York in the east, to the Canadian border in the north. In Canada, it is native to Ontario and Quebec. It grows in wet habitats, sometimes in shallow water, including marshes, wet meadows, swamps, river bottoms, sloughs, ditches, bottomland prairies, and the edges of sinkhole ponds.

In traditional Cherokee medicine, Iris virginica is used as a medicinal plant. The root is pounded into a paste to make a skin salve. A root infusion is used to treat liver ailments, and a root decoction is used to treat "yellowish urine". It may be one of the Iris species used by the Seminole to treat shock following an alligator bite. It is also one of the three iris species included in Ronald Fisher's Iris flower data set.

Photo: (c) Jay Gilliam, all rights reserved, uploaded by Jay Gilliam

Taxonomy

Plantae โ€บ Tracheophyta โ€บ Liliopsida โ€บ Asparagales โ€บ Iridaceae โ€บ Iris

More from Iridaceae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy ยท Disclaimer

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