Bristly bellflower

Campanula cervicaria

''Campanula cervicaria'', the bristly bellflower, is a species of bellflower in the family Campanulaceae. The plant is roughly hairy and the flowers are about 1–2 centimetres long, light blue and are grouped together.
Bristly bellflower - Campanula cervicaria  Asterales,Bristly bellflower,Bulgaria,Campanula cervicaria,Campanulaceae,Eudicot,Flowering Plant,Geotagged,Magnoliophyta,Plantae,Summer,Wildlife

Appearance

Bristly bellflower is a biennial or short-lived perennial herbaceous plant growing to a height of 30 to 100 centimetres. In its first year, this plant produces a rosette of lanceolate, spatulate leaves with winged stalks.

In the second year it sends up one or more erect flowering stems with squarish edges and roughly hairy. The leaves on these are alternate, linear to narrow lanceolate bristly and unstalked. The leaf blades are undulating and the margins have rounded teeth. The lower leaves wither away when the plant is flowering. The inflorescence forms a dense terminal cluster and further smaller clusters grow from the upper leaf axils.

The calyx of each flower is fused and has five blunt lobes. The corolla is five-lobed, 12 to 20 mm long with five pale blue fused petals. The corolla lobes are longer than they are wide. There are five stamens and a pistil formed from three fused carpels. The fruit is a strongly veined, narrowly conical, nodding capsule. The flowering period is from June to September.

Distribution

Bristly bellflower is native to Scandinavia and Central Europe. It has become naturalised in Lake and St. Louis counties of Minnesota, but not in other parts of North America.

Habitat

Its natural habitat is woodland edges, hillside meadows, dry meadows and banks. It also flourishes in places where the soil has been disturbed such as after slash-and-burn, or after forest clearance or when coppicing has taken place.

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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderAsterales
FamilyCampanulaceae
GenusCampanula
SpeciesC. cervicaria
Photographed in
Bulgaria