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Comments are encouraged and appreciated. We are amateur botanist, and we do make mistakes sometimes with our identifications. We strive to make this a good identifying resource. All comments are moderated by me and may take several days to appear. This is due to the high number of inappropriate comments that have nothing to do with this subject.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Angular Ground Cherry (Physalis angulata)

Angular Ground Cherry (Physalis angulata) is a smooth, highly branched annual, 12-36" tall. Leaves are alternate, ovate to lanceolate-ovate, 2-4" long, irregularly and coarsely toothed. Flowers are yellowish, not dark in the center, broadly bell-shaped, about 0.5" wide, 5 shallow lobs; fruiting calyx is sunken at the base and smooth, about as wide as long, typically purple-veined and 10-ribbed. 

Bloom time: July - September. 

Fruits are pulpy or mealy berries with numerous seeds, enclosed in a lantern-like, papery calyx. 

Where Found: Filed, roadsides, and open woodlands. A southern U.S. species extending north to VA, IL, and KS. Thinly scattered across the western 2/3 of TN. 

Notes: Nine species of ground cherries are found in TN, all fairly similar in appearance with yellow, bell-like flowers, usually solitary, and often brown at the corolla base. 

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