Wild Calla
Calla
palustris
Arum family (Araceae)
Description:
This herbaceous perennial plant can be terrestrial or emergent-aquatic.
During the spring, it forms a small number of ascending basal leaves in
a loose rosette. The leaf blades are 2–4½" long and a little less
across; they are cordate, oval-cordate, or orbicular-cordate in shape and their
margins are toothless. The leaf blades are cordate at the base and they
taper abruptly into short narrow tips. These tips are often curved
upward and inward (involute). The leaf blade surface is medium to dark
green, hairless, and somewhat shiny above. Each leaf blade has a
central vein that extends to about one-third of its length, from which
there develops numerous parallel lateral veins that curve upward toward
the leaf tip. The petioles are 3–8" long and rather stout; they are
light to medium green and hairless. The upper side of each petiole is
shallowly concave, while its lower side is round. Basal sheaths wrap
around the bases of the petioles. The inflorescence consists of a
solitary spadix and spathe at the apex of a floral stalk. The greenish
white spadix is ½–1¼" in length, short-cylindrical in shape, and
short-stalked.
The spadix has mostly perfect (bisexual) flowers and
some staminate (male) flowers at its apex, although sometimes the
spadix lacks staminate flowers. These small flowers are densely
arranged across the entire surface of the spadix and they are
numerous. Each perfect flower has a green ovoid pistil that is
surrounded at its base by 6-9 white stamens. The staminate flowers have
only white stamens. Directly behind the spadix, there is a petaloid
white spathe. The hairless spathe is about 1½–2½" in length, ovate to
oval in shape, and tapering abruptly into a narrow linear tip up to 8 mm.
(1/3") long; this tip is strongly involute (rolled tightly inward).
Sometimes the back of the spathe is light green while it is in bloom.
On rare
occasions, 2-3 spathes may develop alongside the spadix. The
blooming period occurs intermittently during the summer, lasting about
1-2 months for a colony of plants. Afterwards, the spadix and spathe
turn green. The perfect flowers are replaced by globoid-obovoid berries
with short tapered beaks; the spadix swells in size as the berries
develop. Immature berries are green or greenish
yellow, but they become bright red and 8–12 mm. (1/3–1/2") across at
maturity. The interior of each berry contains gelatinous flesh and
several seeds.
The mature seeds are 6 mm. (¼") long, ellipsoid and somewhat flattened
in shape, brown to dark brown, and minutely pitted. The root system is
long-rhizomatous and fibrous. Colonies of clonal plants of varying size
sometimes develop from the rhizomes at favorable sites.
Cultivation:
The preference is
partial sun to medium shade, wet conditions to shallow water, and an
acidic peaty soil. Further to the north of Illinois, this plant
tolerates full sun.
Range
&
Habitat: In Illinois, Wild Calla
(Calla palustris)
has been found only in Lake County, where it is
native and still exists (see Distribution
Map); it is state-listed as endangered. Illinois
lies along its southern range-limit. This plant has a broad
distribution in boreal areas of NE and north-central USA and southern
Canada; it also occurs in boreal areas of Eurasia. In Illinois, Wild
Calla is found primarily in shrubby areas of bogs, including shrubby
areas adjacent to boardwalks where live sphagnum mosses occur. It also
occurs in shallow pools of water in bogs, and on wet ground around
Tamarack trees (Larix
laricina). All of these habitats are high quality
natural areas.
Faunal
Associations: The flowers are visited primarily by flies,
including
Syrphid flies and carrion flies (Müller, 1873/1883; Knuth, 1909;
Thomson, 1995). The foliage is toxic because it contains calcium
oxalate; this substance is highly irritating to the gastrointestinal
tract of vertebrate animals. Nonetheless, it has been reported that the
young foliage of this plant is an important source of food for Black
Bears during the spring in Minnesota when few sources of food are
available (Rogers, 2011; Rogers et al., 1987).
Photographic
Location:
Shrubby area of a bog in Lake County, Illinois.
Comments:
While the flowers of the spadices remain in bloom for only a short
time, the white spathes of this plant remain attractive for a longer
period of time. The glossy foliage and ripe red berries are also
attractive. Wild Calla
(Calla palustris)
is the only species in its genus. It is an easy plant
to identify when its inflorescence is present as no other plant
produces anything like it in Illinois. The leaves of Wild Calla have a
superficial resemblance to those of the more common Marsh Marigold
(Caltha palustris),
but the leaves of the latter have fine networks of
veins and shallow teeth along the margins. Marsh Marigold also produces
its yellow flowers during the spring, while Wild Calla produces its
greenish white
flowers during the summer. Another common name of Calla palustris is
Water Arum.