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UK Nature  > Wild Flowers  > Green Wild Flowers  > Rumex acetosa

  • Overall view of plant
  • Close up of developing flowers
  • Close up of individual leaf
  • Leaf, showing the tissue-like sheath structure – the ochrea
  • Magnified view of ribbed stem



Scientific Name:   Rumex acetosa
Common Name:   Common Sorrel

Rumex acetosa, more widely known as Common Sorrel, is an upright plant, often found in grasslands, and along woodland edges and roadside verges. It has slender, arrow-shaped leaves and attractive flowers that appear in May and June, peppering the green grasses of our meadows with crimson and pink. Its numerous other common names, from 'Sour Ducks' to 'Vinegar Plant', all allude to the fact that its leaves taste extremely tart and dry due to their high levels of oxalic acid.

The species is dioecious, with stamens and pistils on different plants. It is a perennial, with roots that run deep into the ground, having arrow-shaped leaves that grow from the stem at the base of the plant. Reddish flowers are carried on slender spikes. Common and widespread throughout the UK.










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