AppearanceDigitalis purpurea is an herbaceous biennial or short lived perennial plant.Foliage The leaves are spirally arranged, simple, 3.9-13.8 in. (10-35 cm) long and 2-4.7 in. (5-12 cm) broad, and are covered with gray-white pubescent and glandular hairs. The foliage forms a tight rosette at ground level in the first year.Flowers The flowering stem develops in the second year, from about 3.3-6.6 ft. (1-2 m) tall. The flowers are arranged in a showy, terminal, elongated cluster, and each flower is tubular and pendent. The flowers are typically purple but some plants, under cultivation, may be pink, rose, yellow, or white. The corolla is spotted inside the bottom of the tube. Flowers in early summer.Fruit The fruit is a capsule which splits open at maturity to release the numerous tiny 0.004-0.007 in. (0.1-0.2 mm) seeds.Ecological Threat Due to the cardiac glycoside digitoxin, in the leaves, flowers and seeds of this plant, it is poisonous to humans and some animals and can be fatal if eaten.

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Francis Gwyn Jones, Bugwood.org

Joy Viola, Northeastern University, Bugwood.org

Barbara Tokarska-Guzik, University of Silesia, Bugwood.org

Tom Heutte, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org

Joseph M. DiTomaso, University of California - Davis, Bugwood.org

Tom Heutte, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org

Tom Heutte, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org

Gil Wojciech, Polish Forest Research Institute, Bugwood.org

Joseph M. DiTomaso, University of California - Davis, Bugwood.org

Barry Rice, sarracenia.com, Bugwood.org