Weeds Identification Gallery

Field Madder

  • Sherardia arvensis
  • Madder Family: Rubiaceae
Updated: 12/2025

Field madder is a winter or summer annual broadleaf plant that is often weedy in turf. It is found in the San Francisco Bay region, western North Coast Ranges, Cascade Range foothills, northern Sierra Nevada foothills, western South Coast ranges, and South Coast to about 2000 feet (600 m).

Habitat

Turf, pastures, orchards, vineyards, roadsides, riparian areas, oak woodlands, and grassland.

Mature field madder, Sherardia arvensis (Rubiaceae) in flower.    Credit: Clyde L. Elmore
Infestation in turf. Credit: Clyde L. Elmore

Seedling

Cotyledons (seed leaves) are broadly egg shaped to nearly round, narrow at the base, often have an indented tip, and are about 1/5 to 3/5 of an inch (5–15 mm) long. The stem above the cotyledons is square in cross-section and the leaves are arranged in whorls around it. True leaves are football to egg shaped, about 1/6 to 1/3 of an inch (4–8 mm) long with short hairs and bristly tips.

A green plant stem against a black background, featuring clusters of pointed leaves and spiky buds. Copyright information is at the bottom (Copyright 2007 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.). Credit: Joseph M. DiTomaso, UC Agriculture and Natural Resources
Whorled leaves. Credit: Joseph M. DiTomaso, UC Agriculture and Natural Resources

Mature Plant

Stems grow prostrate to ascending and often matlike. They are square, widely branched, and grow up to 10 inches (25 cm) long. Leaves are pointed, rough edged, 1/5 to 2/5 of an inch (5–10 mm) long, and arranged along the stem in whorls of fours, fives, or sixes. Leaves have short, straight, stiff hairs that are erect or point toward the blade tip, distinguishing it from catchweed bedstraw, Galium aparine, which has tiny curved prickles on the leaf edges and midveins that point toward the blade base.

Plant with small white flowers and green leaves spreads across dry, rocky soil. Copyright information is at the bottom (Copyright 2007 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.). Credit: Joseph M. DiTomaso, UC Agriculture and Natural Resources
Mature plant. Credit: Joseph M. DiTomaso, UC Agriculture and Natural Resources

Flowers

Flowers bloom from January through July. Two to three small, pink to lavender, sometimes bluish, trumpet-shaped flowers cluster on the stem at the bases of leaves and have six to eight leaflike structures (bracts) underneath.

Small purple flowers with star-shaped petals bloom on green stems amid lush foliage. Copyright information is at the bottom (Copyright 2007 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.). Credit: Joseph M. DiTomaso, UC Agriculture and Natural Resources
Flowering stem. Credit: Joseph M. DiTomaso, UC Agriculture and Natural Resources

Fruits

Fruits are egg shaped, about 1/12 to 1/8 of an inch (2–3 mm) long, with two lobes that separate into two nutlets at maturity.

 Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM
Fruit. Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM

Seeds

Nutlets are oblong to egg shaped and sometimes slightly curved.

Reproduction

Reproduces by seed.

More Information