Creeping Thistle - Cirsium arvense

Description

Medium to tall stoloniferous plant, stem usually branched, but not winged or spiny. Leaves lanceolate to oblong, pinnately lobed or unlobed, spiny, the upper leaves unstalked. Flowerheads pale purple or lilac, 15 to 25 mm, fragrant, solitary or from 2 to 5 together, stalked.

Identification difficulty
ID checklist (your specimen should have all of these features)

Lighter pink that most other thistles, and stem not winged, or with very short wings. As with all Cirsium, the pappus-hairs (the silky white hairs attached to the seed - the thistledown) are individually feathery or branched.

ID Guide to Common Thistles

Habitat

Meadows, arable land, roadsides and waste places.

When to see it

June to September.

Life History

Perennial.

UK Status

Very common throughout Britain.

VC55 Status

Very common in Leicestershire and Rutland. In the 1979 Flora survey of Leicestershire it was found in 606 of the 617 tetrads.

Leicestershire & Rutland Map

MAP KEY:

Yellow squares = NBN records (all known data)
Coloured circles = NatureSpot records: 2025+ | 2020-2024 | pre-2020

UK Map

Species profile

Common names
Creeping Thistle
Species group:
Wildflowers
Kingdom:
Plantae
Order:
Asterales
Family:
Asteraceae
Records on NatureSpot:
615
First record:
11/05/1992 (John Mousley;Steve Grover)
Last record:
01/05/2025 (Pochin, Christine)

Total records by month

% of records within its species group

10km squares with records

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