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one-stemmed butterweed, western groundsel

Habit Stout, fibrous-rooted perennial from a very short crown; stems solitary, 2-7 dm. tall; plants covered with white, loose hairs when young, but these missing in older plants except in the leaf axils.
Leaves

Usually entire, elliptic to broadly lanceolate, the basal ones petiolate, the blade and petiole 6-25 cm. long and 1-6 cm wide;

cauline leaves progressively reduced upward, becoming sessile toward the top of the stem.

Flowers

Heads several to numerous in a rather congested inflorescence;

involucre 5-10 mm. long;

rays 6-15 mm. long, usually yellow, occasionally cream.

Senecio integerrimus

Identification notes A Senecio growing on dry ground, with a fairly tall, single, upright stem and large, entire leaves is probably this species, especially if the leaves are lightly covered with white, tangled hairs.
Flowering time May-August
Habitat Meadows and seasonally moist open areas from low elevations to the subalpine.
Distribution
Occurring chiefly east of the Cascades crest in Washington, where widely distributed; British Columbia to California, east to the Great Plains and Great Lakes region.
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Origin Native
Conservation status Not of concern
Sibling taxa
S. elmeri, S. fremontii, S. hydrophiloides, S. hydrophilus, S. lugens, S. neowebsteri, S. serra, S. sylvaticus, S. triangularis, S. viscosus, S. vulgaris
Subordinate taxa
S. integerrimus var. exaltatus, S. integerrimus var. ochroleucus
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