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achillée, milfoil, yarrow

Habit Perennials [subshrubs], 6–80 cm (usually rhizomatous, sometimes fibrous rooted or taprooted; usually aromatic).
Stems

1(–4+, clustered), usually erect, branched mostly distally, glabrous or sparsely to densely lanate (hairs usually basifixed).

Leaves

basal (often withering before flowering) and cauline; alternate;

petiolate or sessile (bases ± clasping);

blades (cauline equaling basal or slightly smaller distally) linear to oblong-lanceolate, usually 1–2[–4]-pinnately lobed, ultimate margins entire, abaxial faces sparsely to densely lanate, adaxial faces glabrate to sparsely tomentose.

Involucres

campanulate to hemispheric, mostly 2–3(–5+) mm diam.

Receptacles

usually flat to slightly convex, rarely conic, paleate;

paleae membranous, ± folded (sometimes each with central resin duct).

Ray florets

[0] 3–5(–12+), usually pistillate and fertile;

corollas usually white (laminae yellow at bases), sometimes pale yellow to pink or purple (tubes ± flattened), laminae orbiculate to suborbiculate (becoming reflexed).

Disc florets

usually (5–)15–75+, rarely 0, bisexual, fertile;

corollas white to grayish or yellowish [yellow, pink], tubes ± flattened (bases ± saccate, clasping apices of cypselae), throats ± campanulate, lobes 5, ± deltate.

Phyllaries

persistent, 10–30 in (1–)2–3(–4) series, oblong, ovate, or oblanceolate to lanceolate (midribs conspicuous), unequal, margins and apices (pale to black) scarious.

Heads

radiate [discoid], in compact to open (± flat-topped), simple or compound, corymbiform arrays [borne singly].

Cypselae

obcompressed, oblong to obovate (margins sometimes winged, apices rounded);

ribs usually 2, lateral (sometimes plus 1 adaxial), faces glabrous (pericarps with myxogenic cells, sometimes with resin sacs; embryo sac development monosporic).

x

= 9.

Achillea

Distribution
map from USDA
Subtropic to temperate and arctic regions of North America and Eurasia
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Species ca. 115 (4 in the flora).

Centers of diversity for Achillea are in Europe and Asia. Achillea ageratum, A. distans, and A. ligustica have been reported as occurring in North America. Labels on herbarium specimens examined indicated that those reports were based on cultivated plants; there is no evidence that any of the three has become established in our flora. Achillea filipendulina may be persistent or established in California (F. Hrusa et al. 2002) and in Michigan (E. Voss 1972–1996, vol. 3).

Achillea includes aromatic herbs with diverse vegetative morphologies. Floral characters show much less variation. Some species are widely cultivated both in Eurasia and North America. Interspecific hybridization has made identifications difficult and has evidently contributed to long lists of synonyms for some species.

Plants of Achillea contain secondary metabolites with purported therapeutic and pharmacologic uses. Native Americans used the plants to treat earaches, diarrhea, and hemorrhages.

Etymology: for Greek god Achilles, who is supposed to have used the plants to treat his wounds

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Parent taxa Asteraceae > tribe Anthemideae
Subordinate taxa
A. alpina, A. millefolium, A. nobilis, A. ptarmica
Key
1. Leaf blades 1–2-pinnately lobed (lobes of single leaves often arrayed in multiple planes)
→ 2
1. Leaf blades not lobed (margins usually serrulate, rarely subentire or serrate to doubly serrate)
→ 3
2. Phyllaries 20–30 in 3 series; ray florets (3–)5–8, laminae 1.5–3 × 1.5–3 mm; cypselae 1–2 mm
A. millefolium
2. Phyllaries 10–13 in (1–)2 series; ray florets 8–10(–13), laminae 1–1.5 × 2–2.5 mm; cypselae 0.75–1 mm
A. nobilis
3. Ray laminae 4–5 mm; disc florets 45–75+; leaf margins usually serrulate, rarely subentire.
A. ptarmica
3. Ray laminae 1–3 mm; disc florets 25–30+; leaf margins serrate or doubly serrate (teeth antrorse)
A. alpina
Name authority Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 2: 896. (1753): Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 382. (1754)
Source FNA vol. 19, p. 492. Treatment author: Debra K. Trock.
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