Cirsium eatonii var. eatonii |
Cirsium eatonii |
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Eaton's thistle, mountaintop thistle, Peck's thistle, Steens Mountain thistle |
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Habit | Perennials, 10–150 cm; taprooted caudices. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | ascending to erect, slender, 10–50 cm. |
1–several, (fleshy), erect or ascending, simple to sparingly branched in distal 1/2, sometimes openly branched, glabrous to villous or tomentose with septate trichomes, sometimes ± glabrate; branches on distal stems 0–many, ascending. |
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Leaves | faces glabrous or nearly so. |
blades oblong, 10–30 × 1–5 cm, margins usually strongly undulate, unlobed and spiny-dentate or shallowly to deeply pinnatifid with 10–20 pairs of lobes, teeth or lobes closely spaced, often overlapping, lance-oblong to broadly triangular, deeply 3-lobed, ± spiny-dentate, main spines 2–12 mm, abaxial faces glabrous or villous with septate trichomes along midveins to densely arachnoid-tomentose, adaxial glabrous or villous with septate trichomes along midveins; basal often present at flowering, spiny winged-petiolate or sessile; principal cauline many, well distributed, proximally ± winged-petiolate, distally sessile, gradually reduced; distal not much reduced, often closely subtending heads. |
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Peduncles | 0–14+ cm. |
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Involucres | 2–2.5 cm, thinly arachnoid-tomentose or glabrate, individual phyllaries evident. |
green or suffused with dark purple, broadly ovoid to campanulate, 2–5 × 1.5–5 cm (appearing wider when pressed), loosely to densely villous or tomentose with septate trichomes and/or arachnoid-tomentose with finer, non-septate trichomes. |
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Corollas | purple, 17–26 mm, tubes 5–10 mm, throats 4.5–10.5 mm, lobes 5.5–7.5 mm. |
ochroleucous or yellow to lavender, pink, or purple, 15–35 mm, tubes 3.5–10 mm, throats 5–14 mm, lobes (linear), 4–12.5 mm; style tips 3–6 mm, conspicuously exserted beyond corolla lobes. |
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Phyllaries | sometimes suffused with dark purple; outer with few–many lateral spines; apical spines slender to stout. |
in 4–5 series, subequal, bases short-appressed, abaxial faces without or with very narrow glutinous ridge, apices usually stiffly ascending to spreading, linear-acicular, tapering to spines 7–35 mm; outer usually pinnately spiny, sometimes entire; apices of inner straight, plane or spine-tipped. |
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Heads | usually short-pedunculate, in erect, short, racemiform or spiciform arrays, rarely openly branched. |
1–many, erect or nodding, closely subtended by spiny-fringed bracts, usually sessile or short-pedunculate and crowded in subcapitate, spiciform, or racemiform (less commonly in openly branched) arrays. |
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Cypselae | dark brown, 5.5–7 mm, apical collars stramineous or not differentiated; pappi 12–25 mm. |
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Pappi | 15–19 mm. |
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Cirsium eatonii var. eatonii |
Cirsium eatonii |
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Phenology | Flowering summer (Jul–Sep). | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Rocky slopes, canyons, pinyon-juniper woodlands to alpine, montane coniferous forests, subalpine forests, alpine slopes | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 2100–3500 m (6900–11500 ft) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
NV; UT |
CO; ID; MT; NM; NV; OR; UT; WY; Rocky Mountains and high peaks of Great Basin desert region
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Discussion | Variety eatonii is distributed on various of the sky islands in the Basin and Range province of Nevada and Utah. Habitats vary from shaded forest understory sites to forest openings or open exposed sites. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Varieties 7 (7 in the flora). Cirsium eatonii is a polymorphic species widely distributed in a high elevation archipelago across the central Rocky Mountains and the Intermountain Region. During Pleistocene glacial episodes, the progenitors of this species complex undoubtedly occupied lower elevation sites and likely had more contiguous populations. Post-glacial isolation of these populations in allopatric high elevation sites has allowed them to differentiate to a greater or lesser extent. Prehistoric or recent introgressive hybridization with other thistle species probably has contributed to the diversification of the complex (R. J. Moore and C. Frankton 1965). Several of the races recognized here as varieties have been treated in the past as species (e.g., C. clokeyi, C. peckii). Their current geographic isolation and more or less distinctive features might support such recognition, but application of this approach across the complex would result in a proliferation of microspecies. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 19, p. 151. | FNA vol. 19. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | C. eatonii var. harrisonii | Cnicus eatonii | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | unknown | (A. Gray) B. L. Robinson: Rhodora 13: 240. (1911) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Web links |