Cirsium texanum |
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Texas or Texas purple or southern thistle, Texas thistle |
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Habit | Annuals or biennials, 20–200 cm; taprooted. |
Stems | usually single, erect, tomentose to ± glabrate; branches 0–many, usually restricted to distal part, ascending. |
Leaves | blades oblong to elliptic, 7–30 × 2–12 cm, unlobed and merely spinulose to irregularly dentate or shallowly to deeply pinnatifid, lobes ± triangular, separated by narrow to wide sinuses, sometimes coarsely dentate or lobed proximally, obtuse to acute, main spines slender to stout, 1–5 mm, abaxial faces arachnoid tomentose, adaxial glabrous or thinly arachnoid; basal often absent at flowering, petioles slender, ± winged; cauline progressively reduced, proximal petiolate, mid and distal broadly sessile, bases ± auriculate-clasping or decurrent 1–3 cm; distalmost linear to lanceolate, bractlike, irregularly dentate or shallowly lobed. |
Peduncles | slender, 3–30 cm (not overtopped by crowded distal leaves). |
Involucres | ovoid to hemispheric, 1.5–2 × 1.5–2 cm, thinly arachnoid, glabrate. |
Corollas | white to pink-purple, 20–25 mm, tubes 7–10 mm, throats 6–8 mm (noticeably wider than tubes), lobes 4–7 mm; style tips 3–4 mm. |
Phyllaries | in 8–10 series, imbricate, green, lanceolate (outer) to linear (inner), abaxial faces with prominent glutinous ridge; outer and middle appressed, bodies entire, acute, spines spreading, slender, 1–5 mm; apices of inner often flexuous, flat, scabrid-ciliolate, acuminate. |
Heads | 1–many, in openly paniculiform arrays. |
Cypselae | brown, 3–5 mm, apical collars not differentiated; pappi 15–16 mm. |
2n | = 22, 23, 24. |
Cirsium texanum |
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Phenology | Flowering spring–summer (Apr–Jul). |
Habitat | Roadsides, pastures, fields, shrub-tree savannas |
Elevation | 0–1000 m (0–3300 ft) |
Distribution |
AR; LA; MO; NM; OK; TX; Mexico (Coahuila, Durango, Nuevo León, San Luis Potosí, Tamaulipas)
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Discussion | Cirsium texanum ranges from the Chihuahuan Desert regions of trans-Pecos Texas and adjacent southeastern New Mexico across the plains of Texas and southern Oklahoma to southwestern Arkansas and southwestern Louisiana and south into north-central Mexico. D. S. Correll and M. C. Johnston (1970) suggested hybridization between Cirsium texanum and C. undulatum to explain anomalous specimens in the Edwards Plateau and trans-Pecos regions of western Texas. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 19, p. 119. |
Parent taxa | |
Sibling taxa | |
Synonyms | C. austrinum, C. helleri, C. texanum var. stenolepis |
Name authority | Buckley: Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 13: 460. (1862) |
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