Eucephalus |
Eucephalus gormanii |
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aster |
Gorman's aster |
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Habit | Perennials, 10–160 cm (usually cespitose, induments usually of stipitate-glandular and smooth-surfaced, curved or twisted woolly hairs, plants with caudices or short rhizomes, roots fibrous). | Perennials, 10–40 cm (caudices woody or rhizomes short-creeping; herbage sparsely to moderately glandular-hairy, not glaucous). | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | ascending or erect, simple, glabrate, puberulent, pilose, cottony, or woolly, eglandular or glandular. |
ascending to erect, sparsely to moderately glandular-hairy. |
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Leaves | cauline; alternate; sessile (proximal withering by flowering; proximalmost reduced, scalelike); blades (1-nerved) ovate, elliptic, oblong, lanceolate, or linear (± uniform in size), margins entire, faces glabrate, scabrous, cottony, or woolly, eglandular or stipitate-glandular. |
mid and distal blades lance-ovate to elliptic, 1.5–3 cm × 4–10 mm. |
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Peduncles | glandular. |
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Involucres | turbinate-cylindric, turbinate, turbinate-obconic, or campanulate, 10–25 mm diam. |
turbinate, 6–8 mm. |
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Receptacles | ± flat, pitted, epaleate. |
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Ray florets | 0–21 (usually 5, 8, or 13), pistillate, fertile; corollas violet-purple, purple, pink, or white. |
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Disc florets | 10–35, bisexual, fertile; corollas yellow, ± ampliate, tubes shorter than funnelform throats, lobes 5, erect or reflexed, triangular; style-branch appendages lanceolate. |
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Phyllaries | 20–50 in 3–6 series, ± unequal (± appressed, often reddish or purplish at margins and tips), 1-nerved (keeled), ovate, lance-oblong, lanceolate, linear-oblong, or linear, chartaceous at bases, margins sometimes hyaline, especially proximally; apices acute to obtuse, green, usually puberulent, tomentose, and/or stipitate-glandular, sometimes glabrous. |
in 2–4 series (whitish), lanceolate to ovate (unequal), apices acute, abaxial face glabrous or glandular-hairy. |
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Heads | radiate or discoid, usually in open, racemiform, paniculiform, or corymbiform arrays, sometimes borne singly. |
usually 2–5 in racemiform to corymbiform arrays, sometimes borne singly. |
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Cypselae | ± obconic, flattened, laterally 1–2-ribbed, sometimes with 1–2 additional nerves on each face, glabrous, pilose, or strigose, eglandular; pappi persistent, of 30–50 whitish to tawny, barbellate or smooth, apically clavate or more conspicuously barbellate bristles in 2(–3) series (outer usually 1 mm or less, sometimes 0, inner 5–10 mm). |
pilose; pappus bristles in 2 series smooth or ± barbellate. |
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Rays | (5–)8–13, white (often pinkish in bud). |
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x | = 9. |
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2n | = 18. |
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Eucephalus |
Eucephalus gormanii |
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Phenology | Flowering Jul–Aug. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Open rocky slopes and exposed cliffs | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 1200–1900 m [3900–6200 ft] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
North America |
OR
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Discussion | Species 10 (10 in the flora). Eucephalus, a relatively well-marked western North American group, has been treated as a section of Aster or as a distinct genus. Recent molecular evidence places Eucephalus, together with the eastern North American Doellingeria, at the base of the North American clade of Astereae. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Eucephalus gormanii is known only from the central Cascade Mountains. It is closely related to E. paucicapitatus. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 20, p. 39. | FNA vol. 20, p. 41. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Synonyms | Aster section E., Aster subsection E. | Aster gormanii | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | Nuttall: Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc., n. s. 7: 298. (1840) | Piper: Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 29: 101. (1916) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Web links |