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narrowleaf purple everlasting

purple everlasting-cudweed, spoon-leaf cudweed, spoon-leaf purple everlasting

Habit Annuals, 8–45(–55) cm; taprooted or fibrous-rooted. Annuals (sometimes winter annuals), 10–40(–50) cm; fibrous-rooted or taprooted.
Stems

erect, ascending (usually branched ± throughout), subpannose (hairs silver-gray, longitudinally arranged).

erect to decumbent-ascending, densely but loosely pannose or pannose-tomentose.

Leaves

mostly cauline, basal usually withering before flowering, blades spatulate to oblanceolate, mostly 2–6 cm × 2–9 mm (becoming linear-oblanceolate to linear distally, commonly folded along midveins), faces concolor or weakly bicolor, subpannose (hairs closely appressed).

basal and cauline, basal and proximal cauline usually withering before flowering;

blades oblanceolate to spatulate, 1–6 cm × 5–14 mm (distal similar, at least among proximal heads, margins sometimes sinuate), faces usually bicolor, abaxial closely white-pannose, adaxial usually sparsely arachnose (basal cells of hairs persistent, expanded, glassy), sometimes glabrescent.

Involucres

campanulate, 3–3.5 mm, bases usually glabrous or glabrate.

turbinate-cylindric, 4–4.5 mm, bases sparsely arachnose.

Florets

bisexual 2–4; all corollas purple distally.

bisexual 3–4; all corollas usually purplish distally.

Phyllaries

in 5–7 series, outer ovate-triangular, lengths 1/3–1/2 inner, apices acute-acuminate (involute and spreading to recurved), inner oblong, laminae slightly brown (not purple), apices obtuse-apiculate.

in 4–5 series, outer ovate-triangular, lengths 1/3–2/3 inner, apices acute-acuminate, inner triangular-lanceolate (usually striate), laminae purplish (in bud) to whitish or silvery (in fruit), apices acute (not apiculate).

Heads

initially in continuous or interrupted, spiciform arrays, 2–4 cm × 8–12 mm (pressed), later in paniculiform arrays 4–18 cm (main axes usually visible between heads, peduncles usually evident).

initially in continuous spiciform arrays 1–4(–5) cm × (5–)10–15 mm, later interrupted (glomerules widely separated, bracteate, the proximal often on relatively long peduncles).

Cypselae

(tan) 0.4–0.5 mm.

(tan) 0.6–0.7 mm.

2n

= 14, 28.

Gamochaeta calviceps

Gamochaeta purpurea

Phenology Flowering (Apr–)May–Jul. Flowering Apr–May(–Jun).
Habitat Disturbed sites, sandy or clay soils, roadsides, fields, clearing and edges of woods, flower beds Open, usually disturbed, commonly sandy habitats, roadsides, fields, woodland clearings and edges
Elevation 0–500 m (0–1600 ft) 5–300 m (0–1000 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AL; AR; CA; LA; MS; NC; OK; SC; TX; VA; South America; Europe; Pacific Islands (New Zealand)
[WildflowerSearch map]
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from FNA
AL; AR; AZ; CT; DC; DE; FL; GA; IA; IL; IN; KS; KY; LA; MA; MD; ME; MI; MO; MS; NC; NJ; NY; OH; OK; PA; RI; SC; TN; TX; VA; WV; HI; ON; Mexico; South America; West Indies; Central America (Nicaragua)
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Gamochaeta calviceps is recognized by its subpannose cauline and foliar indument (perhaps intermediate between the looser tomentum of G. antillana and the tight, pannose covering of G. argyrinea) and the contrast of its spatulate proximal leaves with the much narrower cauline ones, glabrous or glabrescent involucres, and phyllaries in 5–7 series, lacking purple color, the outer and mid with acute-acuminate apices commonly becoming subulate (by inrolled margins). The distal cauline leaves usually are folded along the midveins (at least when pressed). The relatively late flowering also is distinctive. Plants on the Atlantic coastal plain usually produce 2–3 bisexual florets per head, those on the Gulf coast 3–4.

Heads of older plants are borne in paniculiform arrays resulting from development of lateral branches, the heads usually on evident peduncles and with very little tomentum at the base of the outer phyllaries, thus appearing discrete. In early-season plants, lateral branches may not have formed or lengthened and the arrays of heads may appear continuous-cylindric at stem apices; in such plants, the species can usually still be recognized by the relatively numerous, relatively shorter, axillary shoots along the main stems.

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

Gamochaeta purpurea apparently is native to North America and adventive elsewhere.

Basal cells of hairs on adaxial faces of leaves are expanded and glassy (versus hairs filiform to bases in most other species) and are diagnostic for Gamochaeta purpurea. From Maryland northward, plants of G. purpurea produce relatively small basal rosettes and relatively shallow fibrous roots or a filiform taproot; southward and southwestward, the basal rosettes often are larger and the fibrous roots are denser.

Gamochaeta purpurea apparently occurs widely through the world as a weed; it is fairly clearly native to eastern North America, where it is the least weedy of the gamochaetas. Plants of G. purpurea in southern Arizona along perennial streams at the base of the Santa Catalina Mountains were first collected in 1903 (G. L. Nesom 2004) and were, perhaps, accidentally established through visitation; the same sites are heavily infested by other, more aggressive, nonnative species. Collections of G. purpurea also have been made at higher elevations in the Santa Catalina, Rincon, and Chiricahua mountains, where the species is less likely to have been introduced by human activity. It also seems unlikely that plants in scattered Mexican localities were introduced there by human activity.

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

Source FNA vol. 19, p. 436. FNA vol. 19, p. 433.
Parent taxa Asteraceae > tribe Gnaphalieae > Gamochaeta Asteraceae > tribe Gnaphalieae > Gamochaeta
Sibling taxa
G. antillana, G. argyrinea, G. chionesthes, G. coarctata, G. pensylvanica, G. purpurea, G. simplicicaulis, G. sphacelata, G. stachydifolia, G. stagnalis, G. ustulata
G. antillana, G. argyrinea, G. calviceps, G. chionesthes, G. coarctata, G. pensylvanica, G. simplicicaulis, G. sphacelata, G. stachydifolia, G. stagnalis, G. ustulata
Synonyms Gnaphalium calviceps Gnaphalium purpureum, G. rosacea, Gnaphalium rosaceum
Name authority (Fernald) Cabrera: Bol. Soc. Argent. Bot. 9: 368. (1961) (Linnaeus) Cabrera: Bol. Soc. Argent. Bot. 9: 377. (1961)
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