prairie blazing star
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Annuals, biennials, perennials, subshrubs, shrubs, or vines [trees]. |
moderately to densely piloso-puberulent. |
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moderately to densely piloso-puberulent to nearly glabrous. |
usually cauline, sometimes basal or basal and cauline; usually opposite, sometimes whorled or alternate; usually petiolate, sometimes sessile; blade margins entire, toothed, lobed, or dissected. |
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usually flat to convex, sometimes spheric or conic, usually epaleate, rarely paleate (paleae readily falling). |
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0. |
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bisexual, fertile; corollas white, ochroleucous, or pink to purplish, not yellow, not 2-lipped (sometimes ± zygomorphic), lobes (4–)5, usually ± deltate to lance-ovate, sometimes lanceolate to lance-linear; anther bases obtuse, rounded, or truncate, not tailed, apical appendages usually ovate to lanceolate, sometimes 0; styles abaxially papillate to hirsutulous (usually distally, sometimes at bases), branches ± linear, adaxially stigmatic in 2 lines from bases to appendages, appendages usually terete to clavate (lengths often 2–5+ times lengths of stigmatic lines), usually papillate. |
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usually persistent (readily falling), usually in 2–8+ series, distinct, and unequal, sometimes in 1–2 series, distinct, and subequal to equal, usually herbaceous to chartaceous, margins and/or apices sometimes scarious (abaxial faces often striate-nerved). |
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0. |
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homogamous (usually discoid [radiant]), usually in corymbiform, paniculiform, racemiform, or spiciform arrays, sometimes borne singly or in glomerules. |
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usually ± monomorphic within heads, usually columnar to fusiform, sometimes prismatic or compressed to flattened, rarely, if ever, beaked, bodies often 10-ribbed or (4–)5-angled, smooth or papillate to rugose between ribs or angles (glabrous or hairy); pappi (rarely 0) usually persistent, usually of fine to coarse, barbellulate to plumose bristles, sometimes of scales (scales often aristate) or awns, sometimes of bristles and scales. |
globose, sometimes becoming elongate rhizomes. |
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Flowering mid Jul–Sep(–Nov). |
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Sandy woods, pitcher plant and grass bogs, pine savannas, drainages, roadsides, fencerows, sands, sandy clays, clays |
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0–50 m (0–200 ft) |
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LA; MS; TX |
Mostly subtropics; tropics; and warm-temperate New World; also in Old World |
Variety lasiophylla occurs over most of the range of the species in Louisiana and Texas; var. pycnostachya occurs in the northern counties of those states and, apparently, also sporadically southward through the range of var. lasiophylla, at least in Texas, where it grows in drier habitats than var. lasiophylla. In Louisiana and Texas, var. pycnostachya begins flowering in mid-June and continues through July (through August more northward in its range), usually well before the main flowering period of var. lasiophylla. Despite these indications of reproductive isolation, apparent intermediates are commonly encountered (usually these are plants with dense cauline vestiture but sparsely pubescent to glabrate leaves, compared to the densely piloso-puberulent stems and leaves of typical var. lasiophylla). Most of the plants with reduced vestiture in the range of var. lasiophylla also have the later flowering period. In Pearl River and Hancock counties, Mississippi, and St. Tammany and Washington parishes, Louisiana, plants with vestiture of var. lasiophylla have phyllaries with rounded to slightly acute apices, different from the rest of the species. These were named Liatris serotina, and it seems likely that they originated as hybrids between var. lasiophylla and L. spicata var. resinosa, whose ranges meet in that area. Some plants of L. spicata in Illinois, Indiana, and Minnesota also develop cauline vestiture; the tendency apparently is evolutionarily independent of that in var. lasiophylla. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Genera 170, species 2400 (27 genera, 159 species in the flora). In a survey of Compositae, G. Bentham (1873) noted 35 genera and 750 or so species for Eupatorieae; he treated more than 50% of those species as belonging within one genus, Eupatorium. The current view of circumscriptions of most genera within Eupatorieae has stemmed largely from the work of H. Robinson, which was summarized by R. M. King and Robinson (1987), who reported 45 species for Eupatorium (i.e., ca. 2 % of the total species in the tribe). Authors of molecular studies have repeatedly found Eupatorieae to be a coherent clade “nested” within Heliantheae (broad sense) (e.g., R. K. Jansen et al. 1990). Some of those authors have suggested inclusion of Eupatorieae within Heliantheae in the broad sense as a subtribe; others have suggested break-up of Heliantheae into a dozen or so tribes (e.g., J. L. Panero and V. A. Funk 2002). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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1. Involucres narrowly cylindric, (1–)2–3 mm diam.; phyllaries 4 or 5(–6) in ± 1–2 series; florets 4 or 5(–6) | → 2 |
1. Involucres campanulate, cylindric, ellipsoid, hemispheric, or obconic, (2–)3–7(–25) mm diam.; phyllaries (5–)8–45(–65+) in (1–)2–8+ series; florets (3–)10–125(–200+). | → 3 |
2. Subshrubs or shrubs; phyllaries 5(–6); florets 5(–6) | Stevia |
2. Vines; phyllaries 4; florets 4 | Mikania |
| → 4 |
3. Cypselae (3–)4–5(–8)-ribbed | → 9 |
4. Pappi of 0–5+, muticous, erose, lacerate, or lanceolate to subulate scales (1–4 mm) plus [5–]9–12+, aristate scales (10–15 mm) | Carphochaete |
4. Pappi of 10–100+ bristles | → 5 |
5. Leaves basal or basal and cauline (cauline mostly sessile) | → 6 |
5. Leaves mostly cauline (at flowering; mostly petiolate, sometimes sessile) | → 7 |
6. Heads usually in spiciform or racemiform, rarely corymbiform or thyrsiform, arrays; receptacles epaleate; pappi of 12–40 coarsely barbellate to plumose bristles | Liatris |
6. Heads in corymbiform to paniculiform arrays; receptacles sometimes (at least partially) paleate; pappi of 35–40 barbellulate to barbellate (subequal) bristles | Carphephorus |
7. Leaves all or mostly alternate (at flowering) | Garberia |
7. Leaves all or mostly opposite | → 8 |
8. Leaf blades deltate, lance-elliptic, lance-linear, lanceolate, lance-ovate, lance-rhombic, linear, oblong, obovate, ovate, rhombic-ovate, spatulate, or suborbiculate, margins crenate, dentate, entire, laciniate-dentate, lobed, or serrate; style bases enlarged, hairy | Brickellia |
8. Leaf blades linear (distal sometimes scalelike), margins entire; style bases not enlarged, glabrous | Asanthus |
9. Pappi usually 0 or of 2–6(–12), muticous or aristate to subulate scales plus 0–6(–12), setiform scales or bristles, rarely coroniform (Ageratum) or of 1–5 ± glandular setae (Hartwrightia) | → 10 |
9. Pappi of (5–)10–80+ barbellulate, barbellate, or plumose bristles or setiform scales | → 18 |
10. Pappi usually 0, rarely 1–5 ± glandular setae (Hartwrightia) | → 11 |
10. Pappi usually of 2–6(–12) muticous or aristate to subulate scales plus 0–6(–12),setiform scales or bristles, rarely coroniform (Ageratum) | → 14 |
11. Leaves basal and cauline, mostly alternate; cypselae obpyramidal (gland-dotted) | Hartwrightia |
11. Leaves cauline, all or mostly opposite; cypselae prismatic (not gland-dotted) | → 12 |
12. Heads in dense to open, cymiform or corymbiform arrays; phyllaries 30–40; style branches ± linear to clavate (distally dilated) | Ageratum |
12. Heads in tight, corymbiform to subcapitate arrays or borne singly; phyllaries 10–30; style branches ± filiform or linear-filiform (little, if at all, distally dilated) | → 13 |
13. Leaves sessile; phyllaries not notably nerved; receptacles epaleate; stylebases not enlarged | Shinnersia |
13. Leaves petiolate or sessile; phyllaries 2- or 3-nerved; receptacles paleate(paleae similar to inner phyllaries); style bases enlarged | Isocarpha |
14. Phyllaries unequal; receptacles flat to convex (not warty) | → 15 |
14. Phyllaries ± equal; receptacles convex to conic or hemispheric (sometimes warty) | → 16 |
15. Leaves mostly sessile (or nearly so), blades linear; cypselae ± fusiform | Malperia |
15. Leaves petiolate, blades ovate, deltate, or rhombic to lanceolate; cypselae prismatic | Pleurocoronis |
16. Leaves whorled (4 or 6 per node), blades linear; heads borne singly | Sclerolepis |
16. Leaves mostly opposite (distal sometimes alternate), blades elliptic, lanceolate, or oblong; heads usually in cymiform to corymbiform arrays, sometimes borne singly | → 17 |
17. Leaves petiolate; involucres 3–6 mm diam.; phyllaries usually 2-nerved; pappi usually of 5–6 aristate scales, rarely coroniform | Ageratum |
17. Leaves sessile; involucres 3–4(–5) mm diam.; phyllaries obscurely 3–4-nerved; pappi of 2–6 setiform scales | Trichocoronis |
18. Involucres cylindric (3–4+ mm diam); pappus bristles plumose (basally coherent or connate, falling together or in groups) | Carminatia |
18. Involucres usually obconic to hemispheric, sometimes campanulate, cylindric, or ellipsoid (2–7 mm diam.); pappus bristles smooth to barbellulate or barbellate (not plumose) | → 19 |
| → 20 |
19. Phyllaries unequal (outer shorter) | → 23 |
| Conoclinium |
20. Receptacles flat or convex | → 21 |
21. Phyllaries 2- or 3-nerved, or not notably nerved, or pinnately nerved; style bases usually puberulent (glabrous in Eupatorium capillifolium); cypselae usually gland-dotted | Eupatorium |
21. Phyllaries 3-nerved, or 0- or 2-nerved; style bases glabrous; cypselae sometimes gland-dotted | → 22 |
22. Involucres 2–3 mm diam.; phyllaries 7–16 in 1–2 series; florets 3–13 | Koanophyllon |
22. Involucres 3–6 mm diam.; phyllaries ca. 30 in 2–3 series; florets 10–60 | Ageratina |
23. Style bases usually puberulent (glabrous in Eupatorium capillifolium); cypselae usually glabrous and gland-dotted, sometimes scabrellous on ribs | → 24 |
23. Style bases usually glabrous (hirsute in Flyriella); cypselae glabrous or hirsute, hirtellous, hispidulous, hispidulo-strigose, puberulent, or scabrellous (sometimes gland-dotted) | → 25 |
24. Leaves mostly opposite (sometimes whorled, distal sometimes alternate) | Eupatorium |
24. Leaves mostly whorled (3–7 per node), rarely opposite | Eutrochium |
25. Annuals or perennials; involucres 2–5+ mm diam.; florets 10–30 | → 26 |
25. Perennials, subshrubs, or shrubs; involucres (2–)4–7 mm diam.; florets (3–)25–50 | → 27 |
26. Perennials, 20–60 cm (viscid); corollas white to ochroleucous, throats ± cylindric (± contracted distally, lengths 4–6 times diams.) | Flyriella |
26. Annuals or perennials, 30–120+ cm (not viscid, stems usually puberulent, hairs curled); corollas bluish, pinkish, purplish, or white, throats funnelform (not contracted distally, lengths 2.5–4 times diams.) | Fleischmannia |
27. Phyllaries usually readily falling, 18–65+ in 4–6+ series, 3–5-nerved; cypselae (3–)5-ribbed, scabrellous, usually gland-dotted | Chromolaena |
27. Phyllaries usually persistent, 7–35 in (1–)2–4 series, 2- or 4-nerved, 3-nerved, or obscurely nerved; cypselae 5(–7)-ribbed, hispidulous, hispidulo-strigose, puberulent, or sparsely scabrellous (sometimes gland-dotted) | → 28 |
28. Phyllaries 2- or 4-nerved; corollas white to yellowish white; pappi readily falling or fragile | Brickelliastrum |
28. Phyllaries 3-nerved or obscurely nerved; corollas usually blue, lavender, or pinkish, sometimes white; pappi persistent | → 29 |
29. Involucres 5–7 mm diam.; phyllaries 30–35; florets 30–50 | Tamaulipa |
29. Involucres 2–3 mm diam.; phyllaries 7–16; florets 3–13 | Koanophyllon |
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FNA vol. 21, p. 525. |
FNA vol. 21, p. 459. |
Asteraceae > tribe Eupatorieae > Liatris > Liatris pycnostachya |
Asteraceae |
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Ageratina, Ageratum, Asanthus, Brickellia, Brickelliastrum, Carminatia, Carphephorus, Carphochaete, Chromolaena, Conoclinium, Eupatorium, Eutrochium, Fleischmannia, Flyriella, Garberia, Hartwrightia, Isocarpha, Koanophyllon, Liatris, Malperia, Mikania, Pleurocoronis, Sclerolepis, Shinnersia, Stevia, Tamaulipa, Trichocoronis |
Lacinaria serotina, L. serotina |
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Shinners: Field & Lab. 19: 74. (1951) |
Cassini: J. Phys. Chim. Hist. Nat. Arts 88: 202. (1819) |
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