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cat-tail gayfeather, prairie blazing star, prairie gayfeather, thick-spike blazing star

Appalachian blazing star, Appalachian gayfeather, southern gayfeather, tall gayfeather

Habit Plants (40–)60–120(–180) cm. Plants 25–80(–130) cm.
Stems

glabrous or densely piloso-puberulent.

puberulent.

Leaves

basal and proximal cauline 3–5-nerved, linear to narrowly oblanceolate or oblanceolate, 110–220 × 4–10(–12) mm, gradually then abruptly reduced distally (bractlike proximal to heads), essentially glabrous or sparsely pilose to densely piloso-puberulent, weakly gland-dotted (bases of basal usually fibrous-persistent).

basal and proximal cauline 1-nerved, usually oblanceolate- to elliptic-spatulate to oblanceolate, 80–290 × 12–25(–45) mm, abruptly, then little or gradually, reduced distally, essentially glabrous or puberulent or hirtellous-hispidulous, weakly, if at all, gland-dotted.

Peduncles

usually 0, rarely (spreading to ascending) 1–2 mm.

usually 0, sometimes (ascending to spreading or deflexed) 2–8(–30) mm.

Involucres

campanulate-cylindric, 7–9(–10) × 3.5–5 mm.

turbinate to turbinate-campanulate or campanulate-cylindric, (6–)8–12 × (6–)8–15 mm.

Florets

(4–)5–8;

corolla tubes glabrous inside.

11–26(–28);

corolla tubes pilose inside.

Phyllaries

(reflexed or curving-spreading) in 4–5 series, oblong-lanceolate, unequal, essentially glabrous or ± pilose, margins with hyaline borders, sometimes ciliate, apices usually acute to acute-acuminate (sometimes distally dilated, nearly petaloid).

in 4–5(–6) series, (usually spreading to distally reflexed, sometimes erect) obovate to oblong-spatulate, unequal, essentially glabrous or puberulent to puberulent-hirtellous, margins sometimes with relatively narrow, weakly differentiated hyaline borders, apices acute to obtuse (at least outer) or rounded (mid and inner).

Heads

in dense, spiciform arrays.

in loose to dense, racemiform to spiciform arrays.

Cypselae

3.8–4.5(–5) mm;

pappi: lengths ± equaling corollas, bristles barbellate.

(3–)3.5–5.5(–6) mm;

pappi: lengths ± equaling corollas, bristles barbellate.

Corms

globose, sometimes becoming elongate rhizomes.

globose.

Liatris pycnostachya

Liatris squarrulosa

Phenology Flowering (Jul–)Aug–Oct(–Nov).
Habitat Pine, oak, and oak-hickory woods, scrub oak, prairies, rocky ridges and slopes, marl ridges, sand hills and ridges, alluvial woods (rarely), fencerows, road banks, roadsides, sand, clay, chalk
Elevation 0–600(–1000) m (0–2000(–3300) ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AR; IA; IL; IN; KS; KY; LA; MA; MI; MN; MO; MS; ND; NE; NJ; NY; OH; OK; PA; SD; TX; WI
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
AL; GA; IL; IN; KY; LA; MO; MS; NC; SC; TN; TX; WV
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Varieties 2 (2 in the flora).

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

Liatris squarrulosa occurs across a range of habitats and exhibits much variation in habit, vestiture, and head size (involucral dimensions, numbers of florets, lengths of cypselae); it has not been possible in herbarium study to discern discrete geographic patterns. Plants in South Carolina (including the type of L. squarrulosa) are shorter, leaves and phyllaries are consistently glabrous or sparsely puberulent, involucres are (6–)7–10 × 6–10 mm, and mid to inner phyllaries usually are narrowly oblong. Westward and northward, plants are taller, leaves and phyllaries characteristically have more strongly elaborated vestiture (although considerable variation exists and glabrous plants are scattered nearly through the range), heads range larger, and phyllaries vary from broadly obovate to oblong-spatulate. An overview of head size is indicated by the following measurement samples: South Carolina—florets 12–16, cypselae (3–)3.5–4 mm; Georgia (including the type of L. earlei)—florets (11–)14–21, cypselae 4–5 mm; Alabama—florets 11–20, cypselae 3.5–5(–6) mm; Illinois (including the type of L. scabra) and Tennessee—florets 16–24, cypselae 3.5–5.5 mm; Louisiana—florets 16–21, cypselae 3.5–5 mm; Arkansas—florets (13–)21–26, cypselae 3.5–5 mm. Plants apparently disjunct in a cluster of north-central North Carolina counties have glabrous phyllaries and leaves, large heads, and the phyllaries are broad, more like plants to the west than those southward.

Populations in southwestern North Carolina (Cherokee, Clay, Macon, and Swain counties) and adjacent Tennessee, South Carolina, and Georgia appear to combine features of Liatris squarrulosa and L. scariosa var. scariosa. The plants are within the range of L. squarrulosa and disjunct from L. scariosa. The habit (large basal leaves, few cauline) is common to both taxa; heads are sessile to short-pedunculate (as in L. squarrulosa) and phyllaries are usually erect (the outer triangular and sometimes reflexing) and slightly broader than is characteristic of L. squarrulosa and often have a narrow hyaline border. These add further heterogeneity to the concept of L. squarrulosa, as circumscribed here; they may represent a separate evolutionary entity. The type of L. ruthii Alexander (an illegitimate name) from Tennessee is this form.

Hybrids:

Liatris species readily form hybrids. Named hybrids and their presumed parentals are:

Liatris ×boykinii Torrey & A. Gray; Lacinaria boykinii (Torrey & A. Gray) Kuntze—L. elegans × L. tenuifolia

Liatris ×creditonensis Gaiser—L. ligulistylis × L. squarrosa var. glabrata (known only from garden-grown plants)

Liatris ×deamii (Lunell) Shinners; Lacinaria deamii Lunell; Liatris scariosa (Linnaeus) Willdenow var. deamii (Lunell) Peattie—L. aspera? × L. ligulistylis?

Liatris ×fallacior (Lunell) Rydberg; Lacinaria fallacior Lunell—L. ligulistylis × L. punctata

Liatris ×freemaniana J. R. Allison—L. cylindracea × L. oligocephala

Liatris ×frostii Gaiser—L. aspera × L. pycnostachya

Liatris ×gladewitzii (Farwell) Shinners; Lacinaria gladewitzii Farwell—L. aspera × L. cylindracea

Liatris ×macdanieliana J. R. Allison—L. cylindracea × L. squarrosa

Liatris ×ridgwayi Standley—L. pycnostachya × L. squarrosa

Liatris ×spheroidea Michaux; Lacinaria aspera (Michaux) Greene var. spheroidea (Michaux) Alexander—L. aspera × L. ligulistylis? (fide L. O. Gaiser 1946)

Liatris ×steelei Gaiser—L. aspera × L. spicata

Liatris ×weaveri Shinners—L. aspera × L. punctata (known only from garden-grown plants)

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

Key
1. Corms globose; stems usually glabrous or sparsely pilose except near heads (where sparsely piloso-puberulent); leaves glabrous
var. pycnostachya
1. Corms globose to elongate; stems moderately to densely piloso-puberulent; leaves moderately to densely piloso-puberulent to nearly glabrous
var. lasiophylla
Source FNA vol. 21. FNA vol. 21, p. 534.
Parent taxa Asteraceae > tribe Eupatorieae > Liatris Asteraceae > tribe Eupatorieae > Liatris
Sibling taxa
L. acidota, L. aestivalis, L. aspera, L. bracteata, L. chapmanii, L. cokeri, L. compacta, L. cylindracea, L. cymosa, L. elegans, L. elegantula, L. garberi, L. gholsonii, L. glandulosa, L. gracilis, L. helleri, L. hirsuta, L. laevigata, L. lancifolia, L. ligulistylis, L. microcephala, L. ohlingerae, L. oligocephala, L. patens, L. pauciflora, L. pilosa, L. provincialis, L. punctata, L. savannensis, L. scariosa, L. spicata, L. squarrosa, L. squarrulosa, L. tenuifolia, L. tenuis, L. virgata
L. acidota, L. aestivalis, L. aspera, L. bracteata, L. chapmanii, L. cokeri, L. compacta, L. cylindracea, L. cymosa, L. elegans, L. elegantula, L. garberi, L. gholsonii, L. glandulosa, L. gracilis, L. helleri, L. hirsuta, L. laevigata, L. lancifolia, L. ligulistylis, L. microcephala, L. ohlingerae, L. oligocephala, L. patens, L. pauciflora, L. pilosa, L. provincialis, L. punctata, L. pycnostachya, L. savannensis, L. scariosa, L. spicata, L. squarrosa, L. tenuifolia, L. tenuis, L. virgata
Subordinate taxa
L. pycnostachya var. lasiophylla, L. pycnostachya var. pycnostachya
Synonyms Lacinaria pycnostachya Lacinaria shortii, Lacinaria tracyi, L. earlei, L. scabra, L. scariosa var. squarrulosa
Name authority Michaux: Fl. Bor.-Amer. 2: 91. (1803) Michaux: Fl. Bor.-Amer. 2: 92. (1803)
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