Tephroseris palustris |
Tephroseris |
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marsh fleabane, marsh woolly-groundsel, swamp ragwort |
groundsel |
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Habit | Annuals or biennials (perhaps rarely perennials), 20–100 cm (loosely arachnose or villous, hairs white, light yellowish, or reddish brown, indument fugitive in some populations; caudices fibrous-rooted). | Annuals, biennials, or perennials, (5–)10–100+ cm (rhizomatous or caudices ± erect; plants usually arachnose, floccose, lanate, tomentose, or villous, sometimes unevenly glabrate). | ||||||||||||||||||||
Stems | single. |
1 or more (loosely clustered), erect. |
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Leaves | basal and cauline (basal and proximal sometimes withering before flowering, mid-stem leaves prominent at flowering); petioles weakly defined; blades oblanceolate to linear-oblanceolate or spatulate, 5–15 × 0.5–3(–5) cm, margins subentire to coarsely dentate or subpinnatifid (distal leaves bractlike). |
basal and cauline; alternate; petiolate (basal and proximal cauline; distal leaves usually sessile, smaller, bractlike); blades pinnately nerved, lanceolate, linear-oblanceolate, oblanceolate, ovate, or subrhombic (bases tapering or contracted to petioles), margins entire or dentate, denticulate, subentire, subpinnatifid, or wavy, faces usually arachnose, floccose, lanate, tomentose, or villous, sometimes unevenly glabrate. |
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Involucres | ± abruptly contracted to peduncles. |
hemispheric or campanulate to turbinate, 8–12+ mm diam. |
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Receptacles | flat or ± dome-shaped (not conic), smooth, epaleate. |
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Ray florets | (13–)21+; corolla laminae 5–9+ mm (sometimes incompletely opened, appearing tubular). |
0 or mostly 8, 13, or 21, pistillate, fertile; corollas usually yellow, orange, or orange-yellow, sometimes ochroleucous or white [brick-colored, purplish] (laminae usually 5–20 mm, sometimes 1–3 mm). |
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Disc florets | 30–50; corollas yellow. |
30–80+, bisexual, fertile; corollas usually yellow, orange, or orange-yellow, sometimes ochroleucous or white [brick-colored, purplish], tubes longer than or equaling campanulate throats, lobes 5, erect or recurved, lance-linear (anther collars cylindric); style branches: stigmatic areas continuous, apices rounded-truncate. |
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Phyllaries | usually 21, green or yellowish green (tips sometimes pinkish), 4–10 mm. |
persistent, usually 8, 13, or 21 in (1–)2 series, erect, distinct (margins interlocking), lance-linear to lanceolate or oblong, equal, margins ± scarious (abaxial faces usually arachnose, floccose, lanate, tomentose, or villous, sometimes unevenly glabrate). |
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Calyculi | 0. |
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Heads | (4–)6–20(–40+), in loose to crowded, corymbiform arrays. |
radiate or discoid, borne singly or (2–40+) in corymbiform arrays. |
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Cypselae | glabrous; pappi white or dirty white. |
± cylindric, 10-ribbed or -nerved, glabrous or puberulent; pappi persistent, of 30–60+, white, whitish, or brownish, barbellulate bristles (equaling or slightly exceeding involucres, sometimes exceeding involucres to 10 mm in T. palustris). |
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x | = 24. |
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2n | = 48. |
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Tephroseris palustris |
Tephroseris |
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Phenology | Flowering May–Sep. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Habitat | Wet soils, shorelines, pond margins, brackish habitats | |||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 0–1000 m (0–3300 ft) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Distribution |
AK; IA; MI; MN; ND; SD; WI; AB; BC; LB; MB; NT; NU; ON; QC; SK; YT; Eurasia
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n North America; centered in n Eurasia |
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Discussion | Tephroseris palustris varies greatly in stature and in distribution and persistence of tomentum. The variations have been used to distinguish infraspecific taxa or two species; contemporary thought is that the complex is best treated as a single, polymorphic species. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Species 40–50 (6 in the flora). Species of Tephroseris are variable and poorly defined; their nomenclature is complex. The present treatment is provisional. Tephroseris has been treated within Senecio in most North American floristic studies (T. M. Barkley 1999). Moreover, the tradition has been to treat much of the variation as varieties or subspecies within a broadly circumscribed Senecio (Tephroseris) atropurpureus (e.g., Barkley 1978; E. Hultén 1968; H. J. Scoggan 1978–1979, part 4; S. L. Welsh 1974); current thought is to recognize more species and thereby bring North American species concepts more into accord with those of Russian botanists (e.g., S. S. Kharkevich 1992, vol. 6; I. M. Krasnoborov 1997, vol. 13; E. Wiebe 2000). The circumscription of Tephroseris was discussed by B. Nordenstam (1978). The Eurasian Tephroseris atropurpureus (Ledebour) B. Fedtschenko, in the strict sense, and T. subfrigida (Komarov) Holub may occur in far western Alaska. The former resembles T. frigida; it has smaller heads, narrower, purplish phyllaries, and a different “aspect.” Tephroseris subfrigida is a relatively tall, thin plant with phyllaries purplish on the distal one-third; the bases of the heads have a light yellowish, non-woolly tomentum. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 20, p. 616. | FNA vol. 20, p. 615. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Parent taxa | Asteraceae > tribe Senecioneae > Tephroseris | Asteraceae > tribe Senecioneae | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Subordinate taxa | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Synonyms | Othonna palustris, Senecio arcticus, Senecio congestus, Senecio congestus var. laceratus, Senecio congestus var. palustris, Senecio congestus var. tonsus, Senecio tubicaulis, T. palustris subsp. congesta | Cineraria unranked T. | ||||||||||||||||||||
Name authority | (Linnaeus) Reichenbach: Fl. Saxon., 146. (1842) | (Reichenbach) Reichenbach: Deut. Bot. Herb.-Buch, 87. (1841) | ||||||||||||||||||||
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