Herrickia wasatchensis

(M. E. Jones) Brouillet

Sida 21: 897. 2004.

Common names: Wasatch aster
Endemic
Basionym: Aster glaucus var. wasatchensis M. E. Jones Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci., ser. 2, 5: 694. 1895
Synonyms: Aster wasatchensis (M. E. Jones) S. F. Blake Eucephalus wasatchensis (M. E. Jones) Rydberg Eurybia wasatchensis (M. E. Jones) G. L. Nesom
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 20. Treatment on page 364. Mentioned on page 362.

Perennials, 20–60 cm, colonial and cespitose, short-stipitate-glandular; rhizomes woody, elongate and creeping, or short, erect, branched. Stems 1–4+, erect, sometimes branched proximally, straight glabrescent to thinly scabridulous proximally, stipitate-glandular distally, densely so in arrays. Leaves cauline, proximal smaller and withering by flowering, yellowish green, paler abaxially, firm; sessile; blades lanceolate (sometimes widely) or lanceolate-oblong to oblong or oblanceolate, 20–110 × 6–30 mm, bases ± clasping, rounded, main veins ± marked, margins entire, slightly indurate, sparsely to densely scabridulous, apices acute to obtuse, mucronate, faces glabrous; distal (arrays) lanceolate, 8–60 × 2–13 mm. Heads 2–20+ in ± open, corymbiform arrays with ascending branches. Peduncles densely stipitate-glandular; bracts 0–2, sometimes directly subtending heads, foliaceous or ± grading into phyllaries (bases scarious), margins glandular-ciliate, faces densely stipitate-glandular. Involucres campanulate, 8.5–11 mm. Phyllaries (27–31) in 3–4 series, keeled or rounded, ± spatulate to oblong-obovate or oblong (outer) to lanceolate or linear-lanceolate (inner), unequal, foliaceous (outermost) to membranous, green zones in distal 1/2–6/7 (outer) to ca. 1/10 or reduced to midnerve tips (inner), margins not (outer) or narrowly scarious, hyaline, sometimes purplish distally (inner), erose, glandular-ciliate, apices reflexed to squarrose, acute to acuminate, sometimes apiculate (innermost), abaxial faces ± stipitate-glandular (more densely so on green parts), adaxial stipitate-glandular (on green parts). Ray florets 13–21; laminae white (to pink), 15–28 × 1.6–2.5 mm. Disc florets 26–43; corollas yellow turning reddish purple, barely or not ampliate, 6.7–10.1 mm, tubes (2.2–3.6 mm) shorter than funnelform throats (3.8–5.4 mm), lobes erect to slightly spreading, lanceolate, 0.8–1.1 mm. Cypselae tan to brown or reddish brown, fusiform, ± compressed, 3.5–5.5 mm, ribs 9–10 (stramineous to tan), ± strigillose; pappi of (ca. 60) yellowish bristles 6.5–9.5 mm. 2n = 18.


Phenology: Flowering summer–early fall.
Habitat: Open, rocky slopes from foothills to mid elevations in mountains, pinyon-juniper, aspen, limber pine and spruce-fir communities
Elevation: 1800–3050 m

Discussion

Herrickia wasatchensis is known only from the Wasatch Mountains, where it is considered vulnerable.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Herrickia wasatchensis"
Luc Brouillet +
(M. E. Jones) Brouillet +
Aster glaucus var. wasatchensis +
Wasatch aster +
1800–3050 m +
Open, rocky slopes from foothills to mid elevations in mountains, pinyon-juniper, aspen, limber pine and spruce-fir communities +
Flowering summer–early fall. +
Aster wasatchensis +, Eucephalus wasatchensis +  and Eurybia wasatchensis +
Herrickia wasatchensis +
Herrickia +
species +