Tithonia

Desfontaines ex Jussieu

Gen. Pl., 189. 1789.

Common names: Sunflowerweed
Etymology: From Greek mythology, Tithonus, son of Laomedon and consort of Aurora, symbolic of old age perhaps alluding to gray to white induments of some plants
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 21. Treatment on page 138. Mentioned on page 135.
Revision as of 20:58, 27 May 2020 by imported>Volume Importer

Annuals, perennials, subshrubs, or shrubs [trees], 70–500[–700] cm. Stems erect, branched. Leaves all or mostly cauline; opposite (proximal) or mostly alternate; petiolate or sessile; blades often (1-), 3-, or 5-nerved, mostly deltate or pentagonal [lanceolate, linear], sometimes 3- or 5-lobed, bases ± truncate or auriculate [attenuate] (sometimes decurrent onto petioles), ultimate margins serrate to crenate, faces glabrate, ± hirsute, pilose, soft-pubescent, or villous, often gland-dotted. Heads borne singly (peduncles usually distally dilated, fistulose). Involucres campanulate to hemispheric, 10–20+ mm diam. Phyllaries persistent, 12–28+ in 2–5 series (linear to broadly rounded, unequal to subequal, apices acute to rounded). Receptacles hemispheric to convex, paleate (paleae persistent, embracing cypselae, striate, ± 3-toothed, middle teeth larger, stiff, acute or acuminate to aristate). Ray florets 8–30, neuter; corollas yellow or orange. Disc florets 40–120[–200+], bisexual, fertile; corollas yellow, tubes shorter than throats (bases of throats bulbous and hairy), lobes 5, ± triangular (anthers black, brown, or tan, bases cordate-sagittate, appendages ovate; style branches relatively slender, appendages penicillate or lanceolate to attenuate). Cypselae (black or brown) ± compressed or flattened, often 3- or 4-angled or biconvex, ± cuneiform in silhouette (sometimes with basal elaiosomes); pappi 0, or ± coroniform (of ± connate scales, 1–2 scales sometimes subulate to aristate). x = 17.

Distribution

sw United States, Mexico, Central America, introduced in se United States, West Indies, South America, and Old World.

Discussion

Species 11 (3 in the flora).

Key

1 Perennials, subshrubs, or shrubs; phyllaries 16–28; ray laminae 48–69 mm; disc florets 80–120+; cypselae 4–6 mm Tithonia diversifolia
1 Annuals; phyllaries 12–16; ray laminae 9–15 or 20–33 mm; disc florets 40–60 or 60–90; cypselae 5–9 mm > 2
2 Leaf blades ± deltate to pentagonal, often 3- or 5-lobed, abaxial faces soft-pubescent; rays usually orange, rarely yellow, laminae 20–33 × 6–17 mm Tithonia rotundifolia
2 Leaf blades mostly deltate, rarely, if ever, lobed, abaxial faces sparsely hirsute (hairs larger on veins); rays yellow, laminae 9–15 × 4–6 mm Tithonia thurberi
... more about "Tithonia"
John C. La Duke +
Desfontaines ex Jussieu +
Sunflowerweed +
sw United States +, Mexico +, Central America +, introduced in se United States +, West Indies +, South America +  and and Old World. +
From Greek mythology, Tithonus, son of Laomedon and consort of Aurora, symbolic of old age +  and perhaps alluding to gray to white induments of some plants +
la1982a +
Undefined - tribe Undefined subtribe Lagasceinae +
Tithonia +
Asteraceae - tribe Heliantheae subtribe Helianthinae +