Carphephorus pseudoliatris

Cassini

Bull. Sci. Soc. Philom. Paris 1816: 198. 1816.

Common names: Bristleleaf chaffhead
Endemic
Synonyms: Liatris squamosa Nuttall
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 21. Treatment on page 537. Mentioned on page 535, 536.
Revision as of 20:56, 27 May 2020 by imported>Volume Importer

Plants 30–100 cm. Stems finely villous to villoso-hirsute, eglandular. Leaves: basal and proximal cauline narrowly linear, mostly 10–40 cm; cauline well developed, gradually reduced, faces gland-dotted. Heads in flat-topped, corymbiform arrays. Peduncles finely villous (or hairs somewhat appressed). Involucres 6–9 mm. Phyllaries 15–40+ in 3–5+ series, triangular-lanceolate, apices acute, abaxial faces villous, eglandular. Receptacles paleate (nearly throughout). Corollas eglandular, lobes 1–2 mm. Cypselae eglandular; pappus bristles in ± 2 series. 2n = 20.


Phenology: Flowering (Jul–)Aug–Oct.
Habitat: Moist to dry sites, pine barrens, savannas, cutover pine woods, wiregrass savannas, pine-palmetto flatwoods, grass-sedge bogs, swamp edges, ditches, depressions
Elevation: 10–90 m

Distribution

V21-1365-distribution-map.gif

Ala., Fla., Ga., La., Miss.

Discussion

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
Guy L. Nesom +
Cassini +
Bristleleaf chaffhead +
Ala. +, Fla. +, Ga. +, La. +  and Miss. +
10–90 m +
Moist to dry sites, pine barrens, savannas, cutover pine woods, wiregrass savannas, pine-palmetto flatwoods, grass-sedge bogs, swamp edges, ditches, depressions +
Flowering (Jul–)Aug–Oct. +
Bull. Sci. Soc. Philom. Paris +
Liatris squamosa +
Carphephorus pseudoliatris +
Carphephorus +
species +