Xylorhiza cronquistii

S. L. Welsh & N. D. Atwood

Brittonia 33: 302, fig. 8. 1981.

Common names: Cronquist’s woody-aster
EndemicConservation concern
Synonyms: Machaeranthera cronquistii (S. L. Welsh & N. D. Atwood) Cronquist
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 20. Treatment on page 408. Mentioned on page 407.

Subshrubs, ca. 30 cm. Stems branched mostly in proximal 3/4, sparsely villous and stipitate-glandular to subglabrous. Leaf blades linear-lanceolate to narrowly oblanceolate, 2.5–6 mm wide, bases attenuate, not clasping, margins flat, usually shallowly spinulose-toothed, sometimes entire, faces sparsely villous. Peduncles 5–10 cm. Involucres 10–12 × 13–18 mm. Ray florets 13–17; corollas white. Style-branch appendages ± equal or slightly shorter than stigmatic lines.


Phenology: Flowering Jun–Jul.
Habitat: Gray sand of the Kaiparowits Formation
Elevation: 1900–2100 m

Discussion

Of conservation concern.

Xylorhiza cronquistii grows in Kane County. S. L. Welsh et al. (2003) noted that it is “more or less intermediate in morphologic features between X. confertifolia and X. tortifolia var. imberbis; it occurs on habitats intermediate between the two parental types and is at the approximate summit of the distribution of the latter.”

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.