Machaeranthera_canescens

<i>Dieteria canescens</i>

Dieteria canescens

Species of flowering plant


Dieteria canescens (formerly Machaeranthera canescens)[2] is an annual plant or short lived perennial plant in the family Asteraceae, known by the common names hoary tansyaster and hoary-aster.[3]

Quick Facts Dieteria canescens, Conservation status ...

"Canescens" means "gray-hairy".[4]

Range and habitat

Dieteria canescens is native to western and central North America, from the Pacific Coast to the Western part of the Great Plains, from British Columbia south to California, Sonora, and Chihuahua, east to Saskatchewan, the Dakotas, and Oklahoma, with a few isolated populations in Iowa and Minnesota.[5]

Growth pattern

Dieteria canescens is a woolly-haired, glandular annual or perennial herb with one or more branching stems sometimes exceeding 100 cm (39 in) in height.[6]

Leaves and stems

The linear to oblong leaves may reach 10 centimetres (3.9 inches) long near the base of the stems, their edges usually serrated or toothed.

The stems are glandular with short hairs.[3][6]

Flowers and fruits

The inflorescence bears one or more flower heads lined with several layers of pointed, curling or curving phyllaries. The head has a center of many yellow disc florets and a fringe of blue or purple ray florets each 1 to 2 centimeters long. The fruit is an achene around 3 millimeters in length tipped with a pappus of long hairs.[6]

A number of insects can often be found in the flowers.[3]

Uses

The Zuni people take an infusion the whole plant of subspecies canescens, variety canescens and rub it on the abdomen as an emetic.[7]

Varieties[1][6]

References

  1. Mojave Desert Wildflowers, Pam MacKay, 2nd Ed., p 314
  2. Mojave Desert Wildflowers, Pam MacKay, 2nd Ed., p 39
  3. Great Basin Wildflowers, Laird R. Blackwell, 2006, p. 26
  4. Stevenson, Matilda Coxe 1915 Ethnobotany of the Zuni Indians. SI-BAE Annual Report #30 (p. 56)

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