Ageratina adenophora |
Ageratina thyrsiflora |
|
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Crofton weed, eupatory, Mexican devil, sticky snakeroot, thoroughwort |
congested snakeroot |
|
Habit | Subshrubs, 50–220 cm. | Perennials or subshrubs, 50–100 cm. |
Stems | (usually purplish when young) erect, stipitate-glandular. |
erect (usually forming compact ‘bushlets’), finely and evenly puberulent (hairs minute, bent). |
Leaves | opposite; petioles 10–25 mm; blades (abaxially purple) ovate-lanceolate or ovate-deltate to lanceolate-ovate, (1.5–)2.5–5.5(–8) × 1.5–4(–6) cm, bases cuneate to obtuse or nearly truncate, margins serrate, apices acute to acuminate, abaxial faces stipitate- to sessile-glandular. |
usually alternate, sometimes subopposite (densely overlapping internodes); petioles 3–20 mm; blades ovate-lanceolate to triangular, 2.5–6.5 × 1–2.5(–3) cm, bases obtuse to cuneate, margins shallowly and coarsely crenate to serrate to subentire, apices rounded-obtuse, abaxial faces hirtellous. |
Peduncles | 5–12 mm, densely stipitate-glandular and sometimes also sparsely viscid-puberulent. |
3–8 mm, puberulent. |
Involucres | 3.5–4 mm. |
2.5–3 mm. |
Corollas | white, pink-tinged, lobes sparsely hispidulous. |
white (orange-veined), glabrous. |
Phyllaries | apices acute, abaxial faces stipitate-glandular. |
apices acute to obtuse (dark orange-veined), abaxial faces. |
Heads | clustered. |
clustered (in dense, terminal aggregates). |
Cypselae | glabrous. |
hispid. |
2n | = 51. |
|
Ageratina adenophora |
Ageratina thyrsiflora |
|
Phenology | Flowering Mar–Aug(–Sep). | Flowering Sep–Nov. |
Habitat | Stream margins, ditches, road embankments, hillsides | Rocky sites, oak woodland |
Elevation | 400–900 m (1300–3000 ft) | 1000–2200 m (3300–7200 ft) |
Distribution |
CA; Mexico; Intoduced [Also introduced in Europe, Pacific Islands (New Zealand)]
|
AZ; Mexico (Chihuahua, Durango, Jalisco, Sinaloa, Sonora) |
Discussion | Ageratina thyrsiflora is known from the United States from a single collection dated 1929 from “near Nogales” in Santa Cruz County. It is recognized by its strict, unbranched or few-branched stems with alternate, densely arranged leaves, relatively small heads densely clustered in terminal aggregates, orange-veined phyllaries and corollas, and closely puberulent stems and petioles (hairs minute, sharply upwardly bent). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
|
Source | FNA vol. 21, p. 553. | FNA vol. 21, p. 553. |
Parent taxa | ||
Sibling taxa | ||
Synonyms | Eupatorium adenophorum | Kyrstenia thyrsiflora |
Name authority | (Sprengel) R. M. King & H. Robinson: Phytologia 19: 211. (1970) | (Greene) R. M. King & H. Robinson: Phytologia 19: 227. (1970) |
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