Eurybia spinulosa |
Eurybia radulina |
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Apalachicola aster |
rough-leaf aster, rough-leaf wood-aster |
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Habit | Plants 20–70 cm; solitary or clumped, eglandular; rhizomes short and stout or elongate and wiry, or caudices. | Plants 10–70 cm, laxly cespitose (grayish green), eglandular; rhizomes elongate, slender, woody. |
Stems | 1(–3+), erect, simple, ± villous to glabrescent. |
1–3, ascending to erect, often purple, simple, flexuous, proximally glabrescent or sparsely villous, distally ± densely villous. |
Leaves | strongly basal and cauline, linear, firm, ± fleshy, margins indurate, ± revolute, entire to spinose-serrate, smooth to remotely scabridulous or ciliate, spines indurate, finely parallel-veined with evident midribs, apices acute, revolute-indurate, faces glabrescent (minute hairs bulbous at base, threadlike distally); basal and proximal cauline persistent, sessile or petiolate (narrowing between bases and blades), blades lance-linear to linear, 100–300 × (1–)2–5 mm, bases ± marcescent, sheathing, ciliate; cauline sessile, blades linear to lance-linear, 20–95 × 3–5 mm, progressively reduced distally, bases rounded- to auriculate-clasping, adaxial faces sparsely villous in distal, the distal subtending heads boat-shaped. |
cauline, firm, margins slightly revolute, coarsely serrate or (distal) entire, scabrous to strigoso-ciliate, teeth mucronate, ± markedly veined, apices mucronate, abaxial faces scabrous, adaxial scabroso-strigose; proximal mostly withering by flowering, petioles winged, shorter than blades, bases clasping, blades elliptic to obovate 12–45+ × 7–20+ mm, smaller than mid, apices obtuse; mid narrowly winged-petiolate (petioles short with ± clasping bases), distally subpetiolate or sessile, blades ovate or elliptic to broadly oblanceolate or obovate, 32–85(–130) × 4–40 mm, gradually reduced distally, bases usually attenuate, sometimes cuneate, apices obtuse to acute; distal (arrays) oblanceolate to lanceolate, 5–28 × 1–8 mm, more sharply reduced. |
Peduncles | 0 (usually) or ascending, 1–17+ mm, sparsely villosulous; bracts 0–2, ascending, lanceolate, bases not indurate, rounded (boat-shaped), margins ciliate, faces glabrous. |
densely villous; bracts 0–1, scabroso-strigose. |
Involucres | campanulate, 6.5–9.7 mm, shorter than pappi. |
campanulate, 6–9 mm, shorter than pappi. |
Ray florets | 8–17; laminae pale purple to purplish white, 10–16(–20) × 1–1.8 mm. |
10–15; corollas white to sometimes pale violet or purple, 8.5–11(–13) × 1.3–2.3 mm. |
Disc florets | 18–30; corollas yellow, 5.5–7.6 mm, barely ampliate, tubes much shorter than tubular-funnelform throats (1–2 mm), lobes erect, lanceolate, 0.65–1 mm. |
30–70; corollas yellow becoming purple- or pinkish-tinged, 6–7(–8) mm, ± ampliate, tubes equaling to longer than funnelform-campanulate throats, lobes usually erect, sometimes ± spreading, lanceolate, 1–1.3 mm. |
Phyllaries | 20–40 in 4–5 series, green, often ± involute in distal 1/2–2/3 (outer) to 1/3 (inner), densely nerved (nerves not thickened), lanceolate, unequal, coriaceous, bases indurate, rounded (outer), margins entire, indurate (outer) or scarious and often purplish (inner), sparsely ciliate, apices acute to acuminate, indurate, apiculate, adaxial faces glabrous or sparsely villosulous. |
38–62 in 4–5 series, midnerves slightly raised (outer), oblong (outer) to lanceolate-linear or linear (inner), unequal, membranous, bases indurate, ± rounded, green zones to scarious margins in distal 1/3–1/2 (outer; seldom ± wholly foliaceous) to 1/5 or none (inner), margins often purple, hyaline, narrowly scarious, erose, densely villoso-ciliate, apices appressed, sometimes purplish-tinged, usually acute, sometimes obtuse, adaxial faces villous. |
Heads | 3–16+ in spiciform to narrow, racemiform arrays. |
5–30+ in flat-topped, corymbiform arrays. |
Cypselae | brown to gray-brown, fusiform, ± compressed, 2–2.5 mm, ribs 7–10, faces ± strigillose; pappi of burnt-orange (coarse, sometimes apically clavellate) bristles 6–7.5 mm, as long as or slightly longer than disc corollas. |
tawny, fusiform, 3–3.5 mm, slightly compressed, ribs 7–9 (brown, translucent), faces strigillose; pappi of tawny bristles 2.7–3 mm, ± equaling disc corollas. |
2n | = 18, 27. |
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Eurybia spinulosa |
Eurybia radulina |
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Phenology | Flowering May–Jul. | Flowering summer. |
Habitat | Moist to dry, acid sandy peats, savannas in long-leaf pinelands, fire-maintained | Dry rock outcrops, edges of forests, open forests, mostly on slopes, foothill oak woodlands, oak, oak-fir, yellow pine forests |
Elevation | 0–50 m (0–200 ft) | (10–)100–1600 m ((0–)300–5200 ft) |
Distribution |
FL |
CA; OR; WA; BC
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Discussion | Of conservation concern. Eurybia spinulosa is known only from the Apalachicola River drainage of the Florida panhandle; it is of conservation concern in Florida and is a facultative wetland indicator. Much of its habitat has now been lost to development (R. Kral 1983, vol. 2). Kral published a map of the species. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Eurybia radulina is confined mostly west of the Cascades, from southern Vancouver Island (British Columbia) to the southern Coast Ranges, north Channel Islands, and central Sierra Nevada in California. It often is confused with E. merita in the western, coastal states where both are found, though populations are rarely if ever sympatric, the former apparently thriving at lower elevations than the latter. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 20, p. 381. | FNA vol. 20, p. 369. |
Parent taxa | ||
Sibling taxa | ||
Synonyms | Aster spinulosus, Heleastrum spinulosum | Aster radulinus, Aster eliasii, Weberaster radulinus |
Name authority | (Chapman) G. L. Nesom: Phytologia 77: 262. (1995) | (A. Gray) G. L. Nesom: Phytologia 77: 261. (1995) |
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