Townsendia condensata |
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cushion Townsend daisy, cushion townsendia, hairy townsendia |
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Habit | Perennials, 1–2 cm (usually ± pulvinate). |
Stems | ± erect; internodes 0.1–1(–5+) mm, ± villous. |
Leaves | basal and cauline, ± spatulate, 6–12(–15+) × 1–3+ mm, little, if at all, fleshy or notably thickened, faces of earliest leaves glabrous or glabrate, of later leaves ± villous to pilosulous. |
Involucres | ± hemispheric, (12–)16–30+ mm diam. |
Ray florets | 21–65+; corollas white adaxially, laminae 8–12(–16+) mm, glandular-puberulent abaxially. |
Disc florets | 100–150+; corollas 4–6+ mm. |
Phyllaries | 45–60+ in 5+ series, the longer narrowly lanceolate to subulate, 9–11 mm (l/w = 7–9), apices attenuate, abaxial faces ± pilose. |
Heads | ± sessile or at ends of leafy stems. |
Cypselae | 3–4.5 mm, faces hairy, hair tips entire; pappi readily falling, of 25–30 subulate to setiform scales 5–8 mm (± connate basally). |
Townsendia condensata |
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Phenology | Flowering Jun–Aug. |
Habitat | Rocky slopes and talus |
Elevation | 3000–3600 m (9800–11800 ft) |
Distribution |
CA; ID; MT; UT; WY; AB
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Discussion | The name Townsendia condensata has been attributed to Parry ex D. C. Eaton or to D. C. Eaton. In February 1874 (Amer. Naturalist 8: 106), Parry used T. condensata provisionally and provided a diagnosis. In April that year, he used it as an accepted name and “validated” it by reference to his earlier diagnosis. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 20, p. 196. |
Parent taxa | |
Sibling taxa | |
Synonyms | T. condensata var. anomala |
Name authority | Parry: Amer. Naturalist 8: 213. (1874) |
Web links |