white prairie aster

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Symphyotrichum falcatum var. falcatum


Taxonomy

Family:

Asteraceae (aster)

 

Subfamily:

Asteroideae

 

Supertribe:

Asterodae

 

Tribe:

Astereae (aster)

 

No Rank:

North American clade

Parent

white prairie aster (Symphyotrichum falcatum)


Nativity

Native

Status

 

Habitat

Dry to moderate moisture. Prairies, meadows. Full sun.

Flowering

August to October

Flower Color

White ray florets, yellow disk florets

Height

4 to 24


Identification

This is an erect, perennial forb. It rises in tufts of 1 to 5 or more stems from a short, solid, woody, underground stem. New shoots develop near the bases of old stems. A mature plant can be from 4 to 31 tall, though in Minnesota it is usually no more than 24 in height. It is usually found in colonies.

The stem is ascending to erect, grayish-brown to brown, and usually branched above the middle. It is sparsely covered with straight, stiff, sharp, appressed hairs. The stem is green when young, becoming grayish-brown to brown when the plant matures.

Basal leaves are to 1½ long, to wide, inversely lance-shaped, firm, and stalkless. They are tapered at the base and rounded or angled at the tip with an abrupt, short, sharp, hard point at the tip. The upper and lower surfaces are rough to the touch and usually sparsely to moderately covered with straight, stiff, sharp, appressed hairs. The margins are usually untoothed and have a fringe of spreading or forward-pointing hairs. By the time the plant is in flower the basal leaves have withered.

Lower stem leaves similar to basal, alternate, inversely lance-shaped to oblong, to 1½ long or longer, 1 16 to wide or wider, becoming progressively smaller as they ascend the stem. They are wedge-shaped at the base, rough to the touch, and are sparsely to densely covered with straight, stiff, sharp, appressed hairs.

Upper stem leaves similar to lower, linear oblong to linear lance-shaped, 1 to 1¾ long, and 1 16 to wide. Leaves on the branches are evenly distributed around the branch, notarranged on one side of the branch.

The inflorescence is an elongated, branched cluster (panicle) of usually 10 to 200 or more flower heads at the end of the stem and branches. The panicles have short to long, ascending branches with 1 or a cluster of 2 to 10 or more uncrowded flower heads per branch. The flower heads are usually clustered at the end of the panicle branch, and are not arranged on one side of the branch. The flower heads and clusters are on long, slender stalks (peduncles). The stalks have 1 to 5 somewhat leaf-like bracts. The bracts are to 5 16 long, linear to lance-shaped, and densely hairy.

The flower heads are to ¾ in diameter. The whorl of smaller bracts subtending the flower head (involucre) is bell-shaped. The bracts of the involucre are linear lance-shaped to oblong inversely lance-shaped, thickened toward the base, abruptly bent backward, and tapered at the tip with a short, sharp, spine-like point at the tip. The margins of the bracts have a dense fringe of spreading hairs.

The flower heads have 15 to 35 (usually at least 20) ray florets and 8 to 30 (usually at least 18) yellow disk florets. The ray florets are usually white, rarely pink or blue. The disk florets become brown with age.

The fruit is an achene with a tuft of whitish hairs at the tip.

 
Similar
Species

White prairie aster (Symphyotrichum falcatum var. commutatum) rises in mostly on single stems from a long rhizome, sometimes on 2 to 5 or more clumped stems from a group of short, entangled rhizomes. New shoots develop at the end of elongated rhizomes. The stems are usually densely covered with short, upward-curved hairs. The peduncles are stout, no more than 2 long, and have 2 to 10 or more bracts.


Range Range Map   Sources: 3.
 
Sightings

 

 


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Synonyms

Aster elegantulus

Aster falcatus var. falcatus

Aster ramulosus

Lasallea falcata

Virgulus falcatus

 
Common
Names

white prairie aster


 

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