Common Name: hollyleaf bur ragweed Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Subshrub General: Matted shrubs, 30-50(-120+) cm tall; stems erect, sparsely branched; herbage densely glandular and sticky, and covered with short stiff hairs. Leaves: Mostly alternate and sessile; blades elliptic to ovate, 2-6 cm long by 1-3 cm wide, with rounded to truncate bases, spiny-toothed margins, and hirtellous, stipitate-glandular surfaces. Flowers: Male and female flowers on separate plants; staminate heads arranged in racemes on peduncles 2-8 mm long; staminate involucres saucer-shaped, 9-15 mm in diameter, hirtellous and stipitate-glandular, with 20-40 disc florets; pistillate heads clustered at the bottom of the staminate raceme, each with 2 disc florets. Fruits: Burs globose, the bodies 6-8 mm long, stipitate-glandular, and covered with 40-50 subulate spines, these 4-6 mm long with straight or hooked tips. Ecology: Found in sandy washes, canyons, and creosote-bush scrub, below 2,000 ft (610 m); flowers Jan-Apr. Distribution: AZ and CA; south to n MEX (Baja California, Sonora). Notes: This spiny-leafed Ambrosia is limited to the extreme southwest corner of Arizona and neighboring California and Mexico. Look for a low shrubby perennial with leaves that have spiny teeth on the edges, similar to holly or barberry leaves; the characteristic Ambrosia raceme of pendulous male flower heads, with the heads on this species being noticeably larger than many other Ambrosia; and the cluster of female flowers, turning into burs, at the base of the raceme. Through a hand lens the racemes are noticeably covered with glands and hairs. Ethnobotany: Unknown, but other species in the genus have uses. Etymology: Ambrosia is Greek for food of the gods; ilicifolia means holly-leaf. Synonyms: Franseria ilicifolia Editor: AHazelton 2015