Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Forb/Herb General: Perennial herb from a hard, knotty base, with stout, deeply buried, woody taproots; stems often 40-75 cm, erect, and leafy, with white, mostly appressed hairs. Leaves: Mostly alternate, on petioles 1-3.5 cm long; blades green, 6-17 cm long, 2 or 3 times pinnately divided, strigillose to sericeous (often grayish) and gland-dotted. Flowers: Pistillate and staminate flowers in separate heads; all heads discoid; staminate heads pendant in terminal racemes, with a few pistillate heads at the base of each raceme. Pistillate heads with 1 or 2 florets, developing into a single spiny bur at maturity. Staminate heads with cup-shaped involucres, 2-3+ mm in diameter, strigillose; containing 5-20+ disc flowers. Fruits: Burs 2-4 mm with 5-12 small, terete, hooked spines. Ecology: Found on hillsides, slopes, mesas, and sometimes a weed in fields and along roadsides from 1,000-6,500 ft (305-1981 m); flowers March-October. Distribution: c and s CA, east to s KS, OK, TX; south to c MEX.; also in Australia. Notes: This perennial herbaceous Ambrosia is especially common below the Mogollon Rim in Arizona. Look for the thinly lobed, 2-4 times dissected leaves; the racemes of pendant male flowering heads which can look yellowish inside due to the color of the stamens, and late in the season, small burs with 8-13 hooked spines near the bottom of the racemes. Ambrosia acanthacarpa is similar, but that species is annual and has larger burs (4-8 mm) with longer straight spines. Ambrosia psilostachya also appears similar, but that species is a perennial with running rootstock (as opposed to the woody taproot of this species), and the fruits usually do not have spines on them. Ethnobotany: Unknown, but other species in this genus have many uses. Etymology: Ambrosia is Greek for food of the gods, while confertiflora means with crowded flowers. Synonyms: Franseria confertiflora, F. strigulosa, Gaertneria tenuifolia Editor: SBuckley 2010, FSCoburn 2015, AHazelton 2015