Duration: Annual Nativity: Native Lifeform: Forb/Herb General: Slender, moderately branched annual 0.5-2 m tall with whitish, striate stems sparsely to densely hispid-pilose with spreading; tuberculate-based, coarse hairs interspersed with finer ones, eventually glabrate. Leaves: Lower leaves opposite, upper ones alternate, blades ovate to broadly triangular-ovate, acute to acuminate, 3-27 cm wide, 5-28 cm long, cuneately decurrent along petiole from a cuneate to broadly cordate base, crenate-dentate with mucronulate teeth, deep green and hispidulous with incurved hairs above, paler green and sparsely granular or hispidulous and hispid-pilose along veins beneath, petioles 2-10 cm long. Flowers: Fistulose peduncles, striate, 10-30 cm long, spreadingly hispid-pilose and finely hispidulous; heads 2.5-3.5 cm wide, involucres of graduated bracts in 3 series, 1-2 cm tall, outer bracts lanceolate, oblong-ovate, acute to acuminate; rays 5-10, orange-yellow, oval-oblong 4-6 mm wide, 7-12 mm long; disk corollas 6-6.2 mm long, hispidulous on lobes, glandular-pilosulous below, tube about 1 mm long, throat cylindrical. Fruits: Oblong-obovate cypselae, 8.5-9 mm long, pappus awn solitary on outer angle of cypselae, linear-subulate, 5-5.8 mm long. Ecology: Found in rich soil along banks of streams, ditches, and margins of water bodies from 3,000-4,500 ft (914-1372 m); flowers August-September. Notes: This plant is distinguishable by its orange rays and sunflower-like leaves and habit. Ethnobotany: Unknown Etymology: Tithonia comes from the Latin Tithon, who was the husband of Aurora, while thurberi is named for Dr. George Thurber (1821-1890). Synonyms: None Editor: SBuckley, 2010