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Rudbeckia occidentalis
Rudbeckia occidentalis
Nutt.
Family:
Asteraceae
Western Coneflower
Patrick Alexander
FNA
Resources
Lowell E. Urbatsch, Patricia B. Cox in Flora of North America (vol. 21)
Perennials,
to 200 cm (rhizomatous, roots fibrous).
Leaves:
green, blades broadly ovate to lanceolate (rarely lobed), herbaceous, bases attenuate to cuneate or broadly rounded, ultimate margins entire or serrate, apices acute, faces sparsely to densely hairy (mostly adaxially), rarely glabrous; basal petiolate, 12-30 × 3-9 cm; cauline petiolate or sessile, 5-25 × 2-10 cm.
Heads
in ± corymbiform arrays.
Phyllaries
to 3 cm (margins mostly ciliate, hairy, especially abaxially).
Receptacles
ovoid to columnar; paleae (proximally light brown, distally green, becoming maroon with age) 5-7 mm, apices acute to acuminate, abaxial tips densely hairy.
Ray florets
0.
Discs
17-45 × 12-20 mm.
Disc florets
200-500+; corollas yellowish green proximally, blackish maroon distally, 4-6 mm; style branches ca. 1.2 mm, apices acute to rounded.
Cypselae
3.5-5 mm;
pappi
coroniform, to 1.2 mm.
2
n
= 36.
Flowering summer-fall. Open meadows, streamsides, seeps; 1000-2800 m; Calif., Idaho, Mont., Nev., Oreg., Utah, Wash., Wyo.
Rudbeckia occidentalis
is sometimes grown as an ornamental.
Open Interactive Map
Max Licher
Max Licher
Gregory Gust
Gregory Gust
Patrick Alexander
Patrick Alexander
Patrick Alexander
Patrick Alexander
Gregory Gust
Walter Fertig
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