Dioecious. Plants 4-25 cm. Stolons 2-8 cm. Basal leaves 1-nerved, spatulate to cuneate-oblanceolate, 10-25 × 3-9 mm, tips mucronate, faces greenish gray, moderately pubescent. Cauline leaves linear, 4-20 mm, not flagged (apices acute). Heads 3-6(-9) in corymbiform arrays. Involucres: staminate 3.8-6 mm; pistillate 5-7 mm. Phyllaries distally white or stramineous. Corollas: staminate 2.2-3.5 mm; pistillate 2.8-4.5 mm. Cypselae 0.8-1.3 mm, slightly papillate; pappi: staminate 2.8-4(-5) mm; pistillate 3.5-5.2 mm. 2n = 28, 56.
Flowering early-mid spring. Devonian shale barrens and argillaceous soils derived from them, open deciduous woods and fields; 300-600 m; Md., Ohio, Pa., Va., W.Va.
G. L. Stebbins (1936) and R. J. Bayer and Stebbins (1982) maintained that Antennariavirginica is a distinct species. After previously recognizing the taxon as a variety of A. neglecta, A. Cronquist (1945; H. A. Gleason and Cronquist 1991) agreed. It is a sexual progenitor of the A. howellii complex and is most closely related to A. howellii subsp. neodioica (Bayer 1985). Antennaria virginica is dioecious and is characterized by its relatively small, spatulate, basal leaves and subulate-tipped cauline leaves, which separate it from A. neglecta and the gynoecious A.howellii complex (Stebbins 1935; Bayer and Stebbins).
Heads small, the pistillate invols 5-7 mm; consistently sexual; diploid or tetraploid; otherwise like a small and delicate form of A. neglecta var. neodioica. Mainly shale- barrens; w. Va. and e. W.Va. to Pa., but also to Ky. and s. and e.c. O. Apr., May. (A. neglecta var. argillicola)
Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.