Plants 50-400 cm. herbage canescent-tomentose throughout or ± glabrescent. Stems appressed-hairy; wings to 15 mm wide. Leaves 10-60 cm, margins dentate to shallowly pinnatifid, lobes 8-10 pairs, broadly triangular, densely tomentose, especially on abaxial faces. Heads mostly in clusters of 2-3, at tips of branches. Involucres ± spheric, 20 mm diam. (excluding spines), bases truncate to concave. Phyllaries linear, bases 2-2.5 mm wide, puberulent, ± cobwebby-tomentose, spines to 6 mm, adaxially glabrous. Corollas purple or white, 22-25 mm, lobes glabrous. Cypselae 4-5 mm, transversely roughened; pappi of many pink to reddish, minutely barbed bristles 7-9 mm. 2. = 34.
Scotch thistle is the national emblem of Scotland. Although it is sometimes cultivated as an ornamental, Scotch thistle is considered to be a noxious weed both in Canada and the United States. Infestations severely degrade rangelands, and dense stands are practically impenetrable because of the spiny nature and large size of the plant. This species has also invaded rangelands in Australia.
From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam
In 1910 I found this species to be a common plant along the roadside about a quarter of a mile north of Rosedale, Parke County. I passed along this road in 1918, and it was still plentiful. In 1929 I found a large colony on the bluff of the Ohio River near the roadside on the south side of Glendale Cemetery, Dearborn County. There is a specimen from Jefferson County collected by Stanley Coulter in the herbarium of Wabash College. It has been reported also from Clark and Marion Counties.
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Indiana Coefficient of Conservatism: C = null, non-native