Skip Navigation
Sign In
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Chicago Botanic Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Denver Botanic Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Desert Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • NY Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Sitemap

Taraxacum

Taraxacum
Family: Asteraceae
Taraxacum image
Max Licher
  • FNA
  • Gleason & Cronquist
  • Resources
Luc Brouillet in Flora of North America (vol. 19, 20 and 21)
Perennials, (10-)30-400(-600+ in fruit) cm (sexual or apomictic); taprooted or with branched caudices. Stems (1-10+) erect or ascending, scapiform (terete), simple (hollow), glabrous or villous proximal to heads. Leaves basal (in rosettes, erect or patent to nearly horizontal); petiolate or sessile; blades oblong to obovate or oblanceolate to linear-oblanceolate, runcinate or lyrate (bases cuneate to ± attenuate), margins subentire to dentate or pinnately lobed (apices rounded or obtuse to acute or acuminate, faces glabrous or glabrate to sparsely villous, pilose, or villosulous). Heads borne singly. Calyculi persistent, of (6-)8-18(-20) broadly ovate to lanceolate bractlets in (1-)2-3 series, distinct (appressed before flowering, recurved to spreading or reflexed in fruit), unequal (shorter than phyllaries, margins scarious, ciliate or not, apices corniculate, callous, or neither). Involucres campanulate to cylindro-campanulate or urceolate to cylindric, 8-40 mm diam. Phyllaries 7-25 in 2(-3) series, weakly coherent proximally in buds (interlocking folded margins), distinct later, erect (sometimes slightly spreading) in flower, closing at fruit maturation, reflexed at dispersal (exposing globes of cypselae with fully spread pappi), ± equal, herbaceous, glabrous; inner lanceolate to linear-lanceolate, margins scarious, ciliate or not, apices acuminate, sometimes corniculate, callous, or flat. Receptacles ± flat, epaleate. Florets (15-)20-150; corollas yellow, sometimes greenish, rarely cream or pale pink [white], often purplish- or gray-striped abaxially (anthers yellow or yellow-cream, sometimes darker; styles yellow or greenish, sometimes grayish to blackish). Cypselae straw-colored to olive, brown, or red to pale or dark gray, bodies oblanceoloid to obovoid, ± flattened (distally ± swollen, forming discrete, conic, or terete 'cones' supporting beaks [without cones]), beaked [beakless], ribs 4-12(-15), faces muricate (at least distally) [nearly smooth], glabrous; pappi persistent, of 50-105+ distinct, white to cream-colored or yellowish to sordid, equal, barbellulate bristles in 1 series. x = 8.

The type of the genus, Taraxacum officinale, is conserved. This name is linked to the (very general) description of Leontodon taraxacum Linnaeus. A. J. Richards (1985) typified T. officinale, via L. taraxacum, on a specimen that is apparently referable to T. campylodes Haglund, a microspecies of sect. Crocea restricted to Lapland, which thus became the basis of sect. Taraxacum. J. Kirschner and J. Stepánek (1987) underlined that this typification of T. officinale does not reflect usage of the name, which raises considerable ambiguity as to its application, because Richards essentially defined a new content for it. The species usually referred to as T. officinale must now be referred to sect. Ruderalia (Kirschner and Stepánek); no name was proposed that would correspond closely with the species currently called T. officinale. A proposal to conserve the name T. officinale with a neotype that would preserve its common usage for this widespread entity has been suggested; this has yet to be discussed fully.

Taraxacum Zinn (1757) (= Leontodon Linnaeus) is a rejected name.

The genus has been monographed by H. Handel-Mazzetti (1907) and by R. Doll (1974). Infrageneric nomenclature has recently been reviewed by A. J. Richards (1985) and by J. Kirschner and J. Stepánek (1987, 1997). The European species were treated by Richards and P. D. Sell (1973) and much work has been done since; there is no overall treatment for Asia; Russian authors have covered Siberia. The number of species in the genus depends on the disposition of agamic microspecies within species complexes, which varies greatly among authors, particularly in Europe [e.g., A. A. Dudman and Richards (1997) recognized 105 species for Great Britain and Ireland]. North American Taraxacum, particularly in the boreal and arctic zones, has been investigated by numerous researchers, many of whom incorporated new taxa described by H. Dahlstedt (1906); only works touching North America north of Mexico are mentioned here. Obviously, Scandinavian and Russian works also were significant (e.g., Dahlstedt; Doll 1977; M. L. Fernald 1933; E. L. Greene 1901b; G. Haglund 1943, 1946, 1948, 1949; M. P. Porsild 1930; P. A. Rydberg 1901), but often in a manner limited geographically or taxonomically, and no complete review exists. Most often, the taxonomy of the genus has been presented within the context of floras (e

Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Fls all ligulate and perfect, yellow, mostly numerous; invol bracts biseriate, the outer usually shorter than the inner and often reflexed; achenes columnar or thickly fusiform, terete or 4-5-angled, longitudinally sulcate or ribbed, ordinarily muricate or tuberculate at least above, commonly topped by a smooth, conic or pyramidal cusp that tapers to a slender beak, or rarely beakless; pappus of numerous white capillary bristles; taprooted, lactiferous, perennial, scapose herbs, the lvs all basal and rosulate, entire to pinnatifid or subbipinnatifid. 60, mostly N. Temp. Spp. confluent through polyploidy and apomixis. Taxonomy and nomenclature in utter confusion. We here define spp. broadly and follow traditional nomenclature.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Species within checklist: Sage-Grouse Preferred Forbs, NV || << 1 - 50 taxa >>
Taraxacum acutidens
Media resource of Taraxacum acutidens
Map not
Available
Taraxacum aequilobum
Media resource of Taraxacum aequilobum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum alaskanum
Media resource of Taraxacum alaskanum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum alatum
Media resource of Taraxacum alatum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum albidum
Media resource of Taraxacum albidum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum alpicola
Media resource of Taraxacum alpicola
Map not
Available
Taraxacum altissimum
Media resource of Taraxacum altissimum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum ambigens
Media resource of Taraxacum ambigens
Map not
Available
Taraxacum amphiphron
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Taraxacum angustisquameum
Media resource of Taraxacum angustisquameum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum arcticum
Media resource of Taraxacum arcticum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum arctogenum
Media resource of Taraxacum arctogenum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum asconense
Media resource of Taraxacum asconense
Map not
Available
Taraxacum atlanticola
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Taraxacum atlanticum
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Taraxacum atlantis-majoris
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Taraxacum balticiforme
Media resource of Taraxacum balticiforme
Map not
Available
Taraxacum balticum
Media resource of Taraxacum balticum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum besarabicum
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Taraxacum biforme
Media resource of Taraxacum biforme
Map not
Available
Taraxacum boreophilum
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Taraxacum brachyceras
Media resource of Taraxacum brachyceras
Map not
Available
Taraxacum brachyglossum
Media resource of Taraxacum brachyglossum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum californicum
Media resource of Taraxacum californicum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum canaliculatum
Media resource of Taraxacum canaliculatum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum candidatum
Media resource of Taraxacum candidatum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum canentifolium
Media resource of Taraxacum canentifolium
Map not
Available
Taraxacum carneocoloratum
Media resource of Taraxacum carneocoloratum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum carthamopsis
Media resource of Taraxacum carthamopsis
Map not
Available
Taraxacum caudatulum
Media resource of Taraxacum caudatulum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum ceratolobum
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Taraxacum ceratophorum
Media resource of Taraxacum ceratophorum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum cognatum
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Taraxacum contractum
Media resource of Taraxacum contractum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum copidophyllum
Media resource of Taraxacum copidophyllum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum cordatum
Media resource of Taraxacum cordatum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum cordilleranum
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Taraxacum crassipes
Media resource of Taraxacum crassipes
Map not
Available
Taraxacum croceiflorum
Media resource of Taraxacum croceiflorum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum curvatum
Media resource of Taraxacum curvatum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum cuspidatum
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Taraxacum decorifolium
Media resource of Taraxacum decorifolium
Map not
Available
Taraxacum dens-leonis
Media resource of Taraxacum dens-leonis
Map not
Available
Taraxacum dilatatum
Media resource of Taraxacum dilatatum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum dumetorum
Media resource of Taraxacum dumetorum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum duplidens
Media resource of Taraxacum duplidens
Map not
Available
Taraxacum egregium
Media resource of Taraxacum egregium
Map not
Available
Taraxacum eriophorum
Media resource of Taraxacum eriophorum
Map not
Available
Taraxacum eriopodum
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Taraxacum erythrocarpum
Media resource of Taraxacum erythrocarpum
Map not
Available
Institute for Museum and Library Services KU BI Logo Logo for the Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

EcoFlora is part of the SEINet Portal Network. Learn more here.

Powered by Symbiota.