Log In
New Account
Sitemap
Home
Specimen Search
Search Collections
Map Search
Exsiccati Search
Images
Image Library
Search Images
Inventories
State Floras
Kentucky Flora
Dynamic Tools
Dynamic Checklist
Dynamic Key
Rudbeckia graminifolia
(Torr. & A. Gray) C.L. Boynt. & Beadle
Family:
Asteraceae
Grass-Leaf Coneflower
[
Echinacea atrorubens var. graminifolia
]
University of Florida Herbarium
FNA
Resources
Lowell E. Urbatsch, Patricia B. Cox in Flora of North America (vol. 21)
Perennials,
to 80 cm (roots fibrous).
Stems
moderately strigose (hairs ascending).
Leaves:
blades narrowly lanceolate to elliptic (grasslike, lengths 10+ times widths, not lobed), herbaceous, bases attenuate, margins entire, apices acute, faces glabrous or sparsely hirsute; basal petiolate or sessile, 10-25 × 0.5-1 cm; cauline sessile, 1-25 × 0.2-1 cm (distal smaller), bases attenuate.
Heads
mostly borne singly.
Phyllaries
to 1 cm (spreading to reflexed).
Receptacles
hemispheric to ovoid; paleae 4-5 mm, (apical margins glabrous) apices acuminate-cuspidate, awn-tipped, abaxial tips sparsely strigose.
Ray florets
8-16; corollas orangish red to maroon, laminae elliptic to obovate, 10-25 × 3-6 mm, abaxially sparsely strigose.
Discs
10-15 × 8-15 mm.
Disc florets
50-300+; corollas proximally maroon, distally brown-purple, 3.9-4.4 mm; style branches ca. 1.8 mm, apices obtuse to rounded.
Cypselae
2-3 mm;
pappi
coroniform, to 0.5 mm.
2
n
= 38.
Flowering spring-fall. Wet, sandy flatwoods sites; 0-30 m; Fla.
Rudbeckia graminifolia
grows in the Apalachicola region.
Open Interactive Map
University of Florida Herbarium
University of Florida Herbarium
University of Florida Herbarium
University of Florida Herbarium
University of Florida Herbarium
University of Florida Herbarium
University of Florida Herbarium
University of Florida Herbarium
University of Florida Herbarium
University of Florida Herbarium
University of Florida Herbarium
University of Florida Herbarium
University of Florida Herbarium
Click to Display
100 Initial Images
- - - - -
View All Images
This project made possible by
National Science Foundation Award 1410069
Powered by
Symbiota
.