Harman Patil (Editor)

Erigeron pumilus

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Asteraceae

Genus
  
Erigeron

Order
  
Asterales

Tribe
  
Astereae

Rank
  
Species

Erigeron pumilus wwwwildutahusimagesplantssceneryerigeronpum

Similar
  
Erigeron caespitosus, Erigeron concinnus, Erigeron linearis, Erigeron eatonii, Erigeron bloomeri

Erigeron pumilus (shaggy fleabane, vernal daisy) is a hairy North American species of perennial plants in the (daisy family). It is widespread across much of western Canada and the western United States, from British Columbia east to Saskatchewan and south as far as Oklahoma and the San Bernardino Mountains of California. There have been reports of the plant growing in Yukon Territory, but these were based on misidentified specimens.

Erigeron pumilus is a perennial herb up to 50 cm (20 inches) tall with a thick taproot. Leaves and stems are both covered with many stiff hairs. Flower heads usually come in groups of 1-5 heads, but occasionally in large arrays of as many as 50. Each head has 50–100 white or pink (rarely pale blue) ray florets surrounding many yellow disc florets. The species grows mostly on dry slopes and plains, often among sagebrush or in prairies.

"Pumilus" means "dwarf", referring to the small size of this hairy little plant.

Varieties
  • Erigeron pumilus var. intermedius (Cronquist) Cronquist - British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyoming
  • Erigeron pumilus var. pumilus - Alberta, Saskatchewan, Colorado, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, the Dakotas, Washington, Wyoming
  • References

    Erigeron pumilus Wikipedia