Puneet Varma (Editor)

Eriophyllum ambiguum

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Tribe
  
Heliantheae

Scientific name
  
Eriophyllum ambiguum

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Asterales

Genus
  
Eriophyllum

Higher classification
  
Eriophyllum

Similar
  
Eriophyllum, Daisy family, Eriophyllum wallacei, Eriophyllum lanosum, Chaenactis fremontii

Eriophyllum ambiguum is a species of flowering plant in the aster family known by the common name beautiful woolly sunflower. It is native to the deserts and adjacent hills of southern and eastern California, northwestern Arizona, and southern Nevada.

Eriophyllum ambiguum grows in chaparral, woodlands, and desert habitat. It is an annual herb growing decumbent or upright with stems up to 30 centimeters (1 foot) long. The leaves are widely lance-shaped or oblong and sometimes have lobes, with woolly hairs on both sides. The inflorescence produces one flower head containing many yellow disc florets and 6 to 10 yellow, white, or bicolored ray florets which are each 2 millimeters to one centimeter (0.08-0.40 inches) long. The fruit is a rough-haired achene which may have a very small pappus.

Varieties
  • Eriophyllum ambiguum var. ambiguum - California, mostly in Kern County
  • Eriophyllum ambiguum var. paleaceum (Brandegee) Ferris - California, Nevada, Arizona
  • References

    Eriophyllum ambiguum Wikipedia