Puneet Varma (Editor)

Madia gracilis

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Genus
  
Madia

Higher classification
  
Madia

Order
  
Asterales

Scientific name
  
Madia gracilis

Rank
  
Species

Madia gracilis Common Tarweed Grassy Tarweed Madia gracilis Wholesale

Similar
  
Madia, Daisy family, Agoseris grandiflora, Madia sativa, Madia elegans

Madia gracilis is a species of flowering plant in the aster family known by the common names grassy tarweed, slender tarweed, and gumweed madia.

Contents

Madia gracilis Madia gracilis

Distribution

Madia gracilis Wildflowers NPS SAMO NRA Madia gracilis detail page

The annual herb is native to western North America: from British Columbia, through California to Baja California; and east to Utah and Montana. It grows in many habitat types except for arid desert areas, including oak woodlands and mixed evergreen forests.

Description

Madia gracilis httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Madia gracilis is variable in appearance. In general, it is an aromatic annual herb growing up to 1 metre (3.3 ft) in height. Its stem is branching, and hairy and glandular in texture. The leaves are up to 10 centimeters long and covered in soft hairs and stalked resin glands.

Madia gracilis Madia gracilis Wildflowers in Santa Barbara

The inflorescence is an array of clusters of flower heads. Each head is lined with phyllaries that are coated densely with stalked knobby resin glands. It bears yellow, lobe-tipped ray florets a few millimeters long and several black-anthered disc florets.

The fruit is a flat, hairless achene with no pappus.

Uses

The seeds were used to make pinole by the indigenous Mendocino, Miwok, and Pomo peoples of California.

Madia gracilis Grassy Tarweed Madia gracilis

Madia gracilis Common Tarweed Grassy Tarplant Grassy Tarweed Slender Tarweed

References

Madia gracilis Wikipedia