Checklist » Asteraceae » Erigeron caespitosus
Last updated 9/18/2020 by David Giblin.
Erigeron caespitosus Nutt.[FNA20, HC, HC2]
tufted fleabane

Publication: Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc., n. s. 7: 307. 1840.

Origin: Native

selected vouchers: Not at WTU; WS?

Notes: FNA20: "Erigeron caespitosus as recognized here is highly variable and perhaps justifiably could be divided into more than one taxon. Plants at lower elevations tend to produce tall stems branching above the middle and long, white rays. At higher elevations, especially in Idaho, western Montana, Utah, and Wyoming, stems tend to be shorter and simple and the rays commonly are blue to violet. In the Bitterroot Mountains (Ravalli and Deerlodge counties, Montana), short-stemmed, blue-rayed plants also have strigose cauline vestiture (in contrast to typically deflexed-hirtellous stems); these vestiture variants occur in the same area with plants apparently similar in all other features. Strigose populational variants also occur in Saskatchewan and Yukon, and E. abajoensis, largely distinguished by strigose cauline vestiture, might be considered a regional variant of E. caespitosus. In eastern Idaho and southwestern Montana, plants of E. caespitosus are commonly encountered with cauline leaves obovate and distinctly subclasping. Plants with strongly 3-nerved basal leaves occur in Carbon and Gallatin counties, Montana.

References: (none)

Synonyms & Misapplied Names:
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