Checklist » Asteraceae » Solidago lepida var. salebrosa
Last updated 11/17/2020 by David Giblin.
Solidago lepida DC. var. salebrosa (Piper) Semple[FNA20, HC2]
Canada goldenrod, meadow goldenrod, Rocky Mountains Canada goldenrod

Publication: Sida. 20: 1611. 2003.

Origin: Native

selected vouchers: WTU

Notes: FNA20: "FNA20: "Variety salebrosa strongly resembles Solidago canadensis, and is found throughout most of the Rocky Mountains in the United States and adjacent Canada. It has been included in S. canadensis by many authors (e.g., A. Cronquist 1994). In extreme forms the array is broader than tall with long, arching proximal branches. Hairier plants can be similar in appearance to S. altissima; the latter is usually not glandular and is much hairier. Glabrate plants of var. salebrosa can be difficult to distinguish from hexaploid S. gigantea near and in the mountains from Alberta south to New Mexico. Glabrate plants in the mountains often treated as S. gigantea are glandular and belong in S. lepida var. salebrosa. Small-headed diploids found in the Rocky Mountains from southern British Columbia to Colorado are usually sparsely glandular and could be confused with short-array forms of S. elongata."

Check WTU colls for specimens of S. altissima, reported N to BC by Semple (1993)

References:

» Semple, J.C. J.G. Chmielewski, and R.A. Brammall. 1990. A multivariate morphometric study of Solidago nemoralis (Compositae: Astereae) and comparison with S. californica and S. sparsiflora. Canadian Journal of Botany 68: 2070-2082.
Synonyms & Misapplied Names:
Solidago canadensis L. ssp. salebrosa (Piper) D.D. Keck
Solidago canadensis L. var. salebrosa (Piper) M.E. Jones[HC]
Solidago gigantea Aiton, misapplied[FNA20, HC, HC2]