Flower of the Day: Purple-Headed Sneezeweed

Helenium nudiflorum (aka H. flexuosum); Asteraceae (aster family)

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There’s not much to say about this plant.  It’s found Maine through Texas and parts of the upper Midwest, grows to three feet tall, and has flowers 2 inches across.  It likes wet areas, like riverbanks.  Looks a little like a coneflower, except that each ray flower has three lobes.

I just really like how this picture came out.  I saw a single plant on August 11 and haven’t seen any since.  So glad I took the time to get some nice photos.

Flowers of the Day: Grassleaf Mudplantain and False Pimpernel

grassleaf mudplantain, aka water stargrass; Heteranthera dubia; Pontederiaceae (pickerel-weed family): 20140811-DSC_0188

false pimpernel; Lindernia dubia; Scrophulariaceae (snapdragon family): 20140811-DSC_0183

And now for something a little different – a break from the aster family of plants.  In early August, wih typical almost-droughty conditions, the river was running low, exposing mudflats, so of course I went scrambling off the trail and over the rocks to see what I could see.  And what I saw were tiny little things that are usually hidden from view.

Both of these plants are very low-growing (only a few inches tall) and like really wet soils.  Actually, grassleaf mudplantain is considered an aquatic plant.  A few days later I found it growing in a semi-permanent water hole on a bluff about 30 feet above river level:

20140814-DSC_0169(Click on the picture to see the plants on the left side of the water.)

The specific epithet “dubia”, which these plants share, means “doubtful”.  Doubtful of what, though?  Perhaps it means that the plants are atypical of their genera, as in “it looks like Lindernia, but I’m doubtful.”

False pimpernel is found across the US, except in Montana, Wyoming, and Utah.  It’s an annual that grows 4-8″ tall; the flowers measure about 1/3″ across.  On other parts of the planet it is a real pest, posing a threat to rice fields in Asia and Europe.

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Grassleaf mudplantain is found everywhere in the US except Wyoming, Utah, and Nevada.  It’s of special concern in Kentucky, threatened in Maine, and endangered in New Hampshire.  The plants grow a few inches tall, with flowers a little less than an inch across. 20140814-DSC_0162

 

 

 

 

Bonus flower, to bring us back to the aster family: false daisy, Eclipta prostrata.  This was growing right alongside the other two on the muddy riverbank.

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Flower of the Day: Hairy Hawkweed

aka queendevil; Hieracium gronovii; Asteraceae (aster family)

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Unlike the big sunflowers and coneflowers I’ve posted about in the last several days, this little plant grows in the dry soils along the rocky bluffs well above the river.  Like its close relative rattlesnake weed (fotd 5/31), this composite flower is comprised only of rays.

The flowering stem of hairy hawkweed grows only one to three feet tall, and might show a few small leaves; otherwise the plant has only a very low basal rosette of leaves:

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It’s found from Quebec and Maine (or not; it’s listed as possibly extirpated in Maine) south through Texas and Florida, but not in Vermont and New Hampshire.

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By the way, I swear I did not re-use the picture from May 31! These two plants are in the same genus and the flowers are almost identical.  Indeed, when I first spotted this plant I thought I’d found an extremely late-blooming rattlesnake weed; I only realized it was something different when I looked at the basal rosette of leaves.

 

Flower of the Day: Large-Flowered Leafcup

Polymnia uvedalia (also known as Smallanthus uvedalius); Asteraceae (aster family)

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Yet another sunflower-type tall plant blooming along the river.  I find it interesting for the size and shape of the leaf, which can get to 12 inches long.  The plant itself can grow to ten feet, but the flower doesn’t exceed three inches.

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Large-flowered leafcup is found from New York (where it’s endangered) and Michigan (where it’s threatened) south through Florida and Texas.20140811-DSC_0152

 

Flower of the Day: Tall Coneflower

aka cut-leaf coneflower; Rudbeckia laciniata; Asteraceae (aster family)

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In August the Potomac downstream of Carderock is lined with tall flowering plants by the thousands.  Halberd-leaved rose mallow (fotd 8/7) is still going strong, though starting to wane, while thin-leaf sunflower (fotd 8/19), tall coneflower, and large-flowered leafcup (come back tomorrow to read about that one) are dominating the view.  And I do mean dominating, as these plants can grow to eight feet in height, and tend to form large colonies through rooting.

Flowers in the aster family (formerly known as the composite family, Compositae) are fascinating.   What appear to be petals are actually individual flowers, known as rays; the central portion of the head is comprised of individual disc flowers.  In some composite family flowers, like the Eupatorium species I wrote about last week, only disc flowers are present.  In others, like rattlesnake weed (fotd 5/31) and hairy hawkweed (come back the day after tomorrow), there are only ray flowers.

The coneflowers (Rudbeckia and Echinacea species) are easily distinguished from the sunflowers (Helianthus species, and many others) by the reflexed ray flowers and the more-or-less spherical shape of the disc.

There are 22 species of Rudbeckia in the US, four of which are found in this area, including Maryland’s state flower, the black-eyed Susan (R. hirta).  Tall coneflower is threatened in Rhode Island.