Carlina vulgaris subsp. vulgaris
Family: Asteraceae
[Carlina vulgaris subsp. longifolia Nyman]
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Plants 10-80 cm. Stems simple to distally much branched, arachnoid-tomentose. Leaves: basal tapering to winged petioles, blades oblong-oblanceolate, 7-15 cm, margins with spine-tipped teeth and lobes, abaxially ± arachnoid-tomentose, adaxially ± glabrate; cauline leaves sessile, ± clasping, progressively smaller, margins with spine-tipped lobes, faces ± glabrate. Heads usually 2-5 in corymbiform clusters. Involucres 15-30 mm diam. Phyllaries: outer leaflike, middle green or purplish, spiny-fringed, arachnoid, inner with appressed bases, tips yellow or straw-colored, acuminate, spreading, slender, these resembling laminae of ray corollas. Corollas 7-9 mm, yellow to maroon-purple. Cypselae brownish, 2-4 mm, sericeous; pappi of ca. 30 bristles, basally connate in 10 bundles, 8-10 mm. 2n = 20 (Denmark).

Flowering Jul-Sep. Roadsides, fields, waste places; 0-500 m; introduced; N.J., N.Y.; Eurasia.

Carlina vulgaris is widely distributed across Europe and parts of Asia, often as a weed. Although it has a limited distribution at present in North America, it has the potential to become a serious weed problem as have several other Eurasian thistles.