Solidago stricta Aiton (redirected from: Solidago virgata)
Family: Asteraceae
[Solidago virgata ]
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Plants 30-200 cm; caudices short, simple, rhizomes long, stoloni-form. Stems 1-5(-10) , ascending to erect (tall stems sometimes arching), branching proximal to arrays only in damaged stems, glabrous. Leaves: basal subsessile to winged-petiolate, petioles of proximalmost nearly completely sheathing stems, blades oblanceolate to elliptic-lanceolate, 60-600 × 3-20(-50) mm, thick and firm, obtuse to rounded, bases tapering, margins entire or obscurely serrate, glabrous; proximal to distal cauline sessile, ascending to nearly appressed, lanceolate-oblong to linear, 10-30 × 2-4 mm, abruptly reduced proximally, then gradually so distally, margins entire, apices acute, faces glabrous. Heads 15-250 , sometimes secund on proximal branches and secund terminus, in linear, narrowly elongate paniculiform to elongate pyramidal-secund or thyrsiform-paniculiform and not secund arrays, sometimes with a few elongate proximal, arching branches. Peduncles slender, 2-10 mm, glabrous or sparsely strigillose; bracteoles linear. Involucres narrowly campanulate, 4-6 mm. Phyllaries in 3-4 series, oblong, unequal, acute to rounded, glabrous. Ray florets 3-7, 1.5-2 × ca. 0.5 mm. Disc florets usually 8-12; corollas 3-5 mm, lobes 1-1.2 mm. Cypselae 1.5-2.5 mm, sparsely to moderately strigose; pappi 3 mm.

Solidago chrysopsis is interpreted here as just a diminutive form of S. stricta growing in the Florida Keys. Solidago stricta may hybridize with S. sempervirens in locations near salt marshes. Solidago flavovirens, from brackish marshes near Apalachicola, may be this species, or perhaps a hybrid with S. sempervirens.

Glabrous perennial 3-20 dm with a short, simple caudex and long stoloniform rhizomes; lvs basally disposed, thick and firm, the lowest ones oblanceolate or elliptic- oblanceolate, sometimes very narrowly so, 6-30 נ0.3-2(-5) cm, entire or obscurely serrate; cauline lvs abruptly reduced and sessile, entire, the middle and upper ones numerous, erect, often scarcely more than mere bracts; infl narrow, elongate, naked, sometimes nodding at the tip, the short branches occasionally recurved-secund; heads on slender, flexuous, minutely bracteolate peduncles; invol 4-6 mm; rays 3-7; disk-fls 8-12; achenes hairy, sometimes sparsely so; 2n=18, 36, 54. Sandy, usually moist places, especially among pines, or sometimes in coastal marshes, where it hybridizes with no. 15; coastal plain from N.J. to Fla., Tex., W.I., and s. Mex. (S. petiolata, misapplied)

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

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