Baccharis glomeruliflora Pers.
Family: Asteraceae
Silverling
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Shrubs, 100-300 cm (evergreen, loosely branched). Stems erect to ascending, striate-angled, glabrous or minutely scurfy, not resinous. Leaves present at flowering (not in fascicles); petioles to 7 mm; blades obovate or elliptic to rhombic, 20-60 × 8-40 mm, leathery, bases cuneate to attenuate, margins serrate (teeth 1-3 per side distal to middles, relatively broad), apices acute, faces glabrous, abaxial black gland-dotted (distal reduced, entire), adaxial eglandular. Heads (1-4, sessile or subsessile) in axillary glomerules scattered along branches. Involucres campanulate to obconic; staminate 4-5 mm, pistillate 5-6 mm. Phyllaries ovate to lanceolate, 1-4 mm, margins scarious, medians green, apices rounded or obtuse (sometimes purplish). Staminate florets 20-30; corollas 4-5 mm. Pistillate florets 15-25; corollas 3-4 mm. Cypselae 1.5-2 mm, 8-10-nerved, glabrous; pappi 8-9 mm.

Flowering Oct-Nov. Hammocks, moist woods, pine woods, swamps, swales, stream banks, ditches of inner dunes; 0-100 m; Ala., Fla., Ga., Miss., N.C., S.C.

Found primarily on the Coastal Plain, Baccharis glomeruliflora is recognized by the evergreen leathery leaves with broad teeth, and the small axillary glomerules of heads.