Lasthenia minor (DC.) Ornduff
Family: Asteraceae
Coastal Goldfields
[Baeria minor (DC.) Ferris,  more...]
Lasthenia minor image
Charles Webber  

Annuals, to 35 cm (herbage not sweetly scented). Stems erect, branched distally, ± woolly, especially distally. Leaves broadly to narrowly linear, 20-120 × 1-10 mm, margins entire or irregularly toothed or lobed (lobes to 1.5 mm), faces glabrous or villous. Involucres hemispheric, 4-6 mm. Phyllaries 7-14, oblong to ovate, hairy (especially at margins). Receptacles conic, muricate, glabrous. Ray florets (8-)13; (corollas light to golden yellow) laminae oblong, 4-8 mm. Anther appendages ovate or elliptic, acute (style apices ± deltate with apical tufts of hairs and subapical fringes of shorter hairs). Cypselae black, narrowly clavate, 2-2.5 mm, glabrous or hairy; pappi 0, or of 2-3(-4) brown or white, lanceolate or subulate, aristate scales plus 4-5+ shorter, ± truncate, fimbriate scales. 2n = 8.

Flowering Mar-Jun. Grasslands, coastal and inland; 0-700 m; Calif.

Lasthenia minor is variable; coastal plants tend to have lower stature and broader leaves and tend to flower later in the year. Inland populations were once common in the San Joaquin Valley and are now harder to find as grasslands become cultivated, grazed, or built upon. Epappose plants are common and sometimes comprise entire populations.

Lasthenia minor image
Charles Webber  
Lasthenia minor image
Charles Webber  
Lasthenia minor image
Charles Webber  
Lasthenia minor image
Charles Webber  
Lasthenia minor image
Charles Webber  
Lasthenia minor image
Charles Webber  
Lasthenia minor image
Charles Webber  
Lasthenia minor image
Charles Webber  
Lasthenia minor image
Zoya Akulova  
Lasthenia minor image
Zoya Akulova