Cirsium scariosum var. thorneae S.L.Welsh
Family: Asteraceae
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Plants erect, caulescent (rarely nearly acaulescent), 20-130 cm. Stems distally short-branched to openly much-branched throughout, leafy, glabrous or villous with septate trichomes. Leaves: blades oblong, oblanceolate, or narrowly elliptic, usually pinnately lobed more than halfway to midveins, abaxial faces glabrous or gray-tomentose, adaxial glabrous; distal usually deeply divided, fiercely armed with stout spines, the longer 1-3 cm. Heads 1-10+, sessile or pedunculate, solitary or crowded near tip of main stem or branches, usually subtended and ± overtopped by distal leaves. Involucres (broadly ovoid to hemispheric) 2.5-3.5 cm. Phyllaries: outer and mid lanceolate to narrowly ovate, spines slender to stout, 2-8 mm; apices of inner usually abruptly expanded into scarious, erose-toothed appendages. Corollas white to dull purple, 29-34 mm, tubes 14-18 mm, throats 6.5-9 mm, lobes 7-8.5 mm; style tips 5-6.5 mm. Cypselae 4.5-5 mm; pappi 20-27 mm.

Flowering summer (Jun-Sep). Meadows, streamsides, valley bottoms, often in saline soils; 1500-2200 m; Colo., Idaho, Nev., Utah.

Variety thorneae grows mostly in the Basin and Range province of Utah with populations in eastern Nevada, southern Idaho, and western Colorado.