Cirsium engelmannii Rydb. (redirected from: Cirsium altissimum var. filipendulum)
Family: Asteraceae
[Cirsium altissimum var. filipendulum (Engelm.) A. Gray,  more...]
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Biennials or monocarpic perennials, 40-200 cm; taproots and clusters of coarse fibrous roots that often have tuberlike thickenings. Stems single, erect, often branched above middle, thinly arachnoid-tomentose, ± glabrate; branches few, ascending. Leaves: blades elliptic or ovate, 5-20 × 1-10 cm, usually deeply pinnatifid, lobes narrowly to broadly triangular, sinuses broad, rounded (basal and distal cauline sometimes less divided, lobes linear-lanceolate), margins revolute, spreading, entire or spinulose to remotely few-toothed or sharply lobed, main spines slender, 1-5 mm, abaxial faces white-tomentose, adaxial green, villous with septate trichomes or glabrate; basal usually absent at flowering, winged-petiolate, bases tapered; principal cauline well distributed, gradually reduced, bases narrowed, sometimes weakly clasping; distal reduced, widely separated, distalmost bractlike. Heads 1-10+, borne at tips of main stem and branches. Peduncles 2-20+ cm, essentially naked with much reduced bracts. Involucres ovoid to broadly cylindric or campanulate, 2.5-3.5 × 2-3 cm, thinly arachnoid. Phyllaries in 10-12 series, strongly imbricate, greenish with subapical darker central zone, ovate (outer) to lanceolate (inner), abaxial faces with narrow glutinous ridge; outer and middle entire, bodies appressed, spines abruptly spreading to deflexed, slender, 2-4 mm; apices of inner phyllaries narrow, flexuous, flattened, entire or finely erose. Corollas pink to purple (white), 32-38 mm, tubes 15-20 mm, throats 6-9 mm, lobes 8-11 mm; style tips 5-6 mm. Cypselae brown, 5-6 mm, apical collars yellow, ca. 1 mm; pappi 25-30 mm. 2n = 18 (as C. terrae-nigrae), 20 + 1B.

Flowering spring-summer (May-Jul). Tallgrass prairies, old fields, roadsides, oak savannas, forest edges, in calcareous clay or rarely sandy soils; 50-200 m; La., Okla., Tex.

Cirsium engelmannii occurs mostly in the blackland prairies of eastern Texas. It ranges northward into southeastern Oklahoma and eastward to northwestern Arkansas.