Packera schweinitziana (Nutt.) W.A. Weber & A. Löve
Family: Asteraceae
Schweinitz's Groundsel
[Senecio robbinsii Oakes ex Rusby,  more...]
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Perennials, 40-70+ cm, fibrous-rooted and/or rhizomatous (rhizomes weakly branched). Stems 1, glabrous or leaf axils sparsely tomentose. Basal leaves (and proximal cauline) petiolate; blades narrowly ovate to oblong-lanceolate, 30-70+ × 10-20+ mm, bases abruptly contracted to subcordate, margins usually serrate-dentate, sometimes subcrenate (apices acute). Cauline leaves gradually reduced (± sessile; lacerate to subcrenate). Heads 8-20+ in loose, corymbiform arrays. Peduncles bracteate, glabrous. Calyculi conspicuous. Phyllaries 13 or 21, light green (tips sometimes black), 5-8 mm, glabrous. Ray florets 8-13; corolla laminae 4-7 mm. Disc florets 50-70+; corolla tubes 3.5-4 mm, limbs 3-3.5 mm. Cypselae 1-1.5 mm, glabrous; pappi 5-5.5 mm. 2n = 44.

Flowering May-Jul. Sunny, wet areas, meadows, swamps, ditches, roadsides; 100-1800 m; N.B., N.S., P.E.I., Que.; Maine, N.H., N.Y, N.C., Tenn., Vt.

Packera schweinitziana is rarely mistaken for any other taxon. It grows on slightly acidic soils and may reproduce vegetatively by branched rhizomes. The group of populations on Roan Mountain on the Tennessee-North Carolina border is disjunct from the main distribution.

Blades of basal lvs lanceolate or lance-ovate, acute or acutish, subtruncate or shallowly cordate at base, sharply and generally rather finely toothed, to 8 נ5 cm, commonly 1.75-3.5 times as long as wide; otherwise much like no. 14 [Senecio aureus L.]; 2n=46. Moist meadows and swampy woods; N.S. and Que. to n. N.Y.; disjunct on and near Roan Mt., N.C.-Tenn. May-Aug. (S. robbinsii)

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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