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Key to Helianthus, Key D: perennial sunflowers with leafy stems and yellow disk flowers

Asteraceae

Helianthus

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1 Stems below the capitulescence glabrous or nearly so, sometimes glaucous.
  2 Leaves whorled at principal nodes, either alternate or opposite at other nodes
  2 Leaves either alternate or opposite (or both), never whorled.
    3 Leaves grayish-green or bluish green in color, sessile, and glabrous and glaucous on the undersurface.
      4 Rays 10-14; leaves strumose adaxially, rough to the touch; phyllaries 3.5-4.5 mm wide
      4 Rays 5-10; leaves glabrous or glabrate adaxially, smooth or only slightly rough to the touch; phyllaries 2-3 mm wide
    3 Leaves light to dark green, sometimes whitish abaxially, but not grayish or bluish green in color; leaves sessile or petiolate, glabrous or pubescent.
        5 Leaves linear-lanceolate, with only a single main vein
          6 Rays few, usually 5 or 8; heads small, the involucres 9 mm broad or less.
             7 Leaves abaxially whitish in color and glabrous and glaucous, lacking subsessile glandular trichomes (‘resin dots’)
             7 Leaves abaxially greenish in color, usually tomentulose (sometimes glabrate), with abundant subsessile glandular trichomes
          6 Rays usually 10 or more in larger heads; heads larger, the involucres usually > 9 mm broad.
               8 Leaves sessile, rounded to cordate at base, and trinerved, with the 2 lateral veins diverging from the midrib at the very base of the leaf
               8 Leaves sessile to petiolate, but narrowing gradually to base and triplinerved, the 2 lateral veins diverging from the midrib above the base of the blade.
                   10 Leave blade lanceolate to lance-ovate, sessile to petiolate but the petiole usually < ¼ as long as the blade; phyllaries not conspicuously graduated and imbricate, usually loose and spreading
                   10 Leaf blade ovate to elliptic, with a distinct petiole usually > 2 cm long and ½ as long as blade or longer; phyllaries conspicuously graduated and imbricate, usually appressed, not exceeding disk
                     11 Plants producing abundant tubers; leaves subsessile, the petioles < 1 cm long; [endemic to the Piedmont of NC and SC]
                     11 Plants rhizomatous, but not producing tubers; leaves petiolate, the petioles 1-5 cm long; [collectively widespread in our area].
                       12 Longer phyllaries usually exceeding disk by ½ their length or more, apex acuminate; larger leaves moderately to conspicuously serrate, with a petiole 2-5 cm long, and abaxially with usually relatively few subsessile glandular trichomes
                       12 Phyllaries equal to or slightly exceeding disk, apex acute; leaves moderately serrate to entire, with a petiole 1-3 cm long, and abaxially with usually abundant subsessile glandular trichomes (‘resin dots’)
1 Stems pubescent throughout, not glaucous.
                            14 Phyllaries attenuate, conspicuously exceeding the disk in length and reflexed, apically with numerous subsessile glandular trichomes (‘resin dots’); leaf bases often convex, the basically ovate or lance-ovate blade joined to a broadly winged and gradually narrowed petiole
                            14 Phyllaries acute to attenuate, but not reflexed, subsessile glandular trichomes present or absent; leaf bases usually attenuate to truncate or rounded, the blade lance-linear or lanceolate, or if ovate or lance-ovate either sessile or with a petiole that is at most narrowly winged.
                              15 Leaves conduplicate (strongly folded along the midvein, thus V-shaped in ×-section); leaf margins entire; leaf venation of a single prominent main vein (laterals not readily visible); inflorescence when well developed spiciform or racemose
                                  17 Leaf blades ovate to elliptic, petiole distinct, > 2 cm and usually > ½ as long as the blade; anther appendages yellow; cypselas 3-4 mm long, fertile
                                16 Phyllaries not conspicuously graduated and imbricate, usually loose or spreading.
                                       19 Leaves with a prominent petiole > 2 cm long, blades lance-ovate to ovate and > 5 cm broad; cypselas 5-7 mm long; tubers produced late in growing season
                                       19 Leaves sessile or with a short petiole usually < 2 cm long; blades linear to lanceolate, < 4.5 cm broad; cypselas 3-5 mm long; tubers present or absent.
                                             22 Heads relatively small, the disc portion of the heads usually < 15 mm across; abaxial leaf surfaces softly pubescent (on living plants, except the leaf margins and midveins which are scabrous); tubers present; [of the NC and SC piedmont]
                                             22 Heads various in size (8-20 mm+); abaxial leaf surfaces various, but not softly pubescent; tubers absent; [collectively widespread].
                                               23 Leaf margins conspicuously undulate, the blades narrowly lanceolate to ovate (occasionally linear, if so, usually < 10 cm long), mostly 3-veined (at mid-stem); inflorescences usually with 1-6 heads; plants rhizomatous; pappus scales aristate; [wet habitats, s. SC southward]
                                               23 Leaf margins not conspicuously undulate, the blades linear to lanceolate, mostly with a single prominent mid vein (at mid stem, sometimes the lowest leaves 3-veined); inflorescences with 1-16+ heads; plants rhizomatous or not; pappus scales aristate or not; [habitats various, collectively widespread]
                                                    25 Plants usually > 1 m tall at maturity, not rhizomatous (from crowns or caudices); mid-stem leaves 8-20 cm long, alternate or opposite; inflorescences usually of 3-16+ heads; disc florets yellow, red, or purple; pappus scales narrowly lanceolate to aristate (0.1-0.3 mm wide, ≥7x as long as wide), lacking additional irregularly-shaped scales; [widespread]
                                                    25 Plants usually < 1 m tall at maturity, strongly rhizomatous; mid-stem leaves < 6 (-10) cm long, mostly opposite; inflorescences usually of 1-3 (-10) heads; disc florets yellow; pappus scales deltoid to lanceolate (usually ≥ 0.5mm wide, 1-4× as long as wide), often accompaned by additional irregularly-shaped scales; [Cape Fear Arch region of NC and SC]