No key was found for the requested taxon, but it has only one child: Pinaropappus roseus. Showing where it is keyed below.
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Key to Asteraceae, Key E: herbaceous composites with leaves alternate or basal, liguliflorous heads (composed of ligulate florets), and sap usually milky
1Cypselae beakless, the apex typically rounded or truncate (sometimes tapered but lacking a distinct beak and conspicuously < ½ the length of cypselae body).
15 Leaves basally disposed (stem leaves few or none, if present generally smaller in size than the basal leaves, which are persistent into flowering and fruiting); corollas yellow, orange, or red.
23Involucre 3-5 mm high; achenes 1.5-2.5 mm long; pappus bristles basally connate (unified basally into a ring-like structure at the junction of achene summit), 2.5-3.5 mm long
15 Leaves basal and cauline (plant often beginning with a basalrosette, but by flowering bearing well-developed stem leaves about as large as the basal leaves, the basalrosette often withering prior to flowering and fruiting); corollas yellow, orange, red, blue, pink, white, or lavender.
28Cypselae 1.2-2.8 mm long; heads borne single at the ends of scapiform stems that are unbranched (rarely few-branched near the base); plants to 7 dm tall
32 Leaves broader, of various shapes, usually hastate, irregularly lobed, and/or serrate; cypselae 3.5-10 mm long; [collectively widespread in our area, south to n. FL]
35Cypselae 1-2.5 mm long; pappus of 25-40+ white to sordid bristles, in 1 series; plants stoloniferous (cespitose in a few species); corollas yellow or orange