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Key to Cirsium
Asteraceae
Cirsium
https://fsus.ncbg.unc.edu/main.php?pg=show-key.php&keyid=40549
1 Heads several to many clustered together, usually touching, on peduncles 0-1 cm long | |
1 Heads solitary, or if several to many per plant, not clustered together and touching, and on peduncles mostly > 1 cm long. | |
2 Plant not colonial; heads 25-50 mm high (as small as 15-25 mm in C. carolinianum, C. nuttallii, C. muticum, and C. virginianum); phyllaries mostly spine-tipped, with at least some of the spines > 1 mm long (except sometimes mostly or entirely spine free in C. muticum); plant biennial (to weakly perennial); [native (except C. vulgare), in natural or some species also in disturbed habitats]. | |
3 Leaves decurrent onto the stem below, the decurrency extending as a wing at least several cm down the stem, and often to the leaf below; leaves scabrous-hispid above; phyllaries lacking a glutinous dorsal ridge; [exotic weed] | |
3 Leaves not decurrent as a conspicuous wing, or the decurrency extending < 1 cm (sometimes more decurrent in C. lecontei); leaves not scabrous-hispid above; [native, sometimes in disturbed habitats]. | |
4 Phyllaries lacking spine tips (the outermost sometimes with a weak spine-tip to 0.5 mm long); leaves deeply lobed, to 55 cm long and 20 cm wide | |
4 Phyllaries (at least the outer and middle) with well-developed spine-tips > 1 mm long; leaves lobed or merely toothed, generally < 30 cm long and < 10 cm wide (except in C. altissimus). | |
6 Involucres more-or-less densely tomentose; stems densely tomentose; [of the Coastal Plain and Piedmont] | |
7 Leaves shallowly to deeply pinnatifid; main spines of the leaves 10-30 mm long; [of s. AL and Panhandle FL westward] | |
7 Leaves spinose-dentate to shallowly pinnatifid; main spines mostly 5-10 mm long; [widespread in the Coastal Plain] | |
5 Heads pedunculate (rarely with 1 or 2 reduced leaves below); flowers pink, purple, lavender, or white. | |
9 Heads 25-50 mm high; plants 2-10 dm tall, usually strict or few-branched and with 1 or a few heads. | |
10 Heads on well-developed peduncles; [of moist to wet pinelands of the Coastal Plain from NC and SC south] | |
10 Heads on short peduncles; [of various habitats, mostly inland from the Coastal Plain, or of dry pinelands of the Coastal Plain]. | |
11 Plants lacking well-developed basal leaves; cauline leaves with internodes mostly 0.5-2 cm long; [of dry pinelands of the Coastal Plain] | |
11 Plants generally with well-developed, persistent basal leaves; cauline leaves with internodes usually > 2 cm; [of various habitats, mostly inland from the Coastal Plain] | |
12 Spines of outer phyllaries slender, 1.5-3 mm long; plants simple or with a few short branches above; leaves usually shallowly lobed; roots often tuberous-thickened; cypselas usually 4.5-5 mm long; [midwestern U.S. and Canada distribution east to IN, MI] | |
8 Lower surface of the leaves densely white-tomentose beneath, this persistent and entirely obscuring the green surface. | |
15 Cauline leaves mostly 10-25; plants flowering Apr-Jun; [widespread, including extensively in the Inland provinces] | |
15 Cauline leaves mostly 30-70; plants flowering Aug-Oct; [moist to dry soils of the Coastal Plain (and very rarely in the lower Piedmont in association with other Coastal Plain species, such as Pinus palustris)] | |