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Dummer. ゛☀
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Dummer. ゛☀
2017年07月30日
Family - Oleaceae Stems - To +2m tall, multiple from base, branching, woody, erect to reclining. Tigs hollow, with conspicuous lenticels, the youngest slightly 4-angled. Winter buds lance-ovoid, pointed.
Leaves - Opposite, petiolate. Petiole to 1.5cm long, minutely winged or not, glabrous. Blade lance-ovate to ovate, to +/-6cm long, +/-3cm broad, glabrous, green, acute. Margins serrate above the middle, typically entire near base.
Inflorescence - Flowers mostly appearing before leaves, axillary, solitary or in fascicles. Pedicels glabrous, to +/-6mm long. Flowers - Corolla yellow, 4-lobed, glabrous. Tube to 8mm long. Lobes to 2cm long, 1cm broad, oblong. Stamens 2, adnate at base of corolla tube. Filaments yellow, 4mm long, glabrous. Anthers yellowish-tan, 2.1mm long. Stigma biglobose, capitate. Style to 1.5mm long. Ovary glabrous, 2-locular, glabrous, superior. Calyx 4-lobed, green or with some purple. Tube to 1mm long, glabrous. Lobes to 6mm long, 2.5mm broad, with evident midvein. Margins entire, scarious, ciliate. Capsule loculicidal, to 2cm long, 1cm in diameter, tannish, with lenticels, many seeded.
Flowering - March - April. Habitat - Cultivated. Origin - Native to Asia. Other info. - Forsythia is one of the first plants to bloom in Missouri in the spring. The brilliant yellow flowers are impossible to miss and decorate the landscape. The flowers appear before the leaves but typically remain until the plant is almost leafed out. There are other species of Forsythia which are cultivated in Missouri but nearly all look alike. They can be differentiated by looking at the hairiness of the leaves and the pith (or lack of) of the twigs and branches. For a complete rundown of the genus go here.
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Dummer. ゛☀
2017年07月30日
Family - Asteraceae Stems - Annual from a big taproot, multiple from the base, erect to ascending, herbaceous, appressed pubescent, green to reddish with vertical colored lines, much-branched, to 30cm tall (long).
Leaves - Opposite, sessile, distichous, to +/-3.5cm long, +/-1.5cm broad, deeply pinnatifid, glabrous, with scattered tannish-red glands. Divisions of the leaves linear, with a few coarse serrate teeth on the margins, often slightly folded (conduplicate) in strong sun. Inflorescence - Short-pedunculate flower heads from the leaf axils. The peduncles with reduced leaves at the base, 3-8mm long, appressed pubescent, expanded towards the apex. Involucre - Biseriate, 7-10mm long, 5-7mm broad. Outer series loose, of linear phyllaries. The phyllaries spreading at the apex, glabrous but with ciliolate margins (at least in the middle or basal half), +/-7mm long, 1.5mm broad at the base, with scattered glands. Phyllaries of the inner series larger than those of the outer, +/-8mm long, 2-3mm broad, glabrous, with many glands, sub-acute at the apex, oblong-linear.
Ray flowers - Flowers pistillate and fertile, +/-8 per head. Ligule short, 1mm long, -1mm broad, notched at the apex, glabrous. Corolla tube +/-3mm long, with antrorse pubescence, white in the basal 2/3, yellow above. Style translucent below, glabrous, bifurcate at the apex. Stigmas yellow, .6-.8mm long, recurved, glabrous. Pappus of multiple +/-10 laciniate awns. Awns 2-2.8mm long, purplish at the tips, whitish below. Achenes black, +/-3mm long, -1mm broad, sparse sericeous to glabrous. Disk flowers - Flowers +/-20 per head, fertile. Corolla tube +3mm long, pubescent as the ray flowers, colored as the ray flowers, 5-lobed. Lobes small, .3mm long, .2mm broad, erect to slightly spreading, glabrous, acute. Stamens 5, included, adnate near the base of the corolla tube. Filaments greenish-translucent, 1-1.5mm long. Anthers yellow, connate around the style, 1-1.3mm long. Style included, +/-2mm long, glabrous, greenish-translucent in the basal 2/3, yellowish above. Stigma bifurcate, barely exserted beyond the anthers, included in the corolla tube, yellowish-purple at the apex. Stigmas .5-.6mm long, erect to slightly spreading. Pappus and achenes as with the ray flowers. Receptacle flattish, with no large chaff.
Flowering - May - October. Habitat - Dry fields, pastures, loess hills, prairies, waste ground, roadsides, railroads. Origin - Native to U.S. Other info. - This little species can be found scattered throughout Missouri but is most common in the northern portion of the state. The plant is easy to identify becasue of its small size, opposite, divided leaves, and incredible aroma. The glands of the plant are filled with a watery liquid that has a distinctive smell and is unmistakable. D. papposa is most commonly found in disturbed and waste ground and appears as a weedy, exotic species.
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Dummer. ゛☀
2017年07月30日
Family - Asteraceae Stems - To 2m tall, from a short woody caudex and thickened roots, herbaceous, erect, glabrous, glaucous, branching in apical 1/2, fistulose, single from the base.
Leaves - Opposite, decussate, petiolate, trifoliolate. Petioles glabrous, to 2cm long. Bases of opposing petioles connected and enveloping the stem. Lateral leaflets sessile. Terminal leaflet with a short petiolule (to 5mm long). Leaflets entire, pubescent abaxially, very sparse pubescent adaxially, acute, oblong-lanceolate to lanceolate, to 11cm long, 3.5cm broad. Venation is tuberculate adaxially and plainly visible below. Margins thickened and antrorse strigillose. Inflorescence - A flat-topped cymose arrangement of flower heads. Involucre - Biseriate, to 6mm tall (long), 7mm in diameter. Outer phyllaries green and linear, +/-6 in number, very sparse pubescent, +/-5mm long, 1mm broad, rounded at apex. Inner phyllaries broad, green at base, yellow in apical 1/2, pubescent externally, glabrous internally, the apices bent and spreading outward, acute, 7-8mm long, 3-4mm broad.
Ray flowers - Sterile, typically 8 per flower head. Ligules yellow, to +/-3cm long, to 1cm broad, glabrous or with very few hairs near base by the corolla tube. Achene compressed, to 3.5mm long in flower, yellowish, mostly glabrous but with some pubescence at apex. Pappus of short eros scales. Disk flowers - Disk to -1cm broad. Corolla 5mm long, contracted at base for about 1mm, dark purple at apex, 5-lobed. LObes acute, triangular, spreading to recurved, +/-.8mm long. Stamens 5, adnate at apex of contracted portion of corolla tube. Filaments white, glabrous, compressed, 2.1mm long, with an obvious midvein. Anthers purple, to 2.3mm long, connate around the style, partially exserted. Style glabrous, pale yellow, slightly swollen at base, bifurcate, purple in apical portion (stigmas). Achenes compressed, greenish-white in flower, glabrous, 3mm long. Pappus of short eros scales. Receptacle flat. Chaff thin, glabrous, golden at the apex, 7-8mm long, .3mm broad.
Flowering - July - September. Habitat - Prairies, rocky open woods, bluffs, thickets, roadsides, railroads. Origin - Native to U.S. Other info. - This tall species of Coreopsis is found throughout Missouri except in a few counties in the "bootheel." The plant is tolerant of dry conditions and would make a good garden specimen. This plant is easy to ID in the field because of its glabrous, glaucous stems and its trifoliolate leaves. Occasionally a small plant will have leaves which are undivided.
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Dummer. ゛☀
2017年07月30日
Family - Asteraceae Stems - To 1.5m tall, from fibrous roots, carinate, glabrous, herbaceous, typically single from base, branching above. Leaves - Opposite. Lowest leaves petiolate, bipinnately divided. Ultimate divisions linear-oblanceolate to linear-oblong, entire, typically glabrous. Petioles and petiolules with some pubescence. Petioles to 8cm long. Upper leaves larger than lower. Ultimate divisions linear, glabrous with antrorse strigillose margins.
Inflorescence - Single flower head terminating stem branches. Peduncles to +6cm long. Involucre - In two series. Outer series of phyllaries to 3mm long, 1.5mm broad. Phyllaries green, lanceolate, glabrous. Inner series of phyllaries to 8mm long, +/-3mm broad. Phyllaries dark brown-purple, glabrous, united at base for 1-2mm, abruptly bent and spreading near apex, acute.
Ray flowers - Flowers typically 8 per head. Ligule to 1.5cm long, 1cm broad, slightly tapering to base, shallowly lobed at apex with one larger central lobe and two smaller lateral lobes, yellow or yellow with a dark purple base. Achene flattened, 1.4mm long in flower, truncate at apex, white, broader than disk achenes. Pappus absent or a minute crown. Disk flowers - Disk to 8mm broad, subglobose. Corolla tube to 3mm long, yellow-orange, deep purple at apex, 4-lobed, fertile. Style bifurcate, orange at apex, exserted. Achene 1.8mm long in flower, flattened, glabrous. Pappus absent or a minute crown.
Flowering - June - September. Habitat - Glades, open rocky and sandy ground, roadsides, railroads. Origin - Native to U.S. Other info. - The plant pictured above is C. tinctoria f. atropurpurea (Hook.) Fern., which has the ray ligules with a deep purplish base. The ligules can also be almost completely purple (as seen above). C. tinctoria f. tinctoria has ligules which are solid yellow. This species is widely cultivated and easy to grow. It has spread to most of the eastern U.S., not part of its original range. The plant is widely planted and very common in Missouri.
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Dummer. ゛☀
2017年07月30日
Family - Asteraceae Stems - To 1m tall, erect, with fibrous roots, multiple from base, branching in apical 1/2, hirsute, slightly scabrous, herbaceous. Hairs of the stem multicellular.
Leaves - Opposite, petiolate. Petioles to +/-1.5cm long, hirsute, minutely winged with decurrent leaf tissue. Blades ovate-lanceolate, entire, acuminate, to +/-8cm long, +/-3.5cm broad, pubescent abaxially (slightly scabrous), mostly glabrous adaxially, lighter green abaxially, often with two small lateral lobes at base. Inflorescence - Single flower heads terminating long peduncles. Peduncles to +15cm long, pubescent near base, glabrous near apex. Involucre - Phyllaries in two series. Outer phyllaries 8, green, subulate to lanceolate, to 7mm long, 1.7mm broad, spreading, glabrous, with scarious margins, with some short cilia at apex. Inner phyllaries yellow-green, erect and spreading in apical 1/2, lanceolate, 9mm long, +/-3mm broad, glabrous.
Ray flowers - Typically 8 per flower head, sterile. Ligules to 1.5cm long, 8-9mm broad, glabrous, distinctly notched or lobed at apex. Achenes (in flower) 1.3mm long, .9mm broad, compressed, white. Pappus absent. Disk flowers - Disk 6-8mm broad. Flowers yellow, 5-lobed. Corolla tube 4mm long, glabrous. Achenes with two small scales as pappus, compressed, glabrous, winged, tuberculate, 2.5-3mm long in fruit, black when mature, greenish-white in flower. Receptacle convex. Chaff 6mm long, compressed, whitish at base, becoming thin and yellow at apex.
Flowering - May - October. Habitat - Rocky open woods, base of wooded bluffs, low ground, gravel stream beds, alluvial thickets, railroads. Origin - Native to U.S. Other info. - This species can be found mainly in the lower 1/2 of Missouri. A small population also occurs in the northeast corner of the state. This plant can be easy to ID because of its pubescent stems and leaves, distinctive leaf shape, and deeply notched ray ligules. The plant does well in cultivation and grows well from seed.
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Dummer. ゛☀
2017年07月30日
Family - Asteraceae Stems - From a small crown and rhizomes, single or multiple from the base, herbaceous, erect, to -1m tall, simple to branching, green with light green vertical striations, somewhat carinate or not, somewhat angled in the upper 1/2, mostly glabrous or with a few hairs at the nodes, +/-3mm in diameter.
Leaves - Opposite, sessile, decussate, 3-5-lobed in the apical 1/2, shaped like a turkey foot, deep green above and below, sometimes with light green around the midvein abaxially, to +/-6cm long, antrorse strigillose above and below and on margins. Lobes 3-6mm broad, entire, typically with a minute whitish tip (use a lens to see). The central lobe typically longer than the lateral lobes. All the main veins of the leaf coming from the very base of the leaf. Leaves reduced to bracts in the inflorescence.
Inflorescence - Single pedunculate flower head terminating each stem. Some flowers axillary from the upper leaf axils. Peduncle typically naked, glabrous, slightly expanded just below the involucre. Involucre - Biseriate. Outer series of +/-12 phyllaries. Phyllaries subulate-linear, entire, ascending, 6-7mm long, 2mm broad, rounded at the apex, with sparse strigose-ciliate margins. Inner phyllaries yellow-brown, bent outward in the apical 1/3, glabrous, 4-5mm broad, 7-9mm long, oblanceolate to spatulate, rounded to subacute at apex, with brown vertical striations, green at base. Ray flowers - Sterile, 8-10 per flower head. Ligule yellow, 2-3cm long, +/-1cm broad, mostly glabrous or with a few hairs on the veins below, with 2 impressed veins near the base, 3-toothed at the apex, elliptic-oblong. Corolla tube greenish, +/-3mm long, with sparse multicellular trichomes. The trichomes pilosulous. Achenes compressed, brown at maturity, glabrous, with scarious margins, truncate apically and basally, to 5mm long. Pappus none. Disk flowers - Disk -1cm broad. Corolla tube 5mm long, yellow, 5-lobed, constricted at the base and opaque, expanded in the apical 1/2 and translucent yellow, with a few multicellular trichomes at the apex of the constriction. Apical 1/2 with 5 brown vertical nerves. Lobes erect, acute, -1mm long. Stamens 5, adnate at the base of the expanded portion of the corolla tube. Filaments yellow, glabrous, +2mm long, with a visible midvein, slightly compressed. Anthers brown-purple, 2-2.2mm long, partially exserted, connate around the style. Style bifurcate, exserted beyond the anthers, yellow in the apical 1/2, white basally, glabrous. Stigmas short, yellow, broadly lanceolate, +/-1mm long. Achenes as in the ray flowers but often thinner. Pappus none. Receptacle flat. Chaff linear, translucent, 7-9mm long, with brown vertical striations, slightly expanded at the apex, .3mm broad or less.
Flowering - May - July. Habitat - Prairies, glades, fallow fields, rocky open woods, thickets, roadsides. Origin - Native to U.S. Other info. - This striking species is a common roadside plant in the Ozarks in early summer. It is usually on of the first members of its genus to bloom. The plant is easy to ID in the field because of its parted, opposite leaves. It would make an easy garden subject and should be cultivated more.
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Dummer. ゛☀
2017年07月30日
Family - Asteraceae Stems - Multiple from base, herbaceous, branching, erect or reclining, with vertical striations, glabrous to villous, fistulose.
Leaves - Opposite, sessile, linear oblong to oblanceolate, often with two or four pinnate lobes, to +10cm long, +2cm broad, acute, entire, scabrous (hairs with swollen bases) or glabrous, with a single prominent midrib. Margins with minute antrorse prickles. The leaves mostly in the basal 1/2 of the plant. Inflorescence - Single flower head terminating a long naked peduncle. Peduncle to -30cm long. Involucre. - Involucre of two series (biseriate). Outer phyllaries 8, 5mm long, 2mm broad, with scarious margins, glabrous, green, spreading or slightly erect, expanding in fruit. Inner phyllaries to 1.2cm long, green at base, yellow and translucent at apex, bent at midpoint and the apices spreading, glabrous, acute, to 5mm broad.
Ray flowers - Ligule yellow, +/-2.5cm long, 1.2cm broad, glabrous, 4-lobed near apex. Flowers sterile. Achenes 4mm long in flower, 1mm broad, flattened, greenish. Pappus of two marginal scale-like awns. Disk flowers - Disk 9mm broad in flower. Flowers yellow, 5-lobed, fertile. Corolla tube to 3mm long, glabrous. Achenes flattened, 1.2mm long in flower, with 2 small awns. Achenes brown, 3mm long, to 1.9mm broad in fruit. Awns deciduous in fruit. Receptacle convex. Chaff to 9mm long, white and flat at the base, filiform and yellow at the apex, well exceeding the disk flowers.
Flowering - April - July. Habitat - Rocky prairies, glades, bluffs, sandy open ground, roadsides, railroads. Origin - Native to U.S. Other info. - This species can be found mainly in the southern half of Missouri. The plant is easy to ID in the field because of its undivided, opposite leaves and big yellow flower heads. This plant does well in cultivation and makes a good garden specimen. Steyermark breaks the species up into 2 varieties. Variety lanceolata has stems and leaves that are mostly glabrous. Variety villosa Michx. has leaves and stems which are pubescent. Both varieties are equally distributed in the plants habitat.
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Dummer. ゛☀
2017年07月29日
Family - Asteraceae Stems - To +2m tall, erect, branching, multiple from base, herbaceous, rooting at lower nodes, often purplish or mottled, 4-angled, (the angles rounded), fluted, glabrous to sparse antrorse pubescent, from fibrous roots.
Leaves - Opposite, petiolate. Petioles to +/-3cm long, with an adaxial groove (the groove sparsely pubescent). Blades pinnately divided. Ultimate divisions serrate, lanceolate to linear-lanceolate, the terminal division being the largest, to 10cm long, 1.5cm broad, deep dull green and very sparse antrorse pubescent above, light green and antrorse pubescent below. Leaves reduced upward.
Inflorescence - Loose cymose arrangement of flower heads. Involucre - Flat, to 2.3cm broad. Bracts biseriate. Outer phyllaries +/-15, with fimbriate margins, linear, acute, often twisted, to +1cm long, 1.2-1.4mm broad, pubescent externally, often with revolute margins. Inner phyllaries yellowish, with dark purple apices, ovate-lanceolate, entire, glabrous, 6-7mm long, 2-3mm broad, erect in fruit.
Ray flowers - +/-8 per flower head, sterile. Ligule to 3cm long, +/-1cm broad, yellow, glabrous, the apex blunt to very shallowly 2-3 notched. Corolla tube antrorse pubescent. Achene reduced, compressed, with barbed margins, 1mm long, rectangular. Disk flowers - Corolla yellowish, 5-lobed. Corolla tube constricted in lower 1/2, funnelform in upper 1/2, glabrous, to 4mm long. Corolla lobes acute, spreading to erect, .7mm long. Stamens 5, adnate at apex of corolla tube constriction. Filaments to 1.2mm long, glabrous, pale yellow. Anthers connate around style, purplish-brown, exserted, to 2.1mm long. Style typically not exserted beyond anthers, bifurcate, yellow in apical portion (stigma). Achenes (in flower) white, compressed, 3-sided, antrorse pubescent, with barbed margins, becoming obovate in fruit, dark greenish, +/-4mm long, 3mm broad. Pappus of two rounded shallow awns. Chaff compressed, to 7mm long, 1mm broad, translucent but yellowish in upper 1/2 and with a purple tip, glabrous, subacute. Flowering - August to October. Habitat - Wet prairies and meadows, swampy woods, ditches, waste ground, roadsides, railroads. Origin - Native to U.S. Other info. - This species is common throughout Missouri. It can be seen growing along many roads and highways. The ligules in the first picture above appear to be two-toned but are really solid yellow when seen in nature. This is a weedy species which is locally abundant but is also very striking and visited by many flying insects. Steyermark lists two varieties for the plant based on awn barb direction. Variety polylepis has antrorse awn barbs. Variety retrorsa Sherff has, you guessed it, retrorse awn barbs.
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Dummer. ゛☀
2017年07月29日
Family - Asteraceae Stems - From fibrous roots, stout, erect, herbaceous, to +/-2m tall, branching, 4-angled (the angles rounded), fluted, essentially glabrous but with a few antrorse hairs in upper portions, typically purple.
Leaves - Opposite, petiolate, trifoliolate. Petiole to +/-5cm long, with an adaxial groove (groove curly pubescent within), the rest of the petiole glabrous or with very sparse short pubescence. Lateral leaflets with petiolules to 5-6mm long, basally oblique. Terminal leaflet with petiolule to 2.5cm long, larger than lateral leaflets, sometimes unequally divided. All leaflets serrate, acuminate, puberulent above, pubescent below, to +10cm long, 4cm broad, light green below, deep dull green above.
Inflorescence - Loose cymose arrangement of flower heads. Involucre - Outer series of bracts spreading, 5-8 in number, oblong-lanceolate to oblong-oblanceolate or spatulate, ciliate-margined, occasionally with a few coarse serrate teeth, to 3cm long, +/-6mm broad, antrorse pubescent below and above on midrib. Inner series to 1cm long, 8mm in diameter in flower. Inner bracts yellowish-green, subulate, erect, appressed, glabrous, to 7mm long, 3mm broad.
Ray flowers - Absent. Disk flowers - Corolla 3.1mm long, whitish at base, yellowish in apical 1/2, glabrous, contracted in basal 1/2, 5-lobed. Lobes acute, yellow, spreading to erect, .4mm long, papillate internally. Stamens 5, adnate at apex of contracted portion of corolla tube. Filaments glabrous, whitish, 1.3mm long. Anthers connate around style, only partially exserted, 1mm long, purplish. Style exserted, bifurcate, yellowish at apex (stigmas). Achenes antrorsely barbed, compressed, to 5mm long. Awns 2, to +3mm long, retrorsely barbed. Chaff thin, transparent, yellowish-brown at apex, to 8-9mm long, 1.1mm broad, slightly folded, glabrous. Flowering - August - October. Habitat - Wet ground, ditches, pond margins, streambanks, waste ground, roadsides, railroads. Origin - Native to U.S. Other info. - This species of Bidens can be found throughout Missouri. The plant described above is B. frondosa var. frondosa f. frondosa which has the retrorse barbs on its awns. Form anomala (Porter) Fern. has barbs which are antrorse on the awns. This latter form has not been found in Missouri. Because this species grows close to water, it is eaten by muskrats. The achenes are eaten by ducks.
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Dummer. ゛☀
2017年07月29日
Family - Asteraceae Stems - From fibrous roots, rooting at lower nodes, erect, 4-angled (the angles rounded), often purplish, glabrous or with a few antrorse hairs near the apex of the stem, delicate, much-branched, herbaceous, to 1.5m tall, single from the base. Leaves - Opposite, petiolate, trifoliolate. Petioles to -5cm long, with narrow adaxial groove (the groove with sparse pubescence). Leaflets serrate, acuminate, glabrous or with a few antrorse hairs on the veins below, to 10cm long, 3cm broad, lanceolate. Serrations of margin often with minute whitish apices. Lateral leaflets with petiolules 1-3mm long. Terminal leaflet with a petiolule to +/-2cm long. Blade tissue of leaflets often obliquely terminating at the base.
Inflorescence - Loose cymose arrangement of flower heads terminating the branches. Involucre - Outer phyllaries 1-5(6), to +3.5cm long, 5-6mm broad, entire, oblanceolate to spatulate or lanceolate, glabrous or occasionally with antrorse strigose margins, spreading. Inner bracts glabrous, green, erect, appressed, 5-6mm long, 2mm broad, blunt to subacute, often minutely fimbriate at apex (use a lens to see).
Ray flowers - Absent. Disk flowers - Disk to 5-6mm broad in flower. Corolla +/-2mm long, whitish below, yellow at apex, 5-lobed, glabrous. Lobes erect to spreading, .2mm long, acute, yellow. Stamens 5, partially exserted, adnate in basal 1/3 of the corolla tube. Anthers purplish, connate around the style, .7mm long. Style exserted, bifurcate, yellow at the stigmas. Achenes to 5mm long, becoming greenish-black, 2-awned, compressed, antrorsely pubescent. Awns to 1.5mm long. Chaff translucent-green, orangish at apex, blunt, glabrous, to 6mm long, 1mm broad, linear.
Flowering - August - October. Habitat - Wet ground. Origin - Native to U.S. Other info. - This species can be found mostly in the Ozark section of Missouri but also along rivers and swamps of a few more southern and central counties. The plant is fairly easy to ID in the field because of its small flower heads. Because it freely roots at the nodes, the plant can be found growing off the ground in dead stumps and from the bark of living trees. The genus name "Bidens" means "two teeth" and is so given because of the two awns of the fruit.
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