D I S C O V E R    L I F E   
Bee Hunt! Odonata Lepidoptera 
  HomeAll Living ThingsIDnature guidesGlobal mapperAlbumsLabelsSearch
  AboutNewsEventsResearchEducationProjectsStudy sitesHelp


Chrysothamnus greenei (A. Gray) Greene
GREENES RABBITBRUSH
Life   Plantae   Dicotyledoneae   Asteraceae   Chrysothamnus


Click on map for details about points.

IDnature guide

Links
  • Associates
  • Missouri Botanical Garden

  • We parsed the following live from the Web into this page. Such content is managed by its original site and not cached on Discover Life. Please send feedback and corrections directly to the source. See original regarding copyrights and terms of use.
  • Flora of North America

Associates · map
FamilyScientific name @ source (records)
Apidae  Bombus bifarius @ BBSL__JPS (2); EMEC_JPS__JPS (2)

Bombus ternarius @ EMEC (1)
Cicadellidae  Psammotettix @ AMNH_PBI (2)
Cicadidae  Okanagana fumipennis @ CSUC_TCN (1)
Halictidae  Lasioglossum pruinosiforme @ BBSL (1)
Pseudococcidae  Dysmicoccus desertorum @ CSCA_TCN (2)

go to Discover Life's Facebook group

Following modified from Flora of North America
   Top | See original

Link to Flora of North America home
 
All Floras       Advanced Search
FNA Vol. 20 Page 187 ,188, 189 Login | eFloras Home | Help
FNA | Family List | FNA Vol. 20 | Asteraceae | Chrysothamnus

3. Chrysothamnus greenei (A. Gray) Greene, Erythea. 3: 94. 1895.

Greene's rabbitbrush

Bigelowia greenei A. Gray, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts 11: 75. 1876 (as Bigelovia)

Shrubs, 10—50 cm; with woody, moderately branched caudices, bark light gray, flaky to fibrous with age. Stems ascending, green becoming tan, glabrous, resinous. Leaves ascending to spreading; sessile; blades with faint midnerves, linear-filiform, 10—40 × 0.5—2 mm, flat or sulcate, sometimes twisted, margins glabrous or hirtellous, apices acute to apiculate, faces glabrous. Heads in densely cymiform arrays (4 cm wide), distal leaves reaching into but not overtopping arrays. Involucres cylindric to turbinate, 5—8 × 1.5—2.5 mm. Phyllaries 15—20 in 3—4 series, often in vertical ranks or spirals, mostly tan, ± greenish apically, midveins rarely visible, ovate or oblong to elliptic, 1.5—5 × 0.8—1.4 mm, unequal, mostly chartaceous, sometimes ± keeled, apices acuminate to cuspidate (cusp often recurved or falcate), faces glabrous or with a few long, crooked hairs proximally and near margins, resinous. Disc florets 4—5; corollas 3.7—5.5 mm, lobes 0.8—1.5 mm; style branches 2—2.4 mm (exserted beyond spreading corolla lobes), appendages 0.5—0.8 mm (shorter than stigmatic portion). Cypselae reddish brown, turbinate, 3—4 mm, faces densely hairy; pappi tan, 3.7—5 mm. 2 n = 18.

Flowering summer—fall. Sandy washes, dry open places in desert; 1300—2000 m; Ariz., Calif., Colo., Nev., N.Mex., Utah, Wyo.

Updated: 2024-04-24 15:09:18 gmt
Discover Life | Top
© Designed by The Polistes Corporation