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Artemisia cana

Species of plant From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Artemisia cana
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Artemisia cana is a species of sagebrush native to western and central North America; it is a member of the sunflower family.[3][4] It is known by many common names, including silver sagebrush, sticky sagebrush, silver wormwood, hoary sagebrush, and dwarf sagebrush.[3][5][6]

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Gray foliage.

Quick facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...
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Distribution and habitat

Artemisia cana, Silver sagebrush, is an aromatic shrub found in grasslands, floodplains and montane forests.[7] Artemisia cana is native to the Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba and the American states of Alaska, Oregon, California, Idaho, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico, North and South Dakota, Nebraska and Minnesota.[6][4][8] It grows in rocky, open grasslands and floodplains.[9]

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Description

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The type specimen of Artemisia cana was described informally by its collector, Meriwether Lewis (collected on October 1, 1804, in the vicinity of Centinel Creek in South Dakota, during the epic Lewis and Clark Expedition), in the following passage from Original Journals of Lewis and Clark, edited by Thwaites in 1904 :

On these hills many aromatic herbs are seen; resembling in taste, smel [ [ [sic]] ] and appearance, the sage, hysop, wormwood, southernwood and two other herbs which are strangers to me the one resembling the camphor in taste and smell, rising to the height of 2 or 3 feet; the other about the same size, has a long narrow, smo[o]th, soft leaf of an agreeable smel [ sic ] and flavor; of this last the A[n]telope is very fond; they feed on it, and perfume the hair of their foreheads and necks with it by rubing [ sic ] against it.[10]

Artemisia cana generally reaches 50–150 centimetres (20–59 in) in height, with examples west of the Continental Divide typically being shorter than those east of the divide.[3]

The leaves have a narrow blade shape, are evergreen, grey-green in colour, and have a distinct aroma.[3]

Subspecies

Subspecies include:[4][2][3]

  • Artemisia cana subsp. bolanderiBolander's silver sagebrush, silver sagebrush — mountain meadows and streambanks in eastern California and Oregon, and northwestern Nevada.[11][12][13]
  • Artemisia cana subsp. canaplains silver sagebrush, Coaltown sagebrush, silver sagebrush — most of species range.[14]
  • Artemisia cana subsp. viscidulamountain silver sagebrush, Coaltown sagebrush, silver sagebrush — sagebrush lowlands in Great Basin, Colorado Plateau, Snake River Plain.[15]
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References

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