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Echinacea paradoxa

Species of flowering plant From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Echinacea paradoxa
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Echinacea paradoxa, the yellow coneflower,[2] Bush's purple coneflower,[3] or Ozark coneflower,[4] is a North American species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae. It is native to southern Missouri, Arkansas, and south-central Oklahoma. It is listed as threatened in Arkansas.[3][5]

Quick facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...
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Description

Echinacea paradoxa is a perennial herb up to 90 cm (3 ft) tall with multiple, slightly hairy stems arising from the rootstock. Most of the leaves are basal leaves with smooth margins. They are alternate, becoming shorter higher up on the stem, and they are completely absent on the upper two-thirds of the stem. The basal leaves are 8–45 cm (3–18 in) long and narrowly elliptic to lanceolate, and the stem leaves are 4–35 cm (2–14 in) long and linear to narrowly elliptic or narrowly lanceolate.[6]

One plant can produce several flower heads, each with white, pink, or yellow ray florets surrounding a central head of numerous disk florets.[5][7][8][9] Each flower head is about 5–6 cm (2–2.5 in) across. The central head is dome-shaped and dark reddish brown to nearly black. It is prickly to the touch.[4] It blooms in May and June.[6]

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Taxonomy

Varieties[1][5]
  • Echinacea paradoxa var. paradoxa - yellow rays - Arkansas and Missouri - yellow coneflower or Ozark coneflower[4]
  • Echinacea paradoxa var.neglecta - pink or white rays Oklahoma and Texas - Bush's purple coneflower[4]

Echinacea paradoxa var. paradoxa has a baseline chromosome number of x = 11, like most Echinacea plants.[10]

Distribution and habitat

Echinacea paradoxa var. paradoxa, or yellow coneflower, is endemic to the Ozarks of Missouri and Arkansas. It is listed as imperiled in Arkansas.[11]

Echinacea paradoxa var. neglecta, or Bush's purple coneflower, is currently only known to exist in the wild in the Arbuckle Mountains region of southeastern Oklahoma. One isolated population was reported from Montgomery County in eastern Texas. It is listed as critically imperiled in Oklahoma and presumed extirpated in Texas.[12]

Habitats include partially sunny to sunny savannas, glades, limestone outcroppings, barrens, open hillsides, and bald knobs.

References

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