Overview
Interesting Facts
Common Names
Common Names in English:
Drummond's Thistle, Elk Thistle, Foliose Thistle, Leafy Thistle, Meadow Thistle
Description
Family Compositae
The largest family of flowering plants , the Compositae (Asteraceae), comprising about 1,100 genera and more than 20,000 species and characterized by many small flowers arranged in a head looking like a single flower and subtended by an involucre of bracts. A head may consist of both ray flowers and disk flowers, as in the sunflower, of disk flowers only, as in the burdock, or of ray flowers only, as in the dandelion.
Genus Cirsium
Annuals
, biennials, or perennials
, 5-400 cm, spiny
. Stems (1-several) erect
, branched or simple
, sometimes narrowly spiny-winged. Leaves basal and cauline; finely bristly-dentate to coarsely dentate
or 1-3 times pinnately lobed
, teeth and lobes
bristly-tipped, faces
green and glabrous
or densely gray-canescent, usually eglandular
. Heads discoid
, borne singly, terminal
and in distal axils, or in racemiform
, spiciform
, subcapitate
, paniculiform
, or corymbiform
arrays. ( Peduncles with ± reduced leaflike bracts.) Involucres cylindric
to ovoid
or spheric, (1-6 ×) 1-8 cm. Phyllaries many in 5-20 series, subequal
or weakly to strongly, outer and middle
with bases
appressed
and apices spreading
to erect, usually spine-tipped, innermost usually with erect, flat, often twisted, entire or dentate, usually spineless apices (distal portion of phyllary
midveins
in many species with elongate
, glutinous
resin gland
, usually milky
in fresh material
but dark brown to black when dry) . Receptacles flat to convex
, epaleate, covered with tawny
to white bristles
or setiform
scales
. Florets 25-200+; corollas white to pink, red, yellow or purple, ± bilateral
, tubes
long, slender, distally bent, throats
short, abruptly expanded. cylindric, lobes linear
; (filaments
distinct
) anther
bases sharply short-tailed, apical appendages
linear-oblong; style tips
elongate (as measured in descriptions
including the slightly swollen nodes, long cylindric fused portions of style branches and very short distinct portions) . Cypselae ovoid, ± compressed
, with apical rims, smooth
, not ribbed
, glabrous, basal attachment scars
slightly angled
; pappi persistent
or falling in rings
, in 3-5 series of many flattened, plumose
bristles or plumose, setiform scales (longer
bristles shorter than corollas except in C. foliosum and C.
arvense) . x = 17.
Species ca. 200: North America, Eurasia
, n Africa.
Only three genera in Cynareae are represented by native species
in the New World, and of these Cirsium is by far the most widely distributed and diverse
. Native species of Cirsium range
from sea level to alpine
and from boreal regions of Canada to the tropics of Central America. Members
of the genus occur in a myriad of habitats
including swamps
, meadows, forests
, prairies, sand dunes, and deserts.
Preliminary molecular phylogenetic
studies by D. G. Kelch and B
. G. Baldwin (2003) indicated that this diversity
is the product of a rapid evolutionary diversification based upon a single initial
introduction from Eurasia. Relationships
among the North American species are apparently complex
, and molecular studies have only begun to provide an outline of phylogeny for these plants
. Although there has been a remarkable evolutionary and morphologic diversification in North American Cirsium, it has not been accompanied by very much divergence
in the base sequences of genes commonly used to elucidate phylogenetic relationships. This suggests either that the diversification has been very rapid or that genetic markers
in North American Cirsium mutate more slowly than in most other lineages
.
Chromosomal diversification has accompanied the morphologic radiation
of North American Cirsium. Many New World Cirsium species share the chromosomal base number
of x = 17 that also predominates in most Eurasian species. Among the North American thistles, however, is a mostly descending
dysploid
series with chromosome numbers ranging from n = 18 to n = 10. Very few instances of polyploidy are known among New World Cirsium.
Cirsium species of remarkably different morphologies often are able to hybridize
. Although in some hybrid combinations
fertility
is reduced, in others the formation of complex hybrid swarms
indicates a lack of breeding barriers
and the potential for emergence
of novel character combinations. In the absence of adequate sampling
and field
observations, hybrids may go unrecognized, treated as distinct taxa or as variants
of non-hybrid taxa, or left occupying the indeterminate folders of herbaria. In other cases hybridization has been invoked without much evidence as an explanation for Cirsium variants encountered in herbaria or in the field. Hybrid combinations are listed herein when evidence is convincing. Additional hybrids are likely to be found where the ranges of Cirsium species overlap. I have seen no documentation
of hybridization between native
American Cirsium species and introduced
Eurasian taxa.
Much of the geographic range currently occupied by New World Cirsium species was greatly affected by the events of the Quaternary
. Large areas were glaciated and other areas were vastly different during glacial episodes. The ancestors
of thistles that currently occupy the high mountains of western North America were undoubtedly displaced elevationally and/or latitudinally during the recurrent glacial and interglacial
episodes of the Pleistocene
. Taxa that are currently isolated may have been in contact during glacial episodes with the opportunity for hybridization and genetic interchange. Episodes of prehistoric hybridization may have led to some of the character combinations found in modern American thistles, particularly in the western half of the continent. Current
isolation
and localized selection or genetic drift apparently have promoted differentiation
of populations separated on mountaintop islands.
One of the most challenging aspects
for a taxonomist studying New World Cirsium is the presence of species complexes that are apparently evolutionary works in progress. Some of the thistles, especially in the mountainous western part of North America, are frustratingly polymorphic
with much overlapping variability and intergradation of characters. Early taxonomists, basing their work on a limited sampling of the morphologic diversity, named many of the forms as species, and the literature is rife with species names
. The infilling that results from more collectors
visiting more localities within the ranges of these complexes has blurred the boundaries between many of the proposed species and often added forms that do not "fit" the characteristics of named species. As I faced the challenges
of preparing this treatment, I recognized that maintaining some of the named entities as species would, for consistency, require a further proliferation of species names. I have chosen to go the other way. Instead of proposing yet more ill-defined microspecies, I have chosen to recognize that the groups in question are rapidly evolving, only partially differentiated assemblages
of races that have not reached the level of stability
that is usually associated with the concept of species. Certainly much of such variation
within the genus deserves a level of taxonomic
recognition, or at least should be mentioned, but for those assemblages I think it much more prudent to recognize varieties -- entities that may be expected to freely intergrade
-- rather than species.
Many problems remain to be worked out in North American Cirsium. Further investigation will undoubtedly reveal the need for refinement or major revision
within some of the species groups. Studies that focus
on variation within and among populations and on the biological basis for the variations are much needed. The field is open and the challenges are many.
Preparation of a workable key
to Cirsium species has been frustratingly difficult. Extensive and overlapping ranges of variation in morphologic characteristics often require that a species be keyed two or more times. The resulting key is longer and more complex than I would prefer, and I have no doubt ignored, overlooked, or been completely unaware of variants that will not key out. Caveat clavitor!
The reputation of Cirsium has suffered greatly as a result of the introduction to North America of a few invasive weedy species from Eurasia. Cirsium vulgare (bull
thistle) and C. arvense (Canada thistle€”a misnomer) have long been despised as noxious weeds
. In recent years C. palustre (European swamp thistle) has joined their ranks
. Additionally, weedy Eurasian species of Carduus, Onopordum, Centaurea, etc.
, add to the public perception that all thistles are bad. Most North American native Cirsium are not at all weedy, and many are strikingly attractive plants. All are spiny plants that command respect, but they deserve a better reputation as one of North America€™s evolutionary success stories.
Native Cirsium species have come under threat
from biocontrol programs instituted to suppress populations of weedy introduced thistles. Beginning in 1968 the seedhead weevil Rhinocyllus conicus has been widely introduced in various areas of the United
States and Canada, primarily to control weedy species of Carduus. S. M.
Louda et al.
(1997) reported that R. conicus has crossed over to several native species of Cirsium. They observed that the number of viable cypselae in infested heads
was greatly reduced; e.g.
, heads of C. canescens infested by R. conicus produced
14.1 percent of the number of viable cypselae as in uninfested heads. Not all taxa are impacted as much as C. canescens, particularly those with later flowering phenology (Louda 1998) . R. W. Pemberton (2000) reported that 22 Cirsium taxa in North America are known hosts of R. conicus. I suspect that the number is higher. During my field work
I have observed that the heads of many Cirsium species are heavily parasitized, although I have not determined which of these are infested by R. conicus and which by native seedhead parasites. The long-term impacts
of R. conicus and other biocontrol agents on native thistles, particularly rare taxa, remain to be determined.[1]
Physical Description
Species Cirsium foliosum
Biennials or monocarpic
perennials, 25-70+ cm; taprooted.
Stems usually 1, erect
, stout, ± fleshy
, simple
, very
leafy, densely villous
or tomentose
with septate
trichomes
. Leaves:
blades
linear-oblong to oblanceolate
(elliptic
), 5-20(-25) ×
1-4(-7) cm, subentire
to dentate
or pinnatifid
, lobes
lance-oblong
to triangular, spinulose
to spiny-dentate or shallowly lobed
, main
spines slender, 2-5(-10) mm, abaxial
faces
often thinly gray- or
white-tomentose with felted arachnoid
trichomes, ± villous
along major veins with septate trichomes, adaxial
green, glabrous
to thinly arachnoid, often ± villous with septate trichomes;
basal usually present at flowering, spiny
winged-petiolate or sessile;
principal cauline well distributed, proximally winged-petiolate,
distally sessile, not or only slightly reduced; distal often narrower
than proximal
. Heads few-many, erect, sessile or subsessile
,
crowded in dense, woolly
, leafy-bracted, subcapitate
arrays, closely
subtended and overtopped by crowded leafy bracts. Peduncles
0-1 cm. Involucres broadly ovoid
, 2-2.5 × 1.5-2 cm,
green, glabrous to densely villous with septate trichomes on margins
.
Phyllaries in 4-6 series, imbricate, lanceolate or ovate
(outer)
to linear-lanceolate (inner), bases
appressed
, margins of outer entire,
abaxial faces without glutinous
ridge
, apices appressed to ascending
,
spines straight, slender, 2-3 mm; apices of inner erect, straight.
Corollas white to pale
pink, 21-25 mm, tubes
12-14 mm, throats
(very slender, scarcely larger than tubes) 6-7 mm, lobes 3-4 mm;
style tips
2.5-3 mm, short exserted. Cypselae light brown,
4-5.5 mm, apical collars
yellow, narrow; pappi 23-29 mm, exceeding
corollas. 2n = 34. [source]
Cirsium foliosum occurs in the northern Rockies from Wyoming
to the Yukon and eastward to the Slave River
area in the Northwest
Territories and northeastern Alberta. Reports for Alaska are unconfirmed
(R. Lipkin, Alaska Natural Heritage Program, pers. comm.
). The name
Cirsium foliosum has been misapplied to a wide range
of plants
across the western United
States that now are treated as one or another
variety of the polymorphic
C.
scariosum. The only documented
occurrences of C. foliosum in the lower 48 states are
in the mountains of northern Wyoming. Somewhat similar plants from
other mountain areas of the western United States are treated as
C. scariosum var. scariosum. During Pleistocene
glaciations
the ancestors
of C. foliosum undoubtedly occupied a more southerly
distribution and very likely came into direct contact with ancestral
populations of C. scariosum. The observed similarities between
C. foliosum and C. scariosum var. scariosum
may be a relic
of hybridization in that ancient contact zone. On
the other hand, the corolla features of C. foliosum suggest
that this is a self-pollinating species, perhaps derived from an
ancestral population similar to the modern C. scariosum var.
scariosum. [source]
Habit: Forb/herb • Growth Form: Single Crown • Shape and Orientation: Erect
Flowers: Bloom Period: May, June, July, August. • Flower Color: White • Flower Conspicuous: Yes
Seeds: Seed per Pound: 150000 • Seed Spread Rate: Moderate • Seedling Vigor: Medium • Fruit/Seed Abundance: Medium • Fruit/Seed Color: Brown • Fruit/Seed Conspicuous: No • Cold Stratification Required: No
Foliage: Foliage Color: Green • Foliage Porosity Summer: Moderate • Foliage Porosity Winter: Porous • Foliage Texture: Coarse • Fall Conspicuous: No • Leaf Retention: No
Size/Age/Growth
Active Growth Period: Summer • Growth Rate: Rapid • After Harvest Regrowth Rate: Slow • Mature Height (feet): 4.0 • Vegetative Spread Rate: None • Lifespan: Lifespan
Habitat
Moist soil, grasslands, meadows, edges and openings in boreal forest , subalpine forests and alpine slopes ; 150-2600 m.
Biology
Reproduction
Duration: Perennial • Coppice Potential: No • Progagated by Bulbs: No • Propagated by Bare Root: No • Propagated by Container: No • Propagated by Corms: No • Propagated by Cuttings: No • Propagated by Seed: Yes • Propagated by Sod: No • Propagated by Sprigs: No • Propagated by Tubers: No • Fruit/Seed Period Begin: Summer • Fruit/Seed Period End: Summer • Fruit/Seed Persistence: No
Growth
Soil: Adapted to Medium Textured: Adapted to Medium Textured Soils • Adapted to Coarse Textured Soils: No • Anaerobic Tolerance: Medium • Salinity Tolerance: None • CaCO3 Tolerance: Low • Minimum pH: 6.0 • Maximum pH: 7.2 • Fertility Requirement: Medium
Sunlight: Shade Tolerance: Intermediate
Moisture: Drought Tolerance: None • Minimum Precipitation: 14 • Maximum Precipitation: 50 • Moisture Use: High
Temperature: Minimum Temperature (F): -38 • Minimum Frost Free Days: 80
Taxonomy
- Domain:
Eukaryota
(
)
- Whittaker & Margulis,1978
- eukaryotes
- Kingdom:
Plantae
(
)
- Haeckel, 1866
- Plants
- Subkingdom:
Viridaeplantae
(
)
- Cavalier-Smith, 1981
- Phylum:
Tracheophyta
(
)
- Sinnott, 1935 ex Cavalier-Smith, 1998
- Vascular Plants
- Subphylum:
Euphyllophytina
(
)
- Class:
Spermatopsida
(
)
- Brongniart, 1843
- Subclass:
Asteridae
(
)
- Takhtajan, 1967
- Superorder:
Campanulanae
(
)
- Takhtajan Ex Reveal, 1992
- Order:
Asterales
(
)
- Lindley, 1833
- Family:
Compositae
(
)
- Giseke, 1792, nom. cons., nom. alt.
- Subfamily:
Carduoideae
(
)
- Subfamily:
Carduoideae
(
- Family:
Compositae
(
- Order:
Asterales
(
- Superorder:
Campanulanae
(
- Subclass:
Asteridae
(
- Class:
Spermatopsida
(
- Subphylum:
Euphyllophytina
(
- Phylum:
Tracheophyta
(
- Subkingdom:
Viridaeplantae
(
- Kingdom:
Plantae
(
Synonyms
Carduus foliosus Hook. • Carduus foliosus Hooker • Cirsium nebraskense var. discissum Lunell • Cirsium oblanceolatum (Rydb.) K. Schum.
Notes
Name
Status: Accepted Name
.
Comment: Data Providers: CONABIO, New Zealand Plant Name Database,
Govaerts World Compositae Checklist
A-G, IPNI, Tropicos. GCC LSID:
urn
:lsid:compositae.org:names:C54BF5BC-57D0-4C85-ABCD-64700650DEF7
Last scrutiny: 17-Nov-09
Similar Species
Members of the genus Cirsium
ZipcodeZoo has pages for 146 species, subspecies, varieties, forms, and cultivars in this genus. Here are just 100 of them:
C. altissimum (Roadside Thistle) · C. amblylepis (Mt. Tamalpais Thistle) · C. andersonii (Anderson's Thistle) · C. andrewsii (Franciscan Thistle) · C. araneans (Jeweled Thistle) · C. arcuum (Powderpuff Thistle) · C. aridum (Cedar Rim Thistle) · C. arizonicum (Arizona Thistle) · C. arizonicum var. arizonicum (Arizona Thistle) · C. arizonicum var. nidulum (Arizona Thistle) · C. arvense (Californian Thistle) · C. barnebyi (Barneby's Thistle) · C. brevifolium (Palouse Thistle) · C. brevistylum (Clustered Thistle) · C. calcareum (Cainville Thistle) · C. californicum var. californicum (California Thistle) · C. callilepis var. callilepis (Fringebract Thistle) · C. canalense (Canal Thistle) · C. canescens (Platte Thistle) · C. canovirens (Gray Green Thistle) · C. canum (Queen Anne's Thistle) · C. carolinianum (Carolina Thistle) · C. chellyense (Queen Thistle) · C. chuskaense (Monarch Thistle) · C. ciliolatum (Ashland Thistle) · C. clavatum (Fish Lake Thistle) · C. clokeyi (Charleston Mountain Thistle) · C. congdonii (Rosette Thistle) · C. crassicaule (Slough Thistle) · C. crassum (Thistle) · C. cymosum (Peregrine Thistle) · C. diacanthus (Ivory Thistle) · C. discolor (Field Thistle) · C. douglasii (Douglas Thistle) · C. douglasii var. breweri (Douglas' Thistle) · C. douglasii var. breweri (Petr.) Keil & C.Turner (Douglas' Thistle) · C. douglasii var. douglasii (Douglas' Thistle) · C. douglasii var. douglasii DC. (Douglas' Thistle) · C. drummondii (Drummond Thistle) · C. eatonii (Eaton Thistle) · C. eatonii var. eatonii (Eaton's Thistle) · C. edule (Edible Thistle) · C. engelmannii (Engelmann Thistle) · C. eriophorum (Woolly Thistle) · C. erosum (Glory Thistle) · C. flodmanii (Flodman Thistle) · C. foliosum (Drummond's Thistle) · C. fontinale (Fountain Thistle) · C. fontinale (Greene) Jeps. var. campylon (H.K.Sharsmith) Pilz ex Keil & C.Turner (Fountain Thistle) · C. fontinale var. campylon (Mt Hamilton Thistle) · C. fontinale var. fontinale (Fountain Thistle) · C. fontinale var. obispoense (Chorro Creek Bog Thistle) · C. gilense (Gila Thistle) · C. grahamii (Graham's Thistle) · C. griseum (Gray Thistle) · C. hallii (Hall's Thistle) · C. helenioides (Melancholy Thistle) · C. heterophyllum (Curly Head) · C. hillii (Hill's Thistle) · C. hookerianum (Hooker Thistle) · C. horridulum (Bristly Thistle) · C. horridulum Michx. var. vittatum (Small) R.W.Long (Yellow Thistle) · C. horridulum var. horridulum (Yellow Thistle) · C. horridulum var. vittatum (Yellow Thistle) · C. humboldtense (Humboldt County Thistle) · C. hydrophilum (Suisun Thistle) · C. hydrophilum var. hydrophilum (Suisun Thistle) · C. hydrophilum var. vaseyi (Vasey's Thistle) · C. inornatum (Cloudcroft Thistle) · C. iowense (Iowa Thistle) · C. japonicum (Japanese Thistle) · C. japonicum 'Pink Beauty' (Japanese Thistle) · C. kamtschaticum (Kamchatka Thistle) · C. laterifolium (Porcupine Thistle) · C. lecontei (Le Conte's Thistle) · C. loncholepis (La Graciosa Thistle) · C. longistylum (Long-Styled Thistle) · C. mendocinum (Mendocino Thistle) · C. mexicanum (Mexican Thistle) · C. modestum (Lacy Thistle) · C. mohavense (Mohave Thistle) · C. murdockii (Murdock's Thistle) · C. muticum (Swamp Thistle) · C. navajoense (Navajo Thistle) · C. neomexicanum (Lavender Thistle) · C. neomexicanum var. neomexicanum (New Mexico Thistle) · C. neomexicanum var. utahense (Utah Thistle) · C. nuttallii (Nutalls Thistle) · C. occidentale (Cobweb Thistle) · C. occidentale (Nutt.) Jeps. var. californicum (Gray) Keil and C.Turner (California Thistle) · C. occidentale var. californicum (Cobwebby Thistle) · C. occidentale var. compactum (Compact Cobwebby Thistle) · C. occidentale var. occidentale (Cobwebby Thistle) · C. occidentale var. venustum (Cobwebby Thistle) · C. ochrocentrum (Yellow-Spine Thistle) · C. olivescens (Summer Thistle) · C. oreophilum (Crow Thistle) · C. osterhoutii (Osterhout's Thistle) · C. ownbeyi (Ownbey's Thistle) · C. pallidum (Pale Thistle)
More Info
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Further Reading
- A manual of the flora of northern Idaho /Carl Epling and Joe Ewan. 1 1941 1941. url p. 22, p. 857.
- A study of the vegetation of southeastern Washington and adjacent Idaho. .. Lincoln, Neb.[1917] url p. 58, p. 59.
- Annual report. United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories. 1st-12th, 1867-1878. Washington, Govt. Print. Off., 1867-83. url p. 487, p. 487.
- Aquatic and wetland plants of southwestern United States, by Donovan S. Correll and Helen B. Correll. [Washington]Environmental Protection Agency; [For sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt. Print. Off.]1972. url p. 1697.
- Atlas of the rare vascular plants of Ontario / Ottawa: Botany Division, National Museum of Natural Sciences = Division de la botanique, Musée national des sciences naturelles, 1982-1987. url .
- Britton, N. L. (ed.). North American flora. [New York]New York Botanical Garden. url p. 753, p. 845.
- Budd's flora of the Canadian Prairie Provinces / [Ottawa]: Research Branch, Agriculture Canada, 1987. url p. 745.
- Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. 48 1921 New York: Torrey Botanical Club, 1870-1996 url p. 320, p. 553.
- Catalogue of Canadian plants. .. Montreal [etc.]1883-1902. url p. 271.
- Contributions from the New York Botanical Garden. New York: The Garden, 1899- url , p. 553.
- Contributions from the United States National Herbarium 25 1925 Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1890- url p. 618, p. 619.
- Flora of southeastern Washington and adjacent Idaho / by Charles V. Piper and R. Kent Beattie. Lancaster, Pa.: New Era, 1914. url p. 260.
- Flora of the Rocky Mountains and adjacent plains, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, Montana, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and neighboring parts of Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, and British Columbia / by P.A. Rydberg. New York: The author, 1922. url p. 1009.
- Flora of the southeastern Washington and adjacent Idaho, Lancaster, Pa., Press of the New Era Printing Company, 1914. url .
- Flora of the state of Washington. By Charles V. Piper. Washington, Govt. Print. Off., 1906. url p. 610.
- Great Basin naturalist memoirs. 1987 [Provo, Utah]Brigham Young University, 1976-1992. url p. 170, p. 174.
- National list of scientific plant names. [Washington, D.C.]: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service, 1982- url p. 102.
- Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Boston: Metcalf and Co., 1846-1958 url p. 56.
- Rydberg, P. A. Flora of the Rocky Mountains and adjacent plains, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, Montana, Saskatchewan, Alberta, and neighboring parts of Nebraska, South Dakota, and British Columbia /by P. A. Rydberg... 1917 New York: The author, 1917. url p. 1009.
- Sensitive plant species survey, Ashland District, Custer National Forest, Powder River and Rosebud Counties, Montana / by Bonnie L. Heidel and Hollis Marriott; for Custer National Forest. Helena, MT: Montana Natural Heritage Program, [1996] url .
- Studies on Rocky Mountain flora. New York, New York Botanical Garden, 1899-1913. url p. 553.
- Syllogeus. Ottawa, National Museum of Natural Sciences, 1972-1995. url p. 30, p. 32, p. 34, p. 41, p. 54, p. 57, p. 57, p. 89, p. 95.
- The Canadian field-naturalist. 41 1927 Ottawa, Ottawa Field-Naturalists' Club. url p. 19, p. 323, p. 325, p. 343, p. 344, p. 430, p. 486, p. 624, p. 630.
- The Great Basin naturalist. 42 1982 Provo, Utah: M.L. Bean Life Science Museum, Brigham Young University, 1939-1999. url p. 201, p. 21, p. 253, p. 87.
- University studies of the University of Nebraska. Lincoln. url p. 59.
- Hsi, Y.-T. 1960. Taxonomy, Distribution and Relationships of the Species of Cirsium Belonging to the Series Undulata. Ph.D. dissertation. University of Minnesota.
- Kelch, D. G. and B. G. Baldwin. 2003. Phylogeny and ecological radiation of New World thistles (Cirsium, Cardueae-Compositae) based on ITS and ETS rDNA sequence data. Molec. Ecol. 12: 141-151.
- Moore, R. J. and C. Frankton. 1969. Cytotaxonomy of some Cirsium species of the eastern United States, with a key to eastern species. Canad. J. Bot. 47: 1257-1275.
- Petrak, F. 1917. Die nordamerikanischen Arten der Gattung Cirsium. Beih. Bot. Centralbl. 35(2): 223-567.
Notes
Contributors
- Brands, S.J. (comp.) 1989-present. The Taxonomicon. Universal Taxonomic Services, Zwaag, The Netherlands. Accessed January 10, 2012.
Data Sources
Accessed through GBIF Data Portal February 16, 2008:
- School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, The Deaver Herbarium, Northern Arizona University
- USDA PLANTS, USDA PLANTS Database
Identifiers
- Biodiversity Heritage Library NamebankID: 2657820
- Catalogue of Life Accepted Name Code: Ast-240
- Global Biodiversity Information Facility Taxonkey: 13748974
- Globally Unique Identifier: urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:195361-1
- Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS) Taxonomic Serial Number (TSN): 36369
- Natural Heritage Network Species Identifier: PDAST2E150
- U.S.D.A. Plant Symbol: CIFO
- Zipcode Zoo Species Identifier: 30761
Footnotes
- David J. Keil "Cirsium". in Flora of North America Vol. 19, 20 and 21 Page 57, 66, 82, 83, 93, 95, 96, 97, 100, 102, 1. Oxford University Press. Online at EFloras.org. [back]
