Gaillardia pinnatifida

Gaillardia pinnatifida, the Hopi blanketflower or red dome blanketflower, is a perennial plant in the sunflower family (Asteraceae) found in northern Mexico (Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango, Sonora)[2] and in the south-central and southwestern United States (from southwestern Kansas south to central Texas and west as far as southern Nevada).[3]:78[4]

Gaillardia pinnatifida
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Gaillardia
Species:
G. pinnatifida
Binomial name
Gaillardia pinnatifida
Torr. 1827
Synonyms[1]

Description

Gaillardia pinnatifida is a perennial growing to 22 inches (56 cm) with hairy, wavy to lobed leaves up to 3 inches (7.6 cm) long, growing to halfway up the stem, with a solitary flower head on top having 7-12 yellow ray flowers and numerous densely packed orange-brown to purple disk flowers.[3]:78 The 3-tipped ray flowers may have tips so deep as to be considered lobed.[3]:78[5]

Gaillardia pinnatifida displays considerable variation in parts of its range, so much so that some authors have divided G. pinnatifida into varieties or distinct species. These taxa do intergrade with each other, so Flora of North America[5] and the Kew Garden Plant List[1] does not recognise any of these as separate taxa. Many populations in Arizona have unlobed leaves, unlike the deeply divided leaves farther to the east, and populations in Utah have yellow rather than brown or purple disc flowers, as well as gland-dots embedded in the leaves.[5]

Habitat

Gaillardia pinnatifida can be found in blackbrush scrub, mixed shrub-grasslands, and pinyon juniper woodland communities.[3]:78

gollark: Why do we *have* esobot? Does it do anything useful?
gollark: Okay, emergency contingencies continged.
gollark: !help
gollark: Oh no, those have been affected too.
gollark: !help

References

  1. The Plant List, Gaillardia pinnatifida Torr.
  2. Turner, B. L. 2013. The comps of Mexico. A systematic account of the family Asteraceae (chapter 11: tribe Helenieae). Phytologia Memoirs 16: 1–100
  3. Canyon Country Wildflowers, Damian Fagan, 2nd ed., 2012, Morris Bush Publishing, LLC. in cooperation with Canyonlands Natural History Association, ISBN 978-0-7627-7013-7
  4. Biota of North America Program 2014 county distribution map
  5. Flora of North America, Gaillardia pinnatifida Torrey, 1827.


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