Grindelia subalpina

Grindelia subalpina, the subalpine gumweed,[2] is a North American species of flowering plants in the Astereae tribe of the daisy family.

Grindelia subalpina
Scientific classification
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G. subalpina
Binomial name
Grindelia subalpina
Greene 1898
Synonyms[1]
  • Grindelia eldorae Daniels
  • Grindelia erecta A.Nelson
  • Grindelia platylepis Greene

Distribution

The plant is native to the Rocky Mountains, in Wyoming, Colorado, and New Mexico.[3]

It grows in open rocky or gravelly sites in the Rocky Mountains.

Description

Grindelia subalpina is a biennial, or perennial herb up to 60 cm (2 feet) tall.

The plant usually produces numerous flower heads in open branching arrays. Each head has 18-27 ray flowers, surrounding a large number of tiny disc flowers.[4]

Varieties

  • Grindelia subalpina var. erecta — endemic to Colorado and Wyoming.[5]
  • Grindelia subalpina var. subalpina [6]
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gollark: Oh, those are already using optical phased arrays to track photon count in an arbitrary number of discrete frequency buckets.
gollark: I mean, a Fourier transform would allow bees to incurse into the frequency domain instead of the time domain.
gollark: Alternatively, something something Fourier transform of inbound light signal?

References


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