Solidago arguta

Solidago arguta, commonly called Atlantic goldenrod,[3] cut-leaf goldenrod,[4] and sharp-leaved goldenrod,[4] is a species of flowering plant native to eastern and central North America. It grows along the Gulf and Atlantic states of the United States from Texas to Maine, inland as far as Ontario, Illinois, and Kansas.[5] It is primarily found in areas of woodland openings, such as outcrops or clearings.

Solidago arguta
1913 illustration[1]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Solidago
Species:
S. arguta
Binomial name
Solidago arguta
Synonyms[2]
  • Aster arguta (Aiton) Kuntze
  • Solidago boottii Hook.
  • Solidago dispersa Small
  • Solidago harrisii E.S.Steele
  • Solidago neurolepis Fernald
  • Solidago vaseyi A.Heller
  • Solidago yadkinensis (Porter) Small

Description

Solidago arguta is a tall fall-flowering perennial. Flowers are small, yellow, and in heads. It can be distinguished from similar goldenrods by its broad basal leaves that are lightly pubescent to hairless, which decrease in size towards the apex of the stem.[4]

Taxonomy

Four varieties are recognized by most authors. They are:[2][4][6]

  • Solidago arguta var. arguta - With hairless achenes; native to the Appalachian Mountains and the Northeast
  • Solidago arguta var. boottii (Hook.) E.J.Palmer & Steyerm. - With pubescent achenes and leaves; native to the Ozark Mountains and the Gulf Coastal Plain
  • Solidago arguta var. caroliniana (Gray) G.H.Morton - With pubescent achenes and hairless leaves; native across the Southeastern United States
  • Solidago arguta var. harrisii Cronquist - With thick-textured, truncate basal leaves; native to the Central Appalachians

Due to its morphological distinctiveness and narrow geographic range, some modern taxonomists treat variety harrisii as a full species (named Solidago harrisii).[6][7]

gollark: Due to C's inferior type system, it does not generally autodetect this kind of issue, but basically, local variables are stored in temporary storage and you cannot safely pass pointers to them outside of where they came from.
gollark: (make sure to free it in the callback, or you WILL memory leaks)
gollark: The solution is to use global variables and invoke the wrath of Zeus, or I guess to just malloc some memory to store a copy of `reqCounts` in.
gollark: If so, it'll be on the stack, not the heap, so it'll be overwritten when another function does things.
gollark: Is it a local variable?

References

  1. USDA-NRCS PLANTS Database / Britton, N.L., and A. Brown. 1913. Illustrated flora of the northern states and Canada. Vol. 3: 393.
  2. The Plant List, Solidago arguta Aiton
  3. "Solidago arguta". Natural Resources Conservation Service PLANTS Database. USDA. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
  4. Flora of North America
  5. Biota of North America Program 2014 county distribution map
  6. Alan Weakley (2015). "Flora of the Southern and Mid-Atlantic States".
  7. Asteraceae Lab at the University of Waterloo, by John Semple


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