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Hazardia stenolepis
Hazardia stenolepis
(H.M. Hall) Hoover
Family:
Asteraceae
Images
not available
Flora of North America
Resources
W. Dennis Clark in Flora of North America (vol. 20)
Shrubs,
30-100 cm.
Stems
sparsely short-hispidulous.
Leaves
sessile; blades obovate to oblong, 15-25 × 5-12 mm, coriaceous, bases subclasping, margins coarsely spinulose-dentate or -serrate (with 5-11 pairs of teeth), faces glabrous.
Heads
in densely spiciform arrays.
Involucres
cuneate to very narrowly turbinate, 10-17 × 3-6 mm.
Phyllaries
stiffly erect, almost completely stramineous, linear-lanceolate, faces glabrous except minutely gland-dotted at tips.
Ray florets
0.
Disc florets
4-8(-10); corollas 7-9 mm.
Cypselae
5-8 mm, glabrous.
2
n
= 10. Flowering Sep-Nov. Oak-pine woods; 150-2000 m; Calif.; Mexico (Baja California).
Hazardia stenolepis
is distinguished by its hairy stems, glabrous, relatively small leaves, discoid heads, and long, narrow involucres with stramineous, linear-lanceolate phyllaries.
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