Cutleaf coneflower (Rudbeckia laciniata) flowers. Top right: a mature cutleaf coneflower with all of the disc florets opened. Bottom right: close-up of the disc/cone of a cutleaf coneflower showing individual disc florets. The bottom third of the cone is covered with fertilized disc florets with seeds maturing below the visible corollas. The middle of the cone is covered by a band of flowers with visible, yellow, bifurcated styles. The top third of the cone is covered by disc florets with protruding black stamens with yellow anthers. Top left: The back side of a cutleaf coneflower showing the bracts the cup the underside of the flower. Bottom left: a cutleaf coneflower infected by the developing larva of a gall midge. The galls are uncommon in most years.
Cutleaf coneflower (aka, green-headed coneflower) is an imposing tallgrass prairie plant, 3-8 feet tall, that can form dense stands. The composite flowerheads are 2-3″ across. Eight to fifteen light green, oblong bracts lie beneath a central globe-like, light green to yellow cone surrounded by 6-12 yellow, drooping, sterile ray florets. The disk florets have yellow to yellowish green corollas and a protruding bifurcated stigma; the stamens are yellow, fused to the base of the corolla, with deep purple anthers attached around the styles side-by-side. Immature disk florets are green (thus the alternative common name); mature disk florets produce a spiky appearance. The disk florets mature from the bottom of the cone to the top, lending a pincushion-like appearance to the cone.
Cutleaf coneflower (Rudbeckia laciniata) stems and leaves. Top right: a stem leaf from mid-stem with the leaf divided into seven lobes. Note that the petiole is “winged” (the leaf blade continues as a narrow strip of tissue). Upper left: a stem leaf from the lower regions of the stem. Although the leaf appears to be trifoliate compound, the embayments between the lower lobes and the stem are simply deeper; the leaf blade is continuous from the tip of the leaf to the stem. Lower left: a stem leaf intermediate in morphology between the two leaves in the upper images. Lower right: a stem leaf viewed from in front of its apical tip.
Cutleaf coneflower (aka, green-headed coneflower) is an imposing tallgrass prairie plant, 3-8 feet tall, that can form dense stands. The stems are light green, hairless, and round in section. Basal leaves are initially present but usually wither before flowering. The stem leaves are alternate, up to 12″ long and wide with a dark green upper surface and a pale green underside; the leaves droop on their narrowly winged petioles. The lower and middle leaves are divided into 3-7 deep lobes with pointed tips; the leaf margins may be either smooth or toothed. Some lower leaves appear pinnate, with a pair of more basal leaflets and an apical/terminal leaflet that is three-lobed. The uppermost leaves (on the flower stalks) are unlobed, lance-shaped or oval.
A stand of cutleaf coneflower (Rudbeckia laciniata) north of Bobolink Meadow.
Cutleaf coneflower (aka, green-headed coneflower) is an imposing tallgrass prairie plant, 3-8 feet tall, that can form dense stands. The stems are light green, hairless, and round in section. Basal leaves are initially present but usually wither before flowering. The stem leaves are alternate, up to 12″ long and wide with a dark green upper surface and a pale green underside; the leaves droop on their narrowly winged petioles. The lower and middle leaves are divided into 3-7 deep lobes with pointed tips; the leaf margins may be either smooth or toothed. Some lower leaves appear pinnate, with a pair of more basal leaflets and an apical/terminal leaflet that is three-lobed. The uppermost leaves (on the flower stalks) are unlobed, lance-shaped or oval. The composite flowerheads are 2-3″ across. Eight to fifteen light green, oblong bracts lie beneath a central globe-like, light green to yellow cone surrounded by 6-12 yellow, drooping, sterile ray florets. The disk florets have yellow to yellowish green corollas and a protruding bifurcated stigma; the stamens are yellow, fused to the base of the corolla, with deep purple anthers attached around the styles side-by-side. Immature disk florets are green (thus the alternative common name); mature disk florets produce a spikey appearance. The disk florets mature from the bottom of the cone to the top, lending a pincushion-like appearance to the cone. The cone of cutleaf coneflower is similar in shape to that of sneezeweed (Helenium autumnale), but sneezeweed has notched ray florets, unlobed leaves, and is usually less than a few feet tall. In some years, many cutleaf coneflowers are associated with a large, smooth gall, especially near the flowerheads (which are often grotesquely malformed). The gall is produced by Asphondylia rudbeckiaeconspicua (all one word), a species of gall midge (Insecta). The parasitism is not new — it was first described by Carl Robert Osten-Sacken in 1878, an émigré who was the first person in the U.S. to hold the title of “entomologist” (at Harvard).


