Western sunflower (Helianthus occidentalis) plants aand flowerheads. Right: a flowerhead seen face-on (above) and from the rear (below). Two whole plants from the basal leaves below to the one orr two flowerheads above.
Western sunflower is a spindly plant that leads a double life. It is a perennial that first produces a very large (1.5 feet across) basal rosette of leaves; that basal rosette in turn produces a 2-4 foot tall, nearly leafless, stem. Clusters (a panicle) of 1-4+ flowerheads are present on pedicels less than 6″ long emerging from the stem or upper leaf axils. The flowerheads are 1.5-2.5″ across, with 8-20 ray florets, each bearing oblong yellow petals, and over 50 tubular, yellow disc florets with five lobes on their tips and five protruding brown anthers fused around a yellow style with a bifurcated stigma. Only the disc florets are fertile; the ray florets are sterile. (True throughout the genus Helianthus, although that seems more understandable – to me – than the situation in the genus Silphium, where the opposite is true.) Behind the flowerhead are 20-25 lance-shaped bracts (phyllaries) 5-7 mm long with pointed, green or straw-colored tips; there are often hairs round the margins of the phyllaries. The long, sparsely-leaved stem is diagnostic.
Western sunflower (Helianthus occidentalis) leaves. Right, lower: the basal rosettes of leaves around five stems of western sunflower. Right, upper: a single basal leaf showing an upper surface (top image) and the underside (lower image). Left: three examples of paired stem leaves on western sunflower at different magnifications.
Western sunflower is a spindly plant that leads a double life. It is a perennial that first produces a very large (1.5 feet across) basal rosette of leaves; that basal rosette in turn produces a 2-4 feet tall, nearly leafless, stem. The basal leaves are up to 7″ long and 3″ wide with rounded bases and blunt tips; they have 1-4″ long winged petioles and smooth or shallowly-toothed margins. The basal leaves have three main veins that diverge near the base of the leaves, one central and two lateral. The stem leaves are opposite near the base, alternate above, relatively narrower than the basal leaves, with shorter or absent petioles. All leaves are medium-green and very rough-textured. The stem is light green to greenish-red, usually with appressed hairs near the base, and typically bears only 1-2 pairs of leaves.
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