Ratibida columnifera
upright prairie coneflower [Blooms: Jul]
More information
Upright prairie coneflower (aka, “Mexican hat”) is a 1-3 foot tall plant native to North America but an exotic in Illinois; it looks like English plantain (Plantago lanceolata) dressed up for a party. The stems are green and longitudinally ridged; they bear alternate, pinnatifid leaves with 5-11 elongate, narrow lobes. The upper stems produce flower stalks (peduncles) 2-12″ long, minutely grooved, and lacking leaves; the peduncles are very “wire-like.” The flowerheads are 1.5-3″ long cylinders composed of numerous brown or purplish disk florets that bloom from the bottom of the cylinder to the top; at the base of the cylinder are 4-12 ray florets with drooping, 1/2-1.5″ long, oblong petals with notched tips that are yellow, maroon, or yellow with basal maroon patches (the “party skirt”). This plant is unmistakable when in bloom. The imaged flower was photographed in Bobolink Meadow in July, 2010; I have not seen a specimen since.
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