Rosinweed (Silphium integrifolium) flowers. Bottom right: a rosinweed flowerhead with a honeybee for scale. Top right: two rosinweed flowerheads. The disc florets of the flowerhead on the left are nearly spent; the disc florets of the flower on the right are still in bloom. There is a developing bud in the lower right corner; the ray florets are just beginning to enlarge. Left: close-up of half of the central disk and the base of some ray florets. The bifurcated, functional styles of the ray florets (or the styles’ shadows) are indicated by black arrows. Several of the disk florets have produced non-functional styles (white arrows). The brown structures emerging from the tubular disk florets are the (functional) stamens.
Rosinweed produces a panicle of sunflower-like blooms from the top of the stem and the tops of side stems (if any). Individual flowerheads are 2-3″ across; they consist of 12-35 yellow, pistillate (female) ray florets and 70-200+ functionally male disc florets. The green bracts beneath the flowerheads are teardrop-shaped, partially overlapping in two or three layers, and sometimes covered with glandular hairs. The petals of the ray florets have two prominent longitudinal grooves and a tiny apical notch. Only the ray florets can produce seeds — a split style protrudes from a short tube at the base of the ray floret. The central disk is initially green but becomes yellow as the disk florets open; they are yellow, tubular, with five triangular lobes at their free end, with a column of brown stamens with the tips of very long, (non-functional) styles protruding from the tubular corolla. The fruit is a flat seed that develops from the ray florets. (The curious arrangement where only the ray florets can produce seeds while the disk florets are functionally male is true throughout the genus Silphium. The opposite is true in the true sunflowers, genus Helianthus.)
Rosinweed (Silphium integrifolium) stems and leaves. (1) A single rosinweed stem leaf from near the base of the stem, with my left hand for scale. The upper image (1a) is of the top surface of the leaf; the lower image (1b) is of the underside of the same leaf. (2) A single rosinweed stem leaf from near the tip of the stem, again with my left hand for scale. The upper image (2a) is of the top surface of the leaf; the lower image (2b) is of the underside of the same leaf. (3) A stem leaf in place on the smooth, reddish-green stem. Note the long, white hairs projecting from the mid-vein of the leaf. (4) A series of rosinweed leaves on the stem. Leaves occur in opposite pairs, each of which partially clasps the stem. Each pair of leaves is rotated by 90° relative to the pairs above and below.
Rosinweed is a native prairie species, the shorter relative of prairie dock and compass plant; it has a single stem up to five feet tall. The stem is round or weakly angled in section, light green or red, robust, and usually covered with short, stiff hairs; it is unbranched except near the inflorescence. The basal leaves usually wither by the time flowerheads are produced. The stem leaves are opposite, up to 5″ long and half as wide, sharply pointed with a rounded base that partially clasps the stem; they are relatively thick and leathery, and covered with short, stiff hairs on both surfaces, so they have a sandpaper-like feel. The leaf margins may have tiny teeth or be smooth.
Several rosinweed (Silphium integrifolium) plants at one of the natural areas at 63rd St. Beach. An enlarged view of a rosinweed flowers is present in the insert.
Rosinweed is a native prairie species, the shorter relative of prairie dock and compass plant; it has a single stem up to five feet tall. The stem is round or weakly angled in section, light green or red, robust, and usually covered with short, stiff hairs; it is unbranched except near the inflorescence. The basal leaves usually wither by the time flowerheads are produced. The stem leaves are opposite, up to 5″ long and half as wide, sharply pointed with a rounded base that partially clasps the stem; they are relatively thick and leathery, and covered with short, stiff hairs on both surfaces, so they have a sandpaper-like feel. The leaf margins may have tiny teeth or be smooth. A panicle of sunflower-like blooms arises from the top of the stem and the tops of side stems (if any). Individual flowerheads are 2-3″ across; they consist of 12-35 yellow, pistillate (female) ray florets and 70-200+ functionally male disc florets. The green bracts beneath the flowerheads are teardrop-shaped, partially overlapping in two or three layers, and sometimes covered with glandular hairs. The petals of the ray florets have two prominent longitudinal grooves and a tiny apical notch. Only the ray florets can produce seeds — a split style protrudes from a short tube at the base of the ray floret. The central disk is initially green but becomes yellow as the disk florets open; they are yellow, tubular, with five triangular lobes at their free end, with a column of brown stamens with the tips of very long, (non-functional) styles protruding from the tubular corolla. The fruit is a flat seed that develops from the ray florets. (The curious arrangement where only the ray florets can produce seeds while the disk florets are functionally male is true throughout the genus Silphium. The opposite is true in the true sunflowers, genus Helianthus.)
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