LATE GOLDENROD
File Size: 117 KB
 
Solidago gigantea  Aiton
Douglas County, Kansas
Perennial
Height: 2-6+ feet
Family: Asteraceae - Sunflower Family
Flowering Period:   August, September,October
Also Called: Giant goldenrod, smooth goldenrod.
Stems: Erect, 1-20, or loosely clustered, usually reddish, glabrous, waxy, lightly-hairy among heads in inflorescence.
Leaves: Alternate, sessile or weakly stalked; basal leaves absent at flowering; middle stem leaves numerous, thin, lanceolate, 2.4 to 6.4 inches long, .4 to 1.8 inches wide, tapering at both ends, conspicuously 3-veined, underside glabrous or sometimes slightly pubescent on veins; margins nearly entire to sharply toothed; tip tapering to point.
Inflorescences: Panicle-like, dense, often leafy, triangular in outline; branches curved downward at tips; heads directed to 1-side.
Flowers: Involucre 1/10 to 1/6 inch tall; bracts unequal, pointed, tips greenish; ray florets 8-18, yellow; disk florets 7-17, yellow.
Fruits: Achene, cylindrical, ribbed, sparsely short-hairy, tipped with numerous white, hair-like bristles, enclosing small seed.
Habitat: Low wet areas, moist woods and prairie depressions, edges of ponds and streams, damp thickets, and roadsides.
Distribution: Throughout Kansas.
Uses: Native Americans used the blossoms to treat fevers and used the stems to make baskets.
Comments: The leaves have high rubber content.

Late goldenrod
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Douglas County, Kansas
Late goldenrod
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Douglas County, Kansas
Late goldenrod leaves
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Douglas County, Kansas
Late goldenrod leaf
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Douglas County, Kansas
Late goldenrod stem
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Douglas County, Kansas
Late goldenrod stem
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Douglas County, Kansas
Late goldenrod inflorescence
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Douglas County, Kansas