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Common Ironweed

Vernonia fasciculata

Description:

"This native perennial plant is 2-4' tall and unbranched. The central stem is round, hairless, and white, light green, or reddish purple. The alternate leaves are up to 5" long and ½" across. They are narrowly lanceolate, narrowly ovate, or linear. Their margins are serrated, while the upper and lower leaf surfaces are hairless. The lower leaf surface also has a prominent central vein, and black dots may be present. The leaves are sessile against the stem, or they have short petioles. A compound flower consists of 15-30 disk florets with a short cylinder of green bracts underneath. These bracts are appressed together like fish scales, and they are often slightly ciliate. The cylinder of bracts spans about 1/5" across. A disk floret is magenta, with 5 spreading lobes and a prominent divided style. The blooming period occurs from late summer to early fall, and lasts about a month." From: http://www.illinoiswildflowers.info/prai...

Habitat:

Fitchie Creek Forest Preserve, Kane County, Illinois, USA "Smooth Ironweed is fairly common in in the northern half of Illinois, but uncommon elsewhere in the state (see Distribution Map). Habitats include wet to moist black soil prairies, riverbottom prairies, marshes, sloughs along railroads, and edges of fields. Smooth Ironweed is found in wetland habitats to a greater extent than other species of Ironweeds." From: http://www.illinoiswildflowers.info/prai...

Notes:

First People's use of Ironweed: Candy (spring buds) dye, textile fibers, blood colagulant, dysentary, etc. From: http://herb.umd.umich.edu/herb/search.pl... "The flowers attract long-tongued bees, butterflies, and skippers primarily.... Among the long-tongued bees, are such visitors as bumblebees, Epeoline cuckoo bees, Miner bees, and large Leaf-Cutting bees. An oligolectic bee of Ironweeds is Melissodes vernoniae. The caterpillars of several moths feed on Ironweed, including Grammia parthenice (Parthenice Tiger Moth) and Perigea xanthioides (Red Groundling). Caterpillars that bore into the roots or stems of Ironweed include Papaipema cerussata (Ironweed Borer Moth), Carmenta bassiformis (Eupatorium Borer Moth), and some Polygrammodes spp. (Pyralid Moths). The bitter foliage of Ironweed deters consumption by mamamalian herbivores – it is known as an 'increaser' because it is one of the last plants to be eaten in overgrazed pastures." From: http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/367...

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2 Comments

David Schoenknecht
David Schoenknecht 10 years ago

I would agree! Thank you.

Eis4Xtreme
Eis4Xtreme 10 years ago

Looks like Ironweed

Illinois, USA

Spotted on Aug 23, 2013
Submitted on Aug 23, 2013

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