Log In New Account Sitemap
  • Home
  • Specimen Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
    • Exsiccati Search
  • Images
    • Image Browser
    • Search Images
  • Flora Projects
    • Arizona
    • New Mexico
    • Colorado Plateau
    • Plant Atlas of Arizona (PAPAZ)
    • Sonoran Desert
    • Teaching Checklists
  • Agency Floras
    • NPS - Intermountain
    • USFWS - Region 2
    • BLM Flora
    • Coronado NF
  • Dynamic Floras
    • Dynamic Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Additional Websites
    • New Mexico Flores
    • Plant Atlas Project of Arizona (PAPAZ)
    • Southwest Colorado Wildflowers
    • Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness
    • Consortium of Midwest Herbaria
    • Consortium of Southern Rocky Mountain Herbaria
    • Intermountain Region Herbaria Network (IRHN)
    • Mid-Atlantic Herbaria
    • North American Network of Small Herbaria (NANSH)
    • Northern Great Plains Herbaria
    • Red de Herbarios del Noroeste de México (northern Mexico)
    • SERNEC - Southeastern USA
    • Texas Oklahoma Regional Consortium of Herbaria (TORCH)
  • Resources
    • Help
    • Webinars
    • Joining a Symbiota Portal
Cirsium brevistylum Cronquist  
Go To Encyclopedia of Life...
Family: Asteraceae
Clustered Thistle
Cirsium brevistylum image
Zoya Akulova  
  • FNA
  • Web Links
David J. Keil in Flora of North America (vol. 19, 20 and 21)
Annuals or biennials, 20-350 cm; taprooted. Stems usually 1, erect, simple or branched in distal 1/2, loosely to densely villous or viscid-pilose with jointed trichomes, often arachnoid below heads; branches 0-many, ascending. Leaves: blades oblong to elliptic or oblanceolate, 15-35 × 2-10 cm, flat to ± undulate, coarsely dentate to shallowly pinnatifid, lobes broadly triangular, spinulose to spiny-dentate or shallowly lobed, main spines slender. 3-7 mm, abaxial faces thinly gray-tomentose, villous along major veins, sometimes glabrescent, adaxial sparsely villous or viscid-pilose along midveins with jointed trichomes; basal often absent at flowering, spiny winged-petiolate; principal cauline well distributed, gradually reduced, proximal winged-petiolate, mid and distal sessile, bases clasping or short-decurrent; distal moderately to strongly reduced, often spinier than the proximal. Heads 1-many, ± erect. usually crowded in subcapitate to tight corymbiform arrays, closely subtended by clustered ± leafy bracts. Peduncles 0-1(-30) cm. Involucres hemispheric to campanulate, 2.5-3.5 cm, 2.5-4 cm diam., loosely to densely arachnoid, phyllaries connected by long septate or non-septate trichomes. Phyllaries radiating in 5-10 series, subequal, green, linear-acicular, outermost margins sometimes spiny-fringed, otherwise all entire or minutely serrulate, abaxial faces without glutinous ridge; outer and mid bases short-appressed, apices stiffly radiating to ascending, long, very narrow, spines straight, slender, 3-5 m; apices of inner straight, flat. Corollas white to pink or purple, very slender, 20-25 mm, tubes 10-17 mm, throats 4-5 mm, lobes filiform with knoblike tips, 3-5 mm; style tips 2-4 mm, included or exserted (only 1-2 mm beyond corolla lobes. . Cypselae brown, 3-4.5 mm, apical collars stramineous, 0.2 mm; pappi 10-22 mm. 2n = 34. Flowering spring-summer (Apr-Sep). Coastal meadows, marshes, swamps, riparian woodlands, moist sites in coastal scrub, chaparral, coastal woodlands, mixed conifer-hardwood forests, or coniferous forests; 0-1000 m; B.C.; Calif., Idaho, Mont., Oreg., Wash. Cirsium brevistylum occurs in the coast ranges and adjacent coastal slope from southwestern British Columbia to southern California. In the Pacific Northwest its range extends inland to the northern Rocky Mountains of southern British Columbia, Idaho, and northwestern Montana, and the Blue and Wallowa ranges of eastern Oregon. It is absent from the central and southern Cascade Range.

In older literature the name Cirsium edule was widely misapplied to this species. A. Cronquist (1953) pointed out that the type of C. edule has corolla and style features quite different from those of the plants that had been called by that name and established the name C. brevistylum, based upon the notably short styles of this species. Hybrids of C. brevistylum with C. edule have been named C. ×vancouveriense R. J. Moore & C. Frankton.

  • Encyclopedia of Life
  • W3Tropicos
  • USDA PLANTS Database
  • Flora of North America
  • International Plant Names Index
  • Google Search Engine
  • Google Images
  • BOLD Systems - Barcode of Life Data Systems
  • Global Biotic Interactions (GloBI)
  • NCBI - National Center for Biotechnology Information
Cirsium brevistylum
Open Interactive Map
Cirsium brevistylum image
Charles Webber  
Cirsium brevistylum image
Charles Webber  
Cirsium brevistylum image
Zoya Akulova  
Cirsium brevistylum image
Charles Webber  
Cirsium brevistylum image
Keil, David  
Cirsium brevistylum image
Zoya Akulova  
Cirsium brevistylum image
Beatrice F. Howitt  
Cirsium brevistylum image
Charles Webber  
Cirsium brevistylum image
Zoya Akulova  
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Walter Fertig  
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Cirsium brevistylum image
Click to Display
100 Initial Images
- - - - -
View All Images
The National Science Foundation
Developments of SEINet, Symbiota, and associated specimen databases have been supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)