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Logfia filaginoides

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Species of flowering plant

Logfia filaginoides
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Logfia
Species: L. filaginoides
Binomial name
Logfia filaginoides
(Hook. & Arn.) Morefield
Synonyms

Filago californica (Nutt.) Holub

Logfia filaginoides (formerly Filago californica), also called herba impia or cottonrose, is a small annual plant in the family Asteraceae, found in the Southwestern United States.

Range and habitat

It grows throughout Southern California to Texas and Mexico. In the Mojave Desert, it grows in creosote bush scrub and Joshua tree woodlands.

Growth pattern

It is a hairy, erect, annual plant growing between 2" and 12" tall.

Leaves and stems

Its ⁠1/2⁠- to ⁠3/4⁠-inch-long leaves are attached to the stems without a little stem (petiole) at the bottom of the leaf (sessile).

Flowers

The ⁠1/8⁠-inch flower heads are surrounded by upper leaves of about the same length as the head. Each head has tiny reddish-purple disk flowers with the outer 8–10 being all female.

Fruits

Fruits are tiny, flattened achenes with a ring of pappus bristles, falling off as a unit.

References

  1. Mojave Desert Widlflowers, 2nd E. 2013, p. 314
  2. ^ Mojave Desert Widlflowers, 2nd ed. 2013, p 266
Taxon identifiers
Logfia filaginoides
Gnaphalium filaginoides
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