Centaurea diluta

Aiton

Hort. Kew. 3: 261. 1789.

Common names: North African knapweed
Introduced
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 19. Treatment on page 192. Mentioned on page 182, 183, 184, 193.

Annuals or perennials, to 200 cm. Stems simple proximally, openly branched distally, glabrous or thinly hairy. Leaves thinly pubescent, basal and proximal cauline petiolate, blades 10–15 cm, margins coarsely pinnately lobed; mid cauline sessile or short-petiolate, short-decurrent, blades obovate or narrowly oblong, 2–8 cm, entire to pinnately lobed; distal cauline oblong, entire to irregularly lobed. Heads radiant, in open cymiform arrays, pedunculate. Involucres ovoid, 8–15 mm diam. Principal phyllaries: bodies greenish, ovate, scarious-margined, appendages stramineous to brown, scarious, fringed with slender teeth, tipped by slender spines 1–5 mm. Innermost phyllaries unarmed with brown, expanded, lacerate appendages. Florets many; corollas pink-purple, those of sterile florets 25–30 mm, enlarged, raylike, those of fertile florets ± 20 mm. Cypselae tan, 3–3.5 mm; pappi many, white, unequal bristles 3–5 mm. 2n = 20.


Phenology: Flowering spring (Apr–Jun).
Habitat: Escaped from cultivation in disturbed sites
Elevation: 0–100 m

Distribution

V19-224-distribution-map.gif

Introduced; Calif., Mo., N.Y., sw Europe, n Africa.

Discussion

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Centaurea diluta"
David J. Keil +  and Jörg Ochsmann +
Asteraceae tribe Cynareae +
North African knapweed +
Calif. +, Mo. +, N.Y. +, sw Europe +  and n Africa. +
0–100 m +
Escaped from cultivation in disturbed sites +
Flowering spring (Apr–Jun). +
Introduced +
Acosta +, Cnicus +, Grossheimia +, Jacea +  and Leucacantha +
Centaurea diluta +
Centaurea +
species +