Townsendia condensata

Parry

Amer. Naturalist 8: 213. 1874.

Endemic
Synonyms: Townsendia condensata var. anomala (Heiser) Dorn
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 20. Treatment on page 196. Mentioned on page 194.

Perennials, 1–2 cm (usually ± pulvinate). Stems ± erect; internodes 0.1–1(–5+) mm, ± villous. Leaves basal and cauline, ± spatulate, 6–12(–15+) × 1–3+ mm, little, if at all, fleshy or notably thickened, faces of earliest leaves glabrous or glabrate, of later leaves ± villous to pilosulous. Heads ± sessile or at ends of leafy stems. Involucres ± hemispheric, (12–)16–30+ mm diam. Phyllaries 45–60+ in 5+ series, the longer narrowly lanceolate to subulate, 9–11 mm (l/w = 7–9), apices attenuate, abaxial faces ± pilose. Ray florets 21–65+; corollas white adaxially, laminae 8–12(–16+) mm, glandular-puberulent abaxially. Disc florets 100–150+; corollas 4–6+ mm. Cypselae 3–4.5 mm, faces hairy, hair tips entire; pappi readily falling, of 25–30 subulate to setiform scales 5–8 mm (± connate basally).


Phenology: Flowering Jun–Aug.
Habitat: Rocky slopes and talus
Elevation: 3000–3600 m

Distribution

V20-425-distribution-map.gif

Alta., Calif., Idaho, Mont., Utah, Wyo.

Discussion

The name Townsendia condensata has been attributed to Parry ex D. C. Eaton or to D. C. Eaton. In February 1874 (Amer. Naturalist 8: 106), Parry used T. condensata provisionally and provided a diagnosis. In April that year, he used it as an accepted name and “validated” it by reference to his earlier diagnosis.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.