Solidago ptarmicoides

Solidago ptarmicoides
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Solidago
Species: S. ptarmicoides
Binomial name
Solidago ptarmicoides
(Torr. & A.Gray) B.Boivin
Synonyms[1][2][3]

Solidago ptarmicoides, the prairie goldenrod,[4] white flat-top goldenrod or upland white aster a North American species of goldenrod in the sunflower family. It is native to the central and eastern Canada (from New Brunswick to Manitoba) and parts of the United States (mostly Great Lakes region, the Northeast, the Ozarks, and the northern Great Plains, with isolated populations in Wyoming, Colorado, Oklahoma, and scattered locations in the Southeast.[1][5]

Solidago ptarmicoides is distinctive within the genus in having white to cream-colored flowers, in heads arranged in a flat-topped corymb rather than in an elongated raceme. One plant can sometimes produce as many as 50 small heads. Leaves are narrow and linear, often rather stiff. The species prefers dry, sandy soils and grassy meadows.[1]

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