Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness Asclepias tuberosa subsp. interior


Asclepias tuberosa ssp. interior Lambley Nursery

There are three subspecies of A. tuberosa identified by USDA Plants National Database, all native to the U.S. Subspecies rolfsii and tuberosa are native to the eastern states and subspecies interior is native to most of the U.S., including Colorado. Details for Asclepias tuberosa ssp. interior (butterfly milkweed).


Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness Asclepias tuberosa subsp. interior

Height: 1.00 to 2.50 feet Spread: 1.00 to 1.50 feet Bloom Time: June to August Bloom Description: Yellow/orange Sun: Full sun Water: Dry to medium Maintenance: Low Suggested Use: Naturalize, Rain Garden Flower: Showy Attracts: Butterflies Tolerate: Deer, Drought, Erosion, Dry Soil, Shallow-Rocky Soil Garden locations Culture


Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness Asclepias tuberosa subsp. interior

Specimens and Distribution This species has been reported in the following counties by the herbaria listed. An overview of the individual specimens are provided in the table that follows. Click on an accession number to view full details; click on column headers to sort.


Asclepias tuberosa subsp interior Woodson Stock Photo Alamy

Asclepias tuberosa Jump to a section: Classification | Citation | Source | Synonyms | Specimens Map | Photo Gallery | Browse Photos Distribution Map: Based on vouchered plant specimens from wild populations. Cultivated occurrences are not mapped. View county names by placing the cursor over the map. Biota of North America Program (BONAP) EDD MapS


Asclepias tuberosa ssp. interior Lambley Nursery

Subspecies Asclepias tuberosa subsp. interior - (Central United States, Ontario and Quebec [5]) Asclepias tuberosa subsp. rolfsii - Rolfs milkweed (Southeastern United States) Asclepias tuberosa subsp. tuberosa - (Eastern United States) Common names


Pflanzen von A Z / Botanischer Garten Frankfurt

Description Butterfly weed is a tuberous-rooted, native, herbaceous perennial in the Apocynaceae, or dogbane, family. Its Latin genus name, Asclepias, honors the Greek god of medicine, Asklepios. The species name, tuberosa, refers to the root.


CalPhotos Asclepias tuberosa ssp. interior; Orange Milkweed

Find help & information on Asclepias tuberosa subsp. interior from the RHS


Asclepias tuberosa ssp. interior Calflora

Asclepias tuberosa L. Sp. Pl. : 217 (1753) This name is reported by Apocynaceae as an accepted name in the genus Asclepias (family Apocynaceae ). The record derives from WCSP (in review) (data supplied on 2022-04-18) which reports it as an accepted name


ASCLEPIAS TUBEROSA ssp INTERIOR une plante vivace du Jardin du morvan, la pépinière de Thierry DENI

This name is a synonym of Asclepias tuberosa subsp. interior Woodson by Apocynaceae. The record derives from WCSP (in review) (data supplied on 2022-04-20) which reports it as a synonym of Asclepias tuberosa subsp. interior Woodson


Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness Asclepias tuberosa subsp. interior

The Tennessee-Kentucky Plant Atlas is a source of data for the distribution of plants within the state as well as taxonomic, conservation, invasive, and wetland information for each species. The website also provides access to a database and images of plants photos and herbarium specimens found at participating herbaria.


Asclepias tuberosa subsp. interior

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)


Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness Asclepias tuberosa subsp. interior

Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness-- Asclepias tuberosa subsp. interior Vascular Plants of the Gila Wilderness Presented in Association with the Western New Mexico University Department of Natural Sciences Asclepias tuberosa is a beautiful milkweed which is frequently overrun with butterflies, hence its very appropriate name.


Knollige Seidenpflanze (Asclepias tuberosa subsp. interior)

Asclepias tuberosa is native to sandy, rocky banks and meadows where it thrives in hot and dry conditions. This plant has a very deep tap-root system that extends several feet below ground making it drought tolerant. Generally asclepias tuberosa thrives in conditions that replicate its natural environment-dry areas with little moisture.


Asclepias tuberosa ssp. interior, 4,50

1a. Leaf blades narrow- oblong to lanceolate or oblong - ovate, widest below the middle, . ± truncate to cordate at the base, gradually tapering to the apex.. 7a. Asclepias tuberosa ssp. interior Woods. 1b. Leaf blades oblong to obovate or oblanceolate, broadest above the middle, cuneate to rounded at the base, abruptly tapering to the apex.


Asclepias tuberosa ssp. interior (Asclepias tuberosa ssp. interior) Plants Candide

70b. Asclepias tuberosa Linnaeus subsp. interior Woodson, Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 31: 368, plate 20 [in part]. 1944. Asclepias tuberosa var. interior (Woodson) Shinners; A. tuberosa subsp. terminalis Woodson. Stems 30-90 cm. Leaf blades narrowly elliptic or lanceolate to oblong or linear, 2-12 × 0.5-3 cm, base obtuse or truncate to cordate, margins planar, apex acute to attenuate.


Pflanzen von A Z / Botanischer Garten Frankfurt

Download WCVP data. Build a checklist. Download WCVP data. Compilers and Reviewers. First published in Ann. Missouri Bot. Gard. 31: 368 (1944) This subspecies is accepted. The native range of this subspecies is SE. Canada, U.S.A. to Mexico (Coahuila).

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