Solidago gigantea

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Solidago gigantea is a North American plant species in the family Asteraceae.[3]: 211  Its common names include tall goldenrod[4] and giant goldenrod,[5] among others.

Solidago gigantea

Secure  (NatureServe)[1]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom:Plantae
Clade:Tracheophytes
Clade:Angiosperms
Clade:Eudicots
Clade:Asterids
Order:Asterales
Family:Asteraceae
Genus:Solidago
Species:
S. gigantea
Binomial name
Solidago gigantea
Synonyms[2]
Synonymy
    • Aster latissimifolius var. serotinus Kuntze
    • Doria dumerorum (Lunell) Lunell
    • Doria pitcheri (Nutt.) Lunell
    • Solidago cleliae DC.
    • Solidago deflexa Moench
    • Solidago dumetorum Lunell
    • Solidago fragrans A.Gray
    • Solidago gigantea var. leiophylla Fernald
    • Solidago gigantea var. pitcheri (Nutt.) Shinners
    • Solidago gigantea var. serotina (Kuntze) Cronquist
    • Solidago gigantea subsp. serotina (Kuntze) McNeill
    • Solidago gigantea var. shinnersii Beaudry
    • Solidago glabra Desf.
    • Solidago pitcheri Nutt.
    • Solidago sera J.F.Gmel.
    • Solidago serotina Aiton
    • Solidago serotina var. dumertorum (Aiton) A.Gray
    • Solidago serotina var. gigantea (Aiton) A.Gray
    • Solidago serotina f. huntingdonensis Beaudry
    • Solidago serotina var. minor Hook.
    • Solidago serotinoides Á.Löve & D.Löve
    • Solidago shinnersii (Beaudry) Beaudry
    • Solidago somesii Rydb.

Goldenrod is the state flower of Kentucky,[6] and Solidago gigantea is the state flower of Nebraska.[7]

Description

Solidago gigantea is a perennial herb that reaches heights of up to 2 m (6.6 ft) tall, sometimes spreading by means of underground rhizomes. It often grows in clumps with no leaves at the base but numerous leaves on the stem. At the top, each stem produces a sizable array of many small flower heads, sometimes several hundred. Each head is yellow, containing both disc florets and ray florets.[4]

Habitat

Solidago gigantea is found in a wide variety of natural habitats, although it is restricted to areas with at least seasonally moist soils.[4][8]

Distribution

It is a widespread species known from most of non-arctic North America east of the Rocky Mountains. It has been reported from every state and province from Alberta to Nova Scotia to Florida to Texas, and also from the state of Nuevo León in northeastern Mexico.[9][10]

Environmental impact

Solidago gigantea is highly invasive throughout Europe and Asia.[11] In its non-native range, it exerts a negative impact on native communities by decreasing species richness and diversity, apparently due to its intense competitive effects,[12] rapid growth,[13] or polyploidization.[14] In the non-native European range, several management options are applied, such as periodical flooding, mowing, mulching, grazing, or herbicide to reduce the negative impact of the species on native biodiversity.[15]

Diseases

Parasitized by the Basidiomycete Coleosporium asterum.[16]

Galls

This species is host to the following insect induced galls:

References

External links