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Solidago nana

Nutt.

Baby Goldenrod, Dyersweed Goldenrod, Gray Goldenrod

iNaturalist· cc-by-nc

(c) Shane, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC)

iNaturalist· cc-by-nc

(c) Shane, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC)

iNaturalist· cc-by-nc

(c) Adam Schneider, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC)

Solidago nana is a North American plant species in the family Asteraceae, with the common names baby goldenrod and dwarf goldenrod. The species is native to deserts and mountainsides in the western United States, from the Rocky Mountains to the Great Basin in the states of Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico. Solidago nana is a perennial herb up to 50 cm (20 inches) tall, spreading by means of underground rhizomes. The leaves near the bottom of the stem are narrow, up to 10 cm (4 inches) long; leaves get progressively smaller higher up on the stem. One plant can produce as many as 100 small yellow flower heads in a large, flat-topped array at the top of the plant.

Description

A temperate herbaceous plant in the daisy family with seeds used as food. One of approximately 100 Solidago species.

This description is brief — help expand it

Edible Uses

Seeds are eaten.

Distribution

It is a temperate plant.

Where It Grows

North America, USA,

Notes

There are about 100 Solidago species.

References (2)

  • Beckstrom-Sternberg, Stephen M., and James A. Duke. "The Foodplant Database." http://probe.nalusda.gov:8300/cgi-bin/browse/foodplantdb.(ACEDB version 4.0 - data version July 1994)
  • Plants for a Future database, The Field, Penpol, Lostwithiel, Cornwall, PL22 0NG, UK. http://www.scs.leeds.ac.uk/pfaf/

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