Populations in southwestern North Carolina (Cherokee, Clay, Macon, and Swain counties) and adjacent Tennessee, South Carolina, and Georgia appear to combine features of Liatris squarrulosa and L. scariosa var. scariosa. The plants are within the range of L. squarrulosa and disjunct from L. scariosa. The habit (large basal leaves, few cauline) is common to both taxa; heads are sessile to short-pedunculate (as in L. squarrulosa) and phyllaries are usually erect (the outer triangular and sometimes reflexing) and slightly broader than is characteristic of L. squarrulosa and often have a narrow hyaline border. These add further heterogeneity to the concept of L. squarrulosa, as circumscribed here; they may represent a separate evolutionary entity. The type of L. ruthii Alexander (an illegitimate name) from Tennessee is this form.
Hybrids:
Liatris species readily form hybrids. Named hybrids and their presumed parentals are:
Liatris ×boykinii Torrey & A. Gray; Lacinaria boykinii (Torrey & A. Gray) Kuntze—L. elegans × L. tenuifolia
Liatris ×creditonensis Gaiser—L. ligulistylis × L. squarrosa var. glabrata (known only from garden-grown plants)
Liatris ×deamii (Lunell) Shinners; Lacinaria deamii Lunell; Liatris scariosa (Linnaeus) Willdenow var. deamii (Lunell) Peattie—L. aspera? × L. ligulistylis?
Liatris ×fallacior (Lunell) Rydberg; Lacinaria fallacior Lunell—L. ligulistylis × L. punctata
Liatris ×freemaniana J. R. Allison—L. cylindracea × L. oligocephala
Liatris ×frostii Gaiser—L. aspera × L. pycnostachya
Liatris ×gladewitzii (Farwell) Shinners; Lacinaria gladewitzii Farwell—L. aspera × L. cylindracea
Liatris ×macdanieliana J. R. Allison—L. cylindracea × L. squarrosa
Liatris ×ridgwayi Standley—L. pycnostachya × L. squarrosa
Liatris ×spheroidea Michaux; Lacinaria aspera (Michaux) Greene var. spheroidea (Michaux) Alexander—L. aspera × L. ligulistylis? (fide L. O. Gaiser 1946)
Liatris ×steelei Gaiser—L. aspera × L. spicata
Liatris ×weaveri Shinners—L. aspera × L. punctata (known only from garden-grown plants)
Liatris squarrulosa, commonly called Appalachian blazing star[1] or southern blazingstar, is an herbaceous perennial plant is the family Asteraceae. It is native to the Southeastern United States where it is found in naturally open communities, such as prairies and savannas.[2]
It produces purple heads of flowers in late summer through fall.
Liatris squarrulosa, commonly called Appalachian blazing star or southern blazingstar, is an herbaceous perennial plant is the family Asteraceae. It is native to the Southeastern United States where it is found in naturally open communities, such as prairies and savannas.
It produces purple heads of flowers in late summer through fall.