Northeastern Asian Flora
Log In New Account Sitemap
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Images
    • Image Browser
    • Search Images
  • Inventories
  • Interactive Tools
    • Dynamic Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
Cirsium sieboldii Miq.   (redirected from: Cirsium sieboldii var. austrokiushianum (Kitam.) Kitam.)
Family: Asteraceae
[Cirsium austrokiushianum Kitam., moreCirsium longipes Nakai, Cirsium reinii (Franch. & Sav.) Matsum., Cirsium sieboldii f. leucanthum T.Shimizu, Cirsium sieboldii f. pilosiusculum , Cirsium sieboldii subsp. austrokiushianum (Kitam.) Kitam., Cirsium sieboldii var. austrokiushianum (Kitam.) Kitam., Cnicus hilgendorfii Franch. & Sav., Cnicus reinii Franch. & Sav., Cnicus sieboldii (Miq.) Maxim.]
Images
not available
  • Japan Flora
  • Resources
Japan Flora: Stems subscaposc, loosely leaved, 50-100 cm. long, cobwebby or pubescent in upper portion; radical leaves rosu- late, much larger than the caulinc, ligulate, 15-55 cm. long, wingcd-pctiolatc, usually pinnarifid, the lobes spreading or erect, usually narrow and approximate, incised, glabrous on both sides, the spines 2-3 mm. long; caulinc leaves few, gradu­ally smaller, lanceolate or broadly so, pinnatcly lobed to in­cised, sessile; heads solitary, terminal, nodding at anthesis, erect in fruit, long-pedunculate; involucres campanulate-glo­bose, about 2.2 cm. long, 3-4 cm. wide; bracts sometimes cob­webby, 7-seriate, acute to obtuse, the outer very short, 3-4 mm. long, spine-tipped, appressed; corollas purplish, 17-19 mm. long; achenes 4-4.5 mm. long. Sept.-Oct. Wet places along rivers and streams in lowlands.

Honshu, Shikoku, Kyu­shu.

var. austrokiushianum (Kitam.) Kitam. Leaves narrowly elliptic, often prominently spinose; heads larger, often with 1-3 linear bracts at base; involucres 25-27 mm. long, 4-5 cm. wide, the bracts loosely imbricate; corolla 20-23 mm. long.  Wet places along rivers in Kyushu (s. distr.).

Cirsium sieboldii
Open Interactive Map
Click to Display
0 Total Images

Development supported by College of Agriculture and Life Sciences of Seoul
National University and Korea National Arboretum of Korea Forest Service.
Powered by Symbiota.