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Arches National ParkSego Lily
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Arches National Park
Prairie Sunflower
Helianthus petiolaris

Helianthus petiolaris ssp. fallax

Family: Asteraceae (A Utah Flora – Compositae) – Sunflower Family

Annual herbs; stems 2” to 3.9' (0.5 to 12 dm) tall

Leaves: mainly alternate; simple; 0.4” to 3.2” (1 to 8 cm) long, 0.16” to 1.2” (4 to 30 mm) wide; has hairs

Flowers: yellow ray flowers; disk 0.4” to 1” (10 to 25 mm) wide; disk corolla lobes purplish; perfect; fertile; flower head appears to be a single flower, but is composed of several flowers (a composite)

Pollinators: bees and flies

Fruits: achene – 1 seeded with hard shell

Blooms in Arches National Park: April, May, June, July, August, September, October, early November

Habitat in Arches National Park: riparian, desert shrub, grassland and pinyon-juniper communities

Location seen: park road north of Courthouse Towers, main park road between Delicate Arch turnoff and Fiery Furnace, park road in Salt Valley

Other: The genus name, “Helianthus”, is derived from the Greek words “helios, which means "sun" and “anthos”, which means "flower" and refers to the flower's habit of turning with the sun. The species name, “petiolaris”, means “remarkable leaf stalk, with conspicuous petioles; the subspecies name, “fallax”, is Latin for “deceptive”.

This family is the most advanced and complex of the dicots. The family is rich in oils and resins and is found in every part of the world, but is infrequent in the tropical rainforest. Aquatic or semi-aquatic species are also uncommon.

Ed Abbey  

Did You Know?
Edward Abbey worked as a seasonal park ranger at Arches in the late 1950s. His 1968 memoir of this experience, "Desert Solitaire," has become a classic of desert literature.

Last Updated: December 05, 2007 at 11:57 EST