Artemisia ludoviciana Family: Asteraceae (A Utah Flora – Compositae) – Sunflower Family Perennial aromatic herbs; the juice watery; stems 7.9” to 3.3' (2 to 10 dm) tall or more Leaves: alternate; simple; entire, lobed or incised; has hairs on underside, can have hairs above; 0.32” to 3.6” (0.8 to 9 cm) long, 0.04” to 0.8” (0.1 to 2 cm) wide Flowers: yellow disk flowers only; perfect, or sometimes the central ones sterile; flower head appears to be a single flower, but is composed of several flowers (a composite). Involucres 0.1” to 0.18” (2.5 to 4.5 mm) high, 0.12” to 0.28” (3 to 7 mm) wide or more Pollinators: wind Fruits: achene – 1 seeded with hard shell Blooms in Arches National Park: August, September, October, November Habitat in Arches National Park: desert shrub, grassland, pinyon-juniper and hanging garden communities Location seen: Park Avenue , Fiery Furnace Other: This genus is named for Artemisia, queen of Caria (ca 400 B.C.), a botanist and scholar, who might have been named for the Greek goddess Artemis. Caria is now a part of Turkey . The species name, “ludoviciana”, means either "of or from Louisiana” or “of St. Louis” describing part of the plant's range. Thomas Nuttall (1786-1859) described this species in his The Genera of North American Plants of 1818. He visited the Mandan villages in what is now North Dakota in 1810 and 1811. 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. |
Last updated: November 26, 2021