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- Q7557966 subject Q8461835.
- Q7557966 subject Q8461913.
- Q7557966 subject Q8759954.
- Q7557966 subject Q8765329.
- Q7557966 abstract "Solidago spithamaea is a species of flowering plant in the aster family known by the common name Blue Ridge goldenrod. It is native to a very small region around the border between North Carolina and Tennessee in the United States. Its three remaining populations are threatened by the loss and degradation of its habitat. It is a federally listed threatened species of the United States.Solidago spithamaea produces one or more stems from an underground rhizome and caudex, and it grows 10 to 40 centimeters (4-14 inches) tall. The plant has an unpleasant scent. The leaves vary in shape and size, the ones higher on the stem becoming smaller. The inflorescence is a compact or spreading array of 15 to 50 or more flower heads. Each head has a bell-shaped base about half a centimeter (0.2 inches) long which is lined with phyllaries with pointed, darkened tips. The head contains 8-15 yellow ray florets just a few millimeters long, surrounding 20-60 disc florets. The fruit is an achene with a pappus of bristles.Solidago spithamaea grows on the high summits of the Blue Ridge Mountains in western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee. There is one population each in Avery and Mitchell Counties in North Carolina and Carter County, Tennessee, a region measuring about 15 square miles (38 km2). It can be found on Grandfather Mountain, Hanging Rock, and Roan Mountain. It grows on rocky peaks, cliffs, and slopes covered in talus. The habitat is mostly barren and exposed to full sun and harsh winter weather. This is one of several goldenrods that are relict species, plants that were more common when conditions were colder and wetter. As glaciers receded, the area became warmer and drier, and plants such as this goldenrod were left in areas that most resemble the alpine climate to which it was adapted. It now persists in the high mountain peaks that have the harshest winter conditions. Few of the relict goldenrods remain as far south as this one.Other plants in this barren habitat include mainly grasses and sedges, but there are some other rare mountain herbs and trees including Heller's blazingstar (Liatris helleri), red spruce (Picea rubens), cliff avens (Geum radiatum), sandmyrtle (Leiophyllum buxifolium).The very habitat where the plant persists is an area popular for hiking and sightseeing, and much of it has been converted to roads, trails, parking lots, and other utilities. Remaining habitat is vulnerable to trampling. Other threats include acid precipitation and climate change.".
- Q7557966 binomialAuthority Q2601895.
- Q7557966 class Q165468.
- Q7557966 conservationStatus "G2".
- Q7557966 conservationStatusSystem "TNC".
- Q7557966 division Q25314.
- Q7557966 family Q25400.
- Q7557966 genus Q212939.
- Q7557966 kingdom Q756.
- Q7557966 order Q21730.
- Q7557966 order Q747502.
- Q7557966 synonym "*Aster spithamaeus (M.A.Curtis ex A.Gray) Kuntze)".
- Q7557966 thumbnail Solidagospithamaea.jpg?width=300.
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- Q7557966 wikiPageWikiLink Q8461835.
- Q7557966 wikiPageWikiLink Q8461913.
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- Q7557966 wikiPageWikiLink Q8765329.
- Q7557966 binomialAuthority "M.A.Curtis ex A.Gray".
- Q7557966 familia Q25400.
- Q7557966 genus "Solidago".
- Q7557966 ordo Q21730.
- Q7557966 regnum Q756.
- Q7557966 status "G2".
- Q7557966 statusSystem "TNC".
- Q7557966 synonyms "*Aster spithamaeus ( Kuntze)".
- Q7557966 unrankedClassis Q165468.
- Q7557966 unrankedDivisio Q25314.
- Q7557966 unrankedOrdo Q747502.
- Q7557966 type Eukaryote.
- Q7557966 type Plant.
- Q7557966 type Species.
- Q7557966 type Thing.
- Q7557966 type Q19088.
- Q7557966 type Q756.
- Q7557966 comment "Solidago spithamaea is a species of flowering plant in the aster family known by the common name Blue Ridge goldenrod. It is native to a very small region around the border between North Carolina and Tennessee in the United States. Its three remaining populations are threatened by the loss and degradation of its habitat.".
- Q7557966 label "Solidago spithamaea".
- Q7557966 depiction Solidagospithamaea.jpg.