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Purple coneflower pictures
Purple coneflower pictures












purple coneflower pictures

The blooming period occurs during early summer and lasts about 3 weeks, after which the ray florets shrivel away and the central cone turns black. The ray florets are long, slender, and droop downward. It is about 3" across, consisting of a prominent reddish brown cone of disk florets, which are surrounded by 12-20 light purple ray florets. Illinois Wildflowers describes the flowerheads as follows.Ī single daisy-like composite flower develops at the top of the stem. The hairy stems on pale purple coneflower may stand out weeks before this plant blooms.Īs with other members of the aster family, what appears to be one flower is a composite with ray floret (resembling petals) and small disk florets. The Illinois Wildflowers website notes that compared to pale purple coneflower, purple coneflower has "broader leaves, bushier habit, and later blooming period." Its original range only covered the southeast corner of the state. When I visited again this week, the pale purple coneflowers were well past their peak, and some had finished blooming.Ī related plant, Purple coneflower ( Echinacea purpurea), is more popular in gardens and therefore a common sight throughout Iowa. I took most of the pictures enclosed below on Mike Delaney's restored Dallas County prairie either a couple of summers ago or in late June 2019. The species is native to about two dozen states in the East, South, and Midwest. Pale purple coneflower seemed fitting for a milestone because it a striking plant in tallgrass prairie habitats, which used to cover most of Iowa.

PURPLE CONEFLOWER PICTURES ARCHIVE

You can scroll through all posts tagged wildflowers in reverse chronological order, or click here for a full archive on one page, alphabetized by common name. I've published more than 200 Iowa wildflower Wednesday posts, but some native plants have been the star of the show more than once. (I'm not counting the sedges Leland Searles profiled or Eileen Miller's posts about insects or unusual fungi.) By my count, Pale purple coneflower ( Echinacea pallida) is the 200th wildflower species featured at Bleeding Heartland since I launched this series in 2012.














Purple coneflower pictures