Description:
This perennial wildflower is 2½-5' tall and unbranched, except where
the flowerheads occur. The central stem is light green to reddish
purple, terete, and more or less covered with either short stiff hairs
or longer bristly hairs. Pairs of opposite leaves occur along the
central stem; each pair of leaves rotates 90° from an adjacent pair of
leaves. There may be 1-2 smaller alternate leaves along the
top of the central stem, or along upper lateral stems, underneath the
flowerheads. Leaf blades are 2½-6" long and ½-2½" across; they are
narrowly lanceolate to ovate in shape and serrated to nearly toothless
along
their margins. The upper surface of the leaf blades is medium green and
rough-textured from minute stiff hairs, while the lower surface is pale
green and more or less pubescent. The short petioles are usually
¼-½" long.
The central stem and any lateral stems terminate in
flowerheads on erect to ascending peduncles (flowering stalks) about
1-4" long. These peduncles have characteristics that are similar to the
central stem. Individual flowerheads are 2-3" across, consisting of
10-15 ray florets that surround numerous disk florets. The ray florets
have petal-like corollas that are yellow; they are sterile. The disk
florets have yellow tubular corollas that are perfect and fertile; they
are 5-lobed along their upper rims. Around the base of each flowerhead,
there are light green phyllaries (floral bracts) in 3-4 overlapping
series; they are narrowly lanceolate to lanceolate in shape
and slightly ciliate. When the flowerheads bloom, the
phyllaries
are ascending to widely spreading. The blooming period occurs from
mid-summer to early fall for about 2 months. Afterwards, the disk
florets are replaced by achenes about 4 mm. long that are narrowly
ovoid, somewhat flattened, and glabrous (hairless). Each achene has a
pair of tiny chaffy scales at its apex that become detached easily. The
root system is fibrous and long-rhizomatous. This wildflower often
forms colonies of plants from the rhizomes.
Cultivation:
The
preference is full or partial sun, mesic to dry conditions, and soil
that contains clay-loam, loam, rocky material, or sand. Hairy Sunflower
is easy to grow, but it may spread aggressively in some situations.
Range
& Habitat: The native Hairy Sunflower is
occasional throughout
Illinois. Habitats include thinly wooded bluffs,
upland savannas, borders of upland woodlands, black soil prairies, sand
prairies, limestone glades, areas along railroads, and abandoned
fields. In upland areas with woody vegetation, this wildflower is
often associated with oak trees. It is found in both disturbed and
higher quality habitats.
Faunal
Associations: The nectar and pollen of Hairy Sunflower and
other
sunflowers attract a wide variety of insects, including long-tongued
bees (honeybees, bumblebees, leaf-cutting bees, miner bees, cuckoo
bees), short-tongued bees (Halictid bees & Andrenid bees),
miscellaneous wasps, flies (Syrphid flies, bee flies, thick-headed
flies, & others), butterflies and skippers, and occasional
beetles. Several bees are specialist pollinators (oligoleges) of
sunflowers:
Andrena
accepta,
Andrena
aliciae,
Andrena
helianthi,
Dufourea marginatus,
Melissodes agilis,
and
Pseudopanurgus
rugosus.
Other insects feed more destructively on the leaves, stems,
flowerheads, plant juices, or roots. These species include caterpillars
of the butterflies
Chlosyne
gorgone (Gorgon Checkerspot),
Chlosyne
nycteis (Silvery Checkerspot), and
Vanessa cardui
(Painted Lady); they
also include caterpillars of the moths
Dichomeris flavocostella
(Cream-Bordered Dichomeris),
Ogdoconta
cinereola (Common Pinkband), and
others. Additional insect feeders include
Aphis
helianthi (Sunflower Aphid) and other aphids, several
treehoppers and
leafhoppers,
Clastoptera
xanthocephala (Sunflower Spittlebug), the
plant bugs
Ilnacora
stalii and
Plagiognathus
nigronitens, the thrips
Heterothrips
auranticornis, the larvae of
Apion occidentale
(Black Sunflower Stem Weevil) and other weevils, the leaf beetles
Exema dispar
and
Sumitrosis
inaequalis,
Euphoria
inda (Bumble Flower
Beetle), the larvae of
Contarinia
schulzi (Sunflower Midge),
and several grasshoppers (see the
Insect Table for a
more complete list of species).
The nutritious seeds of Hairy Sunflower and other
sunflowers are eaten by the Bobwhite, Mourning Dove, Eastern Goldfinch,
Tufted Titmouse, Harris Sparrow, White-Throated Sparrow, and
other birds. The seeds are also eaten by some mammals,
including the Gray Squirrel, Thirteen-Lined Ground Squirrel, Prairie
Vole, and White-Footed Mouse. The Plains Pocket Gopher eats the
rhizomes of sunflowers, while the White-Tailed Deer, Cottontail Rabbit,
and Groundhog feed on the foliage. Because sunflowers are tall leafy
plants that often form colonies, they provide good ground cover for
many kinds of wildlife.
Photographic
Location: A wildflower garden at Crystal Lake Park in
Urbana, Illinois.
The photographed plant is
Helianthus
hirsutus trachyphyllus.
Comments:
Because Hairy Sunflower is rather variable across local populations in
Illinois and elsewhere, three different varieties have been described:
the typical variety, var.
trachyphyllus, and var.
stenophyllus. The
typical variety has long bristly hairs along its stems and its leaves
are usually 1-2½" across; var.
trachyphyllus
has short stiff hairs
along its stems and its leaves are usually 1-2½" across; and var.
stenophyllus
has leaves that are only ½-1" across. The distribution map
of Hairy Sunflower does not distinguish between these different
varieties. Other sunflower species that Hairy Sunflower can be confused
with include
Helianthus
pauciflorus (Prairie Sunflower),
Helianthus
strumosus (Pale-Leaved Sunflower), and
Helianthus tuberosus
(Jerusalem
Artichoke). Prairie Sunflower resembles the narrow-leaved variety of
Hairy Sunflower (
Helianthus
hirsutus stenophyllus), but its disk
florets are dark purple or maroon, rather than yellow; Prairie
Sunflower also has wider phyllaries (floral bracts) that are
deltate-ovate in shape. Pale-Leaved Sunflower differs from Hairy
Sunflower by its smooth (or nearly smooth) stems and its tends to have
slightly longer petioles (½-1" long); also the undersides of its leaf
blades are less hairy than those of Hairy Sunflower. The Jerusalem
Artichoke differs by having slightly wider leaves with longer petioles
(1-2½" long); it also has more alternate leaves along its stems. There
is no dominant common name for
Helianthus
hirsutus. In addition to
Hairy Sunflower, this species is also referred to as the Bristly
Sunflower, Rough Sunflower, Oblong Sunflower, and Stiff-Haired
Sunflower!