Helianthus or sunflowers is a genus of plants comprising about 70 species in the family Asteraceae, all of which are native to North America except three species in South America. The common name, "sunflower," also applies to the popular annual species Helianthus annuus, the common sunflower. This and other species, notably Jerusalem artichoke (H. tuberosus), are cultivated in temperate regions as food crops and ornamental plants.
The genus is one of many in the Asteraceae that are known as
sunflowers. It is distinguished technically by the fact that the ray
flowers, when present, are sterile, and by the presence on the disk
flowers of a pappus that is of two awn-like scales that are caducous
(that is, easily detached and falling at maturity). Some species also
have additional shorter scales in the pappus, and there is one species
that lacks a pappus entirely. Another technical feature that
distinguishes the genus more reliably, but requires a microscope to see,
is the presence of a prominent, multicellular appendage at the apex of
the style.
There is quite a bit of variability among the perennial species that
make up the bulk of the species in the genus. Some have most or all of
the large leaves in a rosette at the base of the plant and produce a
flowering stem that has leaves that are reduced in size. Most of the
perennials have disk flowers that are entirely yellow, but a few have
disk flowers with reddish lobes. One species, H. radula, lacks ray flowers altogether.
The domesticated sunflower, H. annuus, is the most familiar
species. Perennial sunflower species are not as popular for gardens due
to their tendency to spread rapidly and become invasive. Whorled
sunflowers, H. verticillatus, were listed as an endangered species in 2014 when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service issued a final rule protecting it under the Endangered Species Act. The primary threats are industrial forestry and pine plantations
in Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee. They grow to six feet tall and are
primarily found in woodlands, adjacent to creeks and moist, prairie-like
areas.
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