- Source: Solidago odora
Solidago odora, the sweet goldenrod, anisescented goldenrod or fragrant goldenrod, is a North American species of goldenrod within the family Asteraceae. The plant is native to the United States and Mexico, found in every coastal state from Veracruz to New Hampshire and as far inland as Ohio, Missouri, and Oklahoma. It flowers from July through October.
Subspecies include:
Solidago odora subsp. odora - most of species range
Solidago odora subsp. chapmanii (Gray) Semple - Florida and Southern Georgia only
As a traditional medicine, Solidago odora has a variety of ethnobotanical uses, especially by the Cherokee.
The leaves, which smell of licorice when crushed, can be made into a tea.
Galls
This species is host to the following insect induced galls:
Eurosta lateralis (Wiedemann, 1830)
Procecidochares atra (Loew, 1862) (summer and autumn generations)
Calycomyza solidaginis Kaltenbach, 1869
References
External links
"Solidago odora". Plants for a Future.
External link to gallformers
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Ambring emas
- Solidago odora
- Solidago
- List of U.S. state foods
- List of flora of Ohio
- List of flora of Indiana
- Xerophyllum asphodeloides
- Calycomyza solidaginis
- List of Delaware state symbols
- Lioptilodes albistriolatus
- Solidago juncea