Liatris punctata
Liatris punctata is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae known by the common names dotted gayfeather, dotted blazingstar, and narrow-leaved blazingstar. It is native to North America, where it occurs throughout the plains of central Canada, the central United States, and northern Mexico.
Description
L. punctata is a perennial herb producing one or more erect stems tall. They grow from a thick taproot deep that produces rhizomes. The leaves are long. Appearing from August to September, the inflorescence is a spike of several flower heads which are each about across. The heads contain several flowers which are usually purple, but sometimes white. The fruit is an achene tipped with a long pappus of feathery bristles. The plant reproduces sexually by seed and vegetatively by sprouting from its rhizome. This species is slow-growing and long-lived, with specimens estimated to be over 35 years old.Distribution and habitat
This plant occurs in Canada from Alberta to Manitoba, in most of the central [United States] and part of Mexico. There are three varieties, with var. punctata in western areas, var. nebraskana more common to the east, and var. mexicana in Oklahoma and Texas.This species grows in a wide variety of habitat types, including ponderosa pine forests, sagebrush, chaparral, pinyon–juniper woodland, and many types of grassland and prairie. It is drought-tolerant because of its deep roots, but is less abundant with less water. It is also fire-tolerant, able to resprout from its rhizome and disperse its seeds via wind to soil cleared of litter by fire. On plains and prairies it grows with many types of grasses, such as Scribner's panic grass and tumble grass, and wildflowers such as heath aster, tick-trefoil, and oldfield goldenrod. It is a host plant for the hemiparasitic wholeleaf Indian paintbrush.