Your search found 15 image(s) of Aaron's Rod and Golden-banner.
To see larger pictures, click or hover over the thumbnails.
To go to the plant's detail page, click its name.
Habitat: Floodplains, mesic disturbed areas, woodland edges, roadbanks
Rachis and calyx tawny-tomentose, pedicels strongly ascendent, per Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968).
Leaves have conspicuous ovate stipules, 2" long, with clasping basal lobes, per Wildflowers of the Southern Mountains (Smith, 1998).
A more erect and unbranched plant than our other 2 species, per Weakley's Flora.
Legumes closely pressed against the rachis, per Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968).
Habitat: Montane oak-hickory forests and woodlands, granitic dome margins, other dry slopes and ridges
Calyx pubescent, the lobes 2-2.5mm long, per Weakley's Flora.
Pedicels shorter than the bracts, per Weakley's Flora.
Leaves have narrow stipules that do not clasp the stem, per Wildflowers of Tennessee, the Ohio Valley, and the Southern Appalachians (Horn, Cathcart, Hemmerly, & Duhl, 2005).
Habitat: Dry slopes and ridges with oak and/or pine canopy, pine-oak heaths and savannas
Legumes flattened, per Guide to the Wildflowers of SC, 1st ed. (Porcher & Rayner, 2001).
Legumes spreading or at least not strictly erect, on a short stalk, per Guide to the Wildflowers of SC, 1st ed. (Porcher & Rayner, 2001).
Leaves have narrow stipules that do not clasp the stem, per Wildflowers of the Southern Mountains (Smith, 1998).
Pedicels as long or longer than the bracts. Calyx glabrous, per Weakley's Flora.
Raceme loosely flowered, per Leguminosae (Fabaceae), vol 3, part 2, Vascular flora of the southeastern United States (Isely, 1990).