Silphium integrifolium – Prairie Dock – Rosinweed –
Description
Silphium – Prairie Dock – Rosinweed –
There are 20 tall herbaceous perennials in the Asteraceae family, in this genus. They are found naturally occurring in fields, prairies and open woodlands and scrub in Canada and Central and Eastern USA. Their, erect, sparsely branched stems exude resinous sap with a strong turpentine like scent. The opposite or alternate, leaves, sometimes all basal, are lance shaped or pinnatifid. Sunflower like yellow flowers, rarely white, are borne in branching corymbs. Excellent for naturalizing in a wild garden or woodland garden, or for the back of a herbaceous border.
Grow in moderately fertile, moist, deep, neutral to slightly alkaline soil in full sun or partial shade, best in heavy soil. Divide in spring.
Prone to downy mildew, rust, and Cercospora leaf spot.
S. integrifolium – This erect, finely woolly to bristly perennial from Central and Eastern USA grows 18-60″ tall and 36″ wide. It usually produces opposite, lance shaped to ovate or elliptic, stalkless, smooth edged or toothed, bristly, mid green leaves, 6″ long, densely woolly to hairless beneath. In summer, bears yellow flowers, to 2″ across, in loose or dense corymb like inflorescences.
Zones 4-7
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