Index
Practical ecological knowledge for the temperate reader.

Eriophyllum lanatum - Woolly eriophyllum

Family: Asteraceae (Aster family) [E-flora]

Description

Ecological Indicator Information: "A very shade-intolerant, submontane to montane, Western North American forb distributed equally in the Pacific and Cordilleran regions. Occurs in cool temperate and cool mesothermal climates on excessively dry to very dry, nitrogen-medium soils. Its occurrence increases with increasing precipitation and elevation. Grows in non-forested, grassy communities very shallow, on water-shedding sites; often inhabits disturbed sites. Characteristic of moisture-deficient sites." [E-flora]

Other Uses

Medicinal Uses

Phytochemicals

"Another possibility is for small-scale production of the major acetylenes produced by the roots; root cultures of Eriophyllum lanatum have been used in this way." [Bajaj MAPS 3]


Eriophyllum Sp. - Woolly Sunflower

"Annual to shrub, ± woolly. Leaf: generally alternate, proximal sometimes opposite, entire to nearly compound. Inflorescence: heads 1–many, generally radiate; often in ± flat-topped clusters; involucre obconic to hemispheric; phyllaries 4–13(15) in 1 series, free or ± fused; receptacle flat to columnar, smooth or pitted (occasionally 1–6 palea-like scales at tip). Ray flower: 0 or generally ± 1 per phyllary; ray entire to lobed, generally yellow (white). Disk flower: (3)10–300; corolla yellow; anther tip ovate, deltate or awl-shaped; style tips ± ovate, papillate. Fruit: 4(5)-angled or outer fruits flattened, inner fruits generally club-shaped; pappus of 0–15 ± jagged or fringed scales.
13 species: western North America. (Greek: woolly leaf) [Johnson & Mooring 2006 FNANM 21:353–362] Eriophyllum nevinii moved to Constancea. Unabridged references: [Mooring 2002 Amer J Bot 89:1973–1983]" [Jepson]

Local Species;

Food Use

"Eriophyllum seeds were parched and ground into a flour by Cahuilla and Luiseno Indians in California. The seeds were also incorporated into pinole." [Vizgirdas WPSN]

Phytochemicals

"Seven species have been studied for flavonoids by Rarborne and Smith (1978): E. ambiguum, E. confertiflorum, E. lanatum var. obovatum, E. multicaule, E. pringlei, E. staechadifolium, and E. wallacei. Quercetin 5-0-glucoside, quercetagetin 7-0-glucoside, and patuletin 7-0-glucoside were identified, although not all taxa exhibited all three compounds." [Bohm FSF]

Eriophyllum confertum

Eriophyllum confertiflorum

Eriophyllum staechadifolium

Eriofertopin - "Constit. of Eriophyllum confertifiorum. Shows antileukaemic props" [Connolly DT]

Eriolin - Constit. of Eriophyllum confertiflorum [Connolly DT]

Cultivation & Propagation

Aphid Host Plant

Journals of Interest

References


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