Species Image Gallery
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THE SUNFLOWER FAMILY
 
The sunflowers are found around the globe in many different places, from temperate climates, like in Saskatchewan, to mountains or in dry regions. The sunflower family is very large and contains about 19,000 species! As you can imagine, the plants in this family can look very different from one another. The sunflowers can be shrubs or herbs, with many different leaf shapes and flower colours. One thing that is common to all sunflowers is the type of flower arrangement. In this family, there are many flowers grouped together into a head, like the one you see on a daisy. It looks like one flower from a distance, but when you get close you will see that it is actually made up of many, small flowers. The head may have ray flowers on the outside and disc flowers on the inside, or only one of the two kinds. Many of the seeds, like the dandelion, have a fluffy structure attached to the seed. This is called the pappus and helps the seeds to spread in the wind.

You probably know a lot of plants in the sunflower family. Sunflowers can be plants you eat or plants that you may grow in the yard. For example, did you know that lettuce is from the sunflower family? So are the marigolds in the garden! Maybe you have heard of Echinacea? It is a plant in the sunflower family that is used to make medicine. Some of the sunflowers are also weeds, like the dandelion.
 
PEARLY PUSSYTOES
 
  LATIN NAME:    Antennaria anaphaloides
 
WHAT DOES IT LOOK LIKE?
 
Pearly pussytoes is between 20 and 60 cm tall, with dark brown rhizomes and a branched woody base. The white-woolly stems are solitary and there are no horizontal, above-ground stems. The basal leaves are long and thin and are woolly below. The leaves on the stem are smaller towards the top of the plant. The bracts on the heads are white and may have a brownish-black spot at the base. Male and female flowers are found on separate plants. Both types of flowers have white petals.
 
WHERE DOES IT GROW?
 
Pearly pussytoes grows on the prairies.
 
WHERE IS IT FOUND IN SASKATCHEWAN?
 
This plant is found in the Cypress Hills in the Cypress Upland Ecoregion.
 
WHY IS IT RARE?
 
Pearly pussytoes is threatened in Saskatchewan because it is only found in the Cypress Hills area.
 
HOW TO IDENTIFY PEARLY PUSSYTOES
  * Are the bracts on the head white with a brown spot?
* Does the plant have rhizome and a woody stem base?
* Are the leaves and stem white and woolly?
* Did you find it in the Cypress Hills?
If you answered yes to all of these questions, you may have found pearly pussytoes!