Longleaf-Leader-Winter-2021.qxp_Layout 1 12/7/20 7:00 PM Page 10
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By Carol Denhof, The Longleaf Alliance
PLANT SPOTLIGHT
Cirsium horridulum Michx. Yellow Thistle Aster Family – Asteraceae
Map showing distribution of yellow thistle. USDA PLANTS Database.
Cirsium horridulum in flower with swallowtail butterfly. Photo by Sharleen Johnson.
Description Yellow thistle is a robust herbaceous, biennial member of the sunflower family. It grows as a densely packed rosette of spiny leaves. The spiny leaves can measure up to a foot in length and four inches in width. The flowering stem emerges from the center of the basal rosette and is covered in long hairs. The reddish-purple to pale yellow flower heads are arranged in racemes at the top of the flowering stem. Flowering occurs from March to June. The seeds, that mature in the summer, have long white bristles that aid in seed distribution.
Wildlife/Medicinal Uses Yellow thistle tends to get a bad name due to its prickly nature. However, it is an important wildlife plant. The seeds are an important food for many songbirds, including American Goldfinch and Carolina Chickadee. The flowers are also an early-season nectar source for pollinators like swallowtail butterflies. Plant Availability This plant is not generally available commercially. However, the seed is easily wind dispersed, which makes it an early colonizer in disturbed and old field sites. It is also easy to propagate from seed.
Distribution & Habitat Yellow thistle tends to inhabit ruderal sites such as young tree plantations and rights-of-way. It occurs in all parts of the longleaf range from Virginia south to Florida and west to Texas.
References Miller, J.H. and K.V. Miller. 2005. Forest Plants of the Southeast and their Wildlife Uses. The University of Georgia Press. Athens, GA. 454pp. USDA, NRCS. 2020. The PLANTS Database (http://plants.usda.gov, 6 November 2020). National Plant Data Team, Greensboro, NC 27401-4901 USA. [7]