Summary[edit] Description: Solidago missouriensis (Low Goldenrod) Photo taken at Chief Whitecap Park near SaskatoonSaskatchewan. Date: 1 September 2007. Source: Own work. Author: SriMesh.
Summary[edit] Description: The leaves of Aster ascendens (uppermost) and Solidago missouriensis (the lower two) are very similar. The main longitudinal veins on either side of the mid vein in Aster are not as straight and the network of veins forms a net with larger reticulations compared to those of Solidago. Aster ascendens is more likely to be found in disturbed settings (e.g., trail side) compared to Solidago, which is common among the sagebrush and undisturbed vegetation. Date: 17 August 2005, 12:22. Source: Symphyotrichum (Aster) ascendens Uploaded by Jacopo Werther. Author: Matt Lavin from Bozeman, Montana, USA. Camera location45° 40′ 16.35″ N, 111° 01′ 35.71″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 45.671209; -111.026587.
Summary[edit] Description: Solidago missouriensis. Family: Asteraceae (commonly known as the aster, daisy, composite, or sunflower family). Occurs in a wide range of habitats, including grasslands, meadows, fields, and open forest, from plains and valleys to montane zones. This photo was taken at Gipsy Lake in the Big Belt Mountain Range. Date: 13 August 2014, 11:14. Source: Missouri Goldenrod. Author: Forest Service Northern Region from Missoula, MT, USA. Camera location46° 30′ 11.78″ N, 111° 12′ 38.62″ WView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 46.503272; -111.210728.