Erigeron uniflorus aka One Flowered Fleabane
Taxonomy ID: 11715
Erigeron uniflorus, commonly known as the one-flower fleabane, oneflower fleabane, or northern daisy, is a small perennial herb in the daisy family (Asteraceae). Described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753, it is one of the most widely distributed members of its genus, occurring across the Arctic and alpine regions of the Northern Hemisphere. In Europe it is recorded from the Pyrenees and Alps east through Scandinavia, Iceland, and the Balkans; in Asia it extends through the Caucasus, Iran, Afghanistan, Nepal, and south-central China; and in North America it occurs in northern Canada, Alaska, and Greenland. The species also has scattered records as far afield as the high mountains of New Guinea.
The plant is a low-growing perennial hemicryptophyte, typically only 2 to 12 centimetres tall, occasionally reaching 20 centimetres. As its scientific and common names suggest, each flowering stem bears a single composite flower head, and this trait distinguishes it from many of its branched-stemmed relatives. The ray florets are white, lilac, or pale pink, and there are no filiform intermediate florets between the ray and disk florets. The stems and the cup-like involucre at the base of the flower head are typically tinged red, and the involucral bracts are densely covered in white woolly hairs that extend almost to their pointed tips. Basal leaves are small and rounded or notched at the apex.
In its native habitat, Erigeron uniflorus grows in open, sunny subalpine to alpine grasslands, ridges, and stony slopes, generally on lime-poor, lightly acid to neutral soils. Swiss ecological indicator values place it in the alpine to nival climatic zone, in highly luminous open conditions, on nutrient-poor substrates with moderately dry to moist moisture levels. Flowering occurs in the short alpine summer, from July to September. The species is assessed as Least Concern in Switzerland and is not listed as threatened across its broad global range. It is primarily of interest as a wildflower of high mountain and tundra ecosystems rather than as a horticultural plant, and it is not generally grown as a houseplant.
Common names
One Flowered Fleabane, Oneflower Fleabane, Northern DaisyMore information about One Flowered Fleabane
Where does One Flowered Fleabane come from?
Erigeron uniflorus is a circumboreal arctic-alpine species, native to high latitudes and high elevations across the Northern Hemisphere. Its European range includes the Alps, Pyrenees, Apennines, Carpathians, Scandinavia, Iceland, and parts of the Balkans, with documented occurrences in Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Finland, Greece, and Bulgaria. In Asia it grows through the Caucasus, north European Russia, Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, Nepal, and south-central China, and in North America it occurs in northern Canada, Alaska, and Greenland. In Switzerland it is restricted exclusively to the Alps biogeographic region.
What do One Flowered Fleabane flowers look like?
Each flowering stem of Erigeron uniflorus bears a single composite flower head, a trait that gives the plant both its species epithet and its common name "one-flower fleabane." The ray florets are slender and white, lilac, or pale pink, surrounding a yellow disk; unlike some related fleabanes, there are no thread-like intermediate florets between the rays and the disk. The cup-shaped involucre below the head is typically tinged red and densely covered in white woolly hairs. Flowering occurs in the short alpine summer, from July to September.
How to propagate One Flowered Fleabane?
Sexual reproduction via seed. Flow cytometric analysis confirmed that E. uniflorus reproduces sexually and does not produce seeds apomictically. Propagation in cultivation would be via seed sown in cold conditions or with stratification appropriate for high-alpine species.
Can One Flowered Fleabane be grown outdoors?
In nature Erigeron uniflorus grows on open subalpine to alpine grasslands, ridges, and stony slopes on lime-poor, lightly acid to neutral soils, in fully sunny positions and nutrient-poor substrates with moderately dry to moist moisture. To approximate these conditions outdoors, it requires a cool climate, an open and very sunny site, sharp drainage, and a gritty, low-fertility soil typical of rock garden or alpine trough culture. It is not adapted to warm lowland gardens.
What varieties of One Flowered Fleabane exist?
GBIF lists three subspecies or varieties as descendants under Erigeron uniflorus L., reflecting some morphological variation across its broad arctic-alpine range. Recognised infraspecific names that have been treated as synonyms or varieties include Erigeron alpinus var. uniflorus Ledeb., Erigeron polymorphus subsp. polymorphus, and Erigeron uniflorus subsp. typicus Á. Löve.
How is One Flowered Fleabane pollinated?
Erigeron uniflorus reproduces sexually, requiring pollination for seed set. Erigeron species are associated with insect visitors, particularly Lepidoptera. In its high-alpine habitat, pollination likely occurs via insects active during the short summer season.
What temperature does One Flowered Fleabane prefer?
This is a true cold-climate species. Swiss ecological indicator values place it at T=1, meaning the alpine to nival climatic stage, where summers are short and cool and freezing temperatures are common most of the year. It naturally inhabits subalpine to alpine grasslands and ridges and is therefore very cold-hardy but ill-suited to warm lowland conditions.
How difficult is it to take care of One Flowered Fleabane
What is the growth pattern and size of One Flowered Fleabane?
What are the water needs for One Flowered Fleabane
What is the right soil for One Flowered Fleabane
What is the sunlight requirement for One Flowered Fleabane
How to fertilize One Flowered Fleabane
Is One Flowered Fleabane toxic to humans/pets?
What seasonal care does One Flowered Fleabane need?
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