Goldenrod

Goldenrod

Taxobox
name = Goldenrod



image_width = 250px
image_caption = Inflorescences of "Solidago virgaurea minuta"
regnum = Plantae
divisio = Magnoliophyta
classis = Magnoliopsida
ordo = Asterales
familia = Asteraceae
tribus = Astereae
genus = "Solidago"
genus_authority = L.
subdivision_ranks = Species
subdivision = See text.

The goldenrod is a yellow flowering plant in the Family Asteraceae.

Description

About 100cite web | url = http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=1&taxon_id=130659 | title = Solidago | work = Flora of North America] perennial species make up the genus "Solidago", most being found in the meadows and pastures, along roads, ditches and waste areas in North America. There are a handful of species from each of Mexico, South America, and Eurasia. Some American species have also been introduced into Europe some 250 years ago.

Many species are difficult to distinguish. Probably due to their bright, golden yellow flower heads blooming in late summer, the goldenrod is often unfairly blamed for causing hay fever in humans. The pollen causing these allergy problems is mainly produced by Ragweed ("Ambrosia sp."), blooming at the same time as the goldenrod, but is wind-pollinated. Goldenrod pollen is too heavy and sticky to be blown far from the flowers, and is thus mainly pollinated by insects.

Goldenrods are easily recognized by their golden inflorescence with hundreds of small capitula, but some are spike-like and other have auxiliary racemes.

They have slender stems, usually hairless but "S. canadensis" shows hairs on the upper stem. They can grow to a length between 60 cm and 1.5 m.

Their alternate leaves are linear to lanceolate. Their margins are usually finely to sharply serrated.

Propagation is by wind-disseminated seed or by underground rhizomes. They form patches that are actually vegetative clones of a single plant.

Use and cultivation

Goldenrod is used as a food plant by the larvae of various Lepidoptera species (see list of Lepidoptera that feed on goldenrods). The invading larva induces the plant to form a bulbous tissue mass (called a gall) around it, upon which the larva then feeds. Various parasitoid wasps find these galls, and lay eggs in the larvae, penetrating the bulb with their ovipositor. Woodpeckers have learned to peck open the galls and eat the insect in the center. [cite journal | url=http://www.bioone.org/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.1674%2F0003-0031(1999)142%5B0102%3AFPOEGS%5D2.0.CO%3B2 | title=Foraging patterns of Eastern gray squirrels ("Sciurus carolinensis") on goldenrod gall insects, a potentially important winter food resource | author=D. A. SHEALER, J. P. SNYDER, V. C. DREISBACH, D. F. SUNDERLIN, and J. A. NOVAK | pages=102–109 | journal=The American Midland Naturalist | volume=142 | issue=1 | month=July | year=1999 | doi=10.1674/0003-0031(1999)142 [0102:FPOEGS] 2.0.CO;2]

Goldenrods can be used for decoration and making tea. Goldenrods are, in some places, held as a sign of good luck or good fortunefact|date = October 2008; but they are considered weeds by others.

Goldenrods are mostly short-day plants and bloom in late summer and early fall and some species produce abundant nectar when moisture is plentiful before bloom, and the bloom period is relatively warm and sunny. Honey from goldenrods often is dark and strong due to admixtures of other nectars. However when there is a strong honey flow, a light (often water white), spicy-tasting honey is produced. While the bees are ripening the honey there is a rank odor and taste, but finished honey is much milder.

Garden use

British gardeners adopted goldenrod long before Americans. Goldenrod only began to gain some acceptance in American gardening (other than wildflower gardening) during the 1980s. A hybrid with aster, known as "x Solidaster" is less unruly, with pale yellow flowers, equally suitable for dried arrangements.

"Solidago canadensis" was introduced as a garden plant in Central Europe, and is now common in the wild. In Germany, it is considered an invasive species that displaces native vegetation from its natural habitat.

Goldenrod is a companion plant, playing host to some beneficial insects, and repelling some pests.fact|date = October 2008

Industrial use

Inventor Thomas Edison experimented with goldenrod to produce rubber, which it contains naturally. [cite news | url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,881890,00.html | title=Goldenrod Rubber | date=December 16, 1929 | work=Time Magazine] Edison created a fertilization and cultivation process to maximize the rubber content in each plant. His experiments produced a 12 foot tall plant that yielded as much as 12 percent rubber. The rubber produced through Edison's process was resilient and long lasting.The tires on the Model T given to him by his friend Henry Ford were made from goldenrod. Examples of the rubber can still be found in his laboratory, elastic and rot free after more than 50 years. However, even though Edison turned his research over to the U.S. government a year before his death, goldenrod rubber never went beyond the experimental stage.

Medicinal use

The variety "Solidago virgaurea" is used as a traditional kidney tonic. [cite journal | pmid = 15638071 | year = 2004 | month = Nov | author = Melzig, Mf | title = Goldenrod--a classical exponent in the urological phytotherapy | volume = 154 | issue = 21-22 | pages = 523–7 | issn = 0043-5341 | journal = Wiener medizinische Wochenschrift (1946) | doi = 10.1007/s10354-004-0118-4] It is used by practitioners of herbal medicine as an agent to counter inflammation and irritation of the kidneys when bacterial infection or stones are present.Campion, Kitty. (1995). Holistic Woman's Herbal - How to Achieve Health and Well-Being at Any Age, ISBN 978-0760710302, "Basic Maintenance", Pg. 65, "Kidney/Bladder tincture" recipe (kidney cleansing); "Self-Monitoring: Genito-Urinary and Breast Health" Pg. 96, "Kidney/Bladder Tonic" tincture recipe (cystitis). Barnes & Noble, Inc.] Goldenrod has also been used as part of a tincture to aid in cleansing of the kidney/bladder during a healing fast, in conjunction with Potassium broth and specific juices. 'Solidago odora' is also sold as a medicinal, for these issues: mucus, kidney/bladder cleansing and stones, colds, digestion.

Cultural significance

The goldenrod is the state flower of the U.S. states of Kentucky (adopted March 16, 1926) and Nebraska (adopted April 4, 1895). It used to be the state flower of Alabama, being adopted as such on September 6, 1927, but was later rejected in favour of the camellia. Goldenrod was recently named the state wildflower for South Carolina.

In Midwestern states in the mid-twentieth century it was said that when the goldenrod bloomed, it would soon be time to go back to school--the blossoms appeared in mid- to late August, shortly before the traditional start of school on the day after Labor Day. [cite news | url=http://www.essences.com/vibration/may01/goldenrod.html | work=Vibration Magazine: The Journal of Vibrational/Flower Essences | title=Goldenrod and Other Essences for School Transitions | author=Donna Cunningham | date=May 2001]

In Sufjan Stevens' song, Casimir Pulaski Day, the narrator brings goldenrod to his girlfriend upon finding out that she has been diagnosed with bone cancer. [http://www.singingbiscuit.com Carrie Hamby] 's song, Solidago, tells the story of Thomas Edison's experiments with making goldenrod a domestic source of rubber during the 2nd world war.

The Sweet Goldenrod ("Solidago odora") is also the state herb of Delaware as of June 24, 1996. [ [http://delcode.delaware.gov/title29/c003/index.shtml#P137_5151 STATE SEAL, SONG AND SYMBOLS of Delaware] ]

pecies

* "Solidago albopilosa" E.L. Braun : Whitehair Goldenrod
* "Solidago altiplanities" C.& J. Taylor : High Plains Goldenrod
* "Solidago arguta" Ait. : Atlantic Goldenrod
** "Solidago arguta". var. "arguta" : Atlantic Goldenrod
** "Solidago arguta" var. "boottii" (Hook.) Palmer & Steyermark : Boott's Goldenrod
** "Solidago arguta" var. "caroliniana" Gray : Atlantic Goldenrod
** "Solidago arguta" var. "harrisii" (Steele) Cronq. : Harris' Goldenrod
** "Solidago arguta" var. "neurolepis" (Fern.) Steyermark : Atlantic Goldenrod
* "Solidago auriculata" Shuttlw. ex Blake : Eared Goldenrod
* "Solidago bicolor" L. : White Goldenrod
* "Solidago brachyphylla" Chapman : Dixie Goldenrod
* "Solidago buckleyi" Torr. & Gray : Buckley's Goldenrod (VU)
* "Solidago caesia" L. : Wreath Goldenrod
** "Solidago caesia" var. "caesia" : Wreath Goldenrod
** "Solidago caesia" var. "curtisii" (Torr. & Gray) Wood : Mountain Decumbent Goldenrod
* "Solidago calcicola" Fern. : Limestone Goldenrod
* "Solidago californica" Nutt. : California Goldenrod
* "Solidago canadensis" L. : Canada Goldenrod, Canadian Goldenrod
** "Solidago canadensis" var. "canadensis" : Canada Goldenrod
** "Solidago canadensis" var. "gilvocanescens" Rydb. : Shorthair Goldenrod
** "Solidago canadensis" var. "hargeri" Fern. : Harger's Goldenrod
** "Solidago canadensis" var. "lepida" (DC.) Cronq. : Canada Goldenrod
** "Solidago canadensis" var. "salebrosa" (Piper) M.E. Jones : Salebrosa Goldenrod
** "Solidago canadensis" var. "scabra" Torr. & Gray : Canada Goldenrod
* "Solidago cutleri" Fern. : Cutler's alpine Goldenrod
* "Solidago deamii" Fern. : Deam's Goldenrod
* "Solidago discoidea" Ell. : Rayless Mock Goldenrod
* "Solidago fistulosa" P. Mill. : Pinebarren Goldenrod
* "Solidago flaccidifolia" Small : Mountain Goldenrod
* "Solidago flexicaulis" L. : Zigzag Goldenrod
* "Solidago gattingeri" Chapman : Gattinger's Goldenrod
* "Solidago gigantea" Ait. : Giant Goldenrod
* "Solidago glomerata" Michx. : Clustered Goldenrod
* "Solidago gracillima" Torr. & Gray : Virginia Goldenrod
* "Solidago guiradonis" Gray : Guirado Goldenrod
* "Solidago hispida" Muhl. ex Willd. : Hairy Goldenrod
** "Solidago hispida" var. "arnoglossa" Fern. : Hairy Goldenrod
** "Solidago hispida" var. "hispida" : Hairy Goldenrod
** "Solidago hispida" var. "lanata" (Hook.) Fern. : Hairy Goldenrod
** "Solidago hispida" var. "tonsa" Fern. : Hairy Goldenrod
* "Solidago juliae" Nesom : Julia's Goldenrod
* "Solidago juncea" Ait. : Early Goldenrod
* "Solidago latissimifolia" P. Mill. : Elliott's Goldenrod
* "Solidago leavenworthii" Torr. & Gray : Leavenworth's Goldenrod
* "Solidago ludoviciana" (Gray) Small : Louisiana Goldenrod
* "Solidago macrophylla" Pursh : Largeleaf Goldenrod
* "Solidago missouriensis" Nutt. : Missouri Goldenrod
** "Solidago missouriensis" var. "fasciculata" Holz. : Missouri Goldenrod
** "Solidago missouriensis" var. "missouriensis" : Missouri Goldenrod
** "Solidago missouriensis" var. "tenuissima" (Woot. & Standl.) C.& J. Taylor : Missouri Goldenrod
** "Solidago missouriensis" Nutt. var. "tolmieana" (Gray) Cronq. : Tolmies' Goldenrod
* "Solidago mollis" Bartl. : Velvety Goldenrod
** "Solidago mollis" var. "angustata" Shinners : Velvety Goldenrod
** "Solidago mollis" var. "mollis" : Velvety Goldenrod
* "Solidago multiradiata" Ait. : Rocky Mountain Goldenrod, Alpine Goldenrod
** "Solidago multiradiata" var. "arctica" (DC.) Fern. : Arctic Goldenrod
** "Solidago multiradiata" var. "multiradiata" : Rocky Mountain Goldenrod
** "Solidago multiradiata" var. "scopulorum" Gray : Manyray Goldenrod
* "Solidago nana" Nutt. : Baby Goldenrod
* "Solidago nemoralis" Ait. : Gray Goldenrod, American Western Goldenrod
** "Solidago nemoralis" var. "longipetiolata" (Mackenzie & Bush) Palmer & Steyermark : Gray Goldenrod
** "Solidago nemoralis" var. "nemoralis" : Gray Goldenrod
* "Solidago odora" Ait. : Anise-scented Goldenrod, Sweet Goldenrod
** "Solidago odora" var. "chapmanii" (Gray) Cronq. : Chapman's Goldenrod
** "Solidago odora" var. "odora" : Anise-scented Goldenrod
* "Solidago ouachitensis" C.& J. Taylor : Ouachita Mountain Goldenrod
* "Solidago patula" Muhl. ex Willd. : Roundleaf Goldenrod
** "Solidago patula" var. "patula" : Roundleaf Goldenrod
** "Solidago patula" var. "strictula" Torr. & Gray : Roundleaf Goldenrod
* "Solidago petiolaris" Ait. : Downy Ragged Goldenrod
** "Solidago petiolaris" var. "angusta" (Torr. & Gray) Gray : Downy Ragged Goldenrod
** "Solidago petiolaris" var. "petiolaris" : Downy Ragged Goldenrod
* "Solidago pinetorum" Small : Small's Goldenrod
* "Solidago plumosa" Small : Plumed Goldenrod
* "Solidago porteri" Small : Porter's Goldenrod
* "Solidago puberula" Nutt. : Downy Goldenrod (VU)
** "Solidago puberula" var. "puberula" : Downy Goldenrod
** "Solidago puberula" var. "pulverulenta" (Nutt.) Chapman : Downy Goldenrod
* "Solidago pulchra" Small : Carolina Goldenrod
* "Solidago radula" Nutt. : Western Rough Goldenrod
** "Solidago radula" var. "laeta" (Greene) Fern. : Western Rough Goldenrod
** "Solidago radula" var. "radula" : Western Rough Goldenrod
** "Solidago radula" var. "stenolepis" Fern. : Western Rough Goldenrod
* "Solidago roanensis" Porter : Roan Mountain Goldenrod (Endangered)
* "Solidago rugosa" P. Mill. : Wrinkleleaf Goldenrod, Rough-stemmed Goldenrod
** "Solidago rugosa" subsp. "aspera" (Ait.) Cronq. : Wrinkleleaf Goldenrod
** "Solidago rugosa" subsp. "rugosa" : Wrinkleleaf Goldenrod
*** "Solidago rugosa" subsp. "rugosa" var. "rugosa" : Wrinkleleaf Goldenrod
*** "Solidago rugosa" subsp. "rugosa" var. "sphagnophila" Graves : Wrinkleleaf Goldenrod
*** "Solidago rugosa" subsp. "rugosa" var. "villosa" (Pursh) Fern. : Wrinkleleaf Goldenrod
* "Solidago rupestris" Raf. : Eock Goldenrod
* "Solidago sciaphila" Steele : Shadowy Goldenrod
* "Solidago sempervirens" L. : Seaside Goldenrod, Beach Goldenrod
** "Solidago sempervirens" var. "mexicana" (L.) Fern. : Seaside Goldenrod
** "Solidago sempervirens" var. "sempervirens" : Seaside Goldenrod
* "Solidago shortii" Torr. & Gray : Short's Goldenrod (Endangered)
* "Solidago simplex" Kunth : Mt. Albert Goldenrod
* "Solidago simplex" subsp. "randii" (Porter) Ringius : Rand's Goldenrod
** "Solidago simplex" subsp. "randii" var. "gillmanii" (Gray) Ringius : Rand's Goldenrod
*** "Solidago simplex" subsp. "randii" var. "monticola" (Porter) Ringius : Rand's Goldenrod
*** "Solidago simplex" subsp. "randii" var. "ontarioensis" (Ringius) Ringius : Ontario Goldenrod
*** "Solidago simplex" subsp. "randii" var. "racemosa" (Greene) Ringius : Rand's Goldenrod
*** "Solidago simplex" subsp. "randii" var. "randii" (Porter) Kartesz & Gandhi : Rand's Goldenrod
** "Solidago simplex" subsp. "simplex" : Mt. Albert Goldenrod
*** "Solidago simplex" subsp. "simplex" var". nana" (Gray) Ringius : Dwarf Goldenrod
*** "Solidago simplex" subsp. "simplex" var. "simplex" : Mt. Albert Goldenrod
*** "Solidago simplex" subsp. "simplex" var. "spathulata" (DC.) Cronq. : Mt. Albert Goldenrod
* "Solidago simulans" Fern. : Fall Goldenrod
* "Solidago speciosa" Nutt. : Showy Goldenrod
** "Solidago speciosa" var. "erecta" (Pursh) MacM. : Showy Goldenrod
** "Solidago speciosa" var. "jejunifolia" (Steele) Cronq. : Showy Goldenrod
** "Solidago speciosa" var. "pallida" Porter :Showy Goldenrod
** "Solidago speciosa" var. "rigidiuscula" Torr. & Gray : Showy Goldenrod
** "Solidago speciosa" var. "speciosa" : Showy Goldenrod
* "Solidago spectabilis" (D.C. Eat.) Gray : Nevada Goldenrod
** "Solidago spectabilis" var. "confinis" (Gray) Cronq. : Nevada Goldenrod
**" Solidago spectabilis" var. "spectabilis" : Nevada Goldenrod
* "Solidago spathulata" : Mountain Goldenrod
* "Solidago sphacelata" Raf. : Autumn Goldenrod
* "Solidago spithamaea" M.A. Curtis : Blue Ridge Goldenrod
* "Solidago squarrosa" Nutt. : Stout Goldenrod, Big Goldenrod
* "Solidago stricta" Ait. : Wand Goldenrod
* "Solidago tortifolia" Ell. : Twistleaf Goldenrod
* "Solidago tenuifolia" : Slender Goldenrod
* "Solidago uliginosa" Nutt. : Bog Goldenrod
** "Solidago uliginosa" var. "levipes" (Fern.) Fern. : Bog Goldenrod
** "Solidago uliginosa" var. "linoides" (Torr. & Gray) Fern. : Bog Goldenrod
** "Solidago uliginosa" var. "terrae-novae" (Torr. & Gray) Fern. : Bog Goldenrod
** "Solidago uliginosa". var. "uliginosa" : Bog Goldenrod
* "Solidago ulmifolia" Muhl. ex Willd. : Elmleaf Goldenrod
** "Solidago ulmifolia" var. "microphylla" Gray : Elmleaf Goldenrod
** "Solidago ulmifolia" var. "palmeri" Cronq. : Palmer's Goldenrod
** "Solidago ulmifolia" var. "ulmifolia" : Elmleaf Goldenrod
* "Solidago velutina" DC. : Threenerve Goldenrod
* "Solidago verna" M.A. Curtis : Springflowering Goldenrod
* "Solidago virgaurea" : Goldenrod, Aaron’s Rod
* "Solidago wrightii" Gray : Wright's Goldenrod
** "Solidago wrightii" var. "adenophora" Blake : Wright's Goldenrod
** "Solidago wrightii" var. "wrightii" : Wright's Goldenrod

Natural hybrids

* "Solidago × asperula" Desf. ("S. rugosa" × "S. sempervirens")
* "Solidago × beaudryi" Boivin ("S. rugosa" × "S. uliginosa")
* "Solidago × erskinei" Boivin ("S. canadensis" × "S. sempervirens")
* "Solidago × ovata" Friesner ("S. sphacelata" × "S. ulmifolia")
* "Solidago × ulmicaesia" Friesner ("S. caesia" × "S. ulmifolia")

Note

ee also

* List of beneficial weeds
* List of companion plants

External links

* Goldenrod identification: http://www.ontariowildflower.com/goldenrods.htm
* Goldenrods as state flowers: http://www.geobop.com/Symbols/plants/flowers/goldenrods/
* [http://ontariowildflowers.com/main/group.php?id=2 Ontario Wildflowers website] More detail about Ontario's Goldenrods


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