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Dandelion

Taraxacum officinale F.H. Wigg.

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Dandelion
Dandelion
Dandelion
Dandelion
Dandelion
Dandelion
Dandelion

Morphology

Stem
Stemless
Leaves
In basal rosette, simple, crowded, 20+, horizontal to erect, oblong-lanceolate in outline, 1.6 to 12 inches long, .4 to 6 inches wide, containing milky sap; margins variously lobed to toothed; terminal lobe often largest, rounded-triangular; surfaces often lightly pubescent, particularly below and on midvein; tapering at base to narrowly winged, indistinct stalk.
Inflorescence
Head, solitary, .4 to 1.2 inch wide, terminal on leafless flowering stalk; flowering stalks 1 to 10, erect or ascending, hollow, soft-hairy to glabrous.
Flower
Involcure bell-shaped, .6 to 1 inch tall; involcural bracts in 2 series; outer bracts lanceolate, 13-20, short, reflexed with age, sometimes purplish; inner bracts mostly 13-23, long, erect; florets ray-like, .4 to .6 inch long, 40-100+, yellow.
Fruit
Achene, cone-shaped, slightly flattened, 1/8 to 1/6 inch long, brownish, tapering to thin beak, tipped with numerous white bristles, resembling ribbed parachute, enclosing small seed. Mature achenes and pappus form conspicuous balls.

Ecology

Habitat
Lawns, waste areas, pastures, disturbed sites, roadsides, stream banks, crop and fallow fields, damp low areas; all soil types.
Distribution
Throughout Kansas.
Reproduction
By seeds

Practical Information

Forage Value
Readily consumed by livestock but provides only fair forage value. Rabbits, wild turkeys, deer and small mammals eat the leaves. Prairie chickens and other birds eat the seeds.
Uses
The large taproot has been used as a coffee substitute, the flowering heads made into wine, and the green leaves used in salads. The leaves are a source of vitamin A and iron and are said to supply higher levels than spinach. Mature leaves are bitter. Native Americans used the leaves as greens and pot herbs, made a poultice of steamed leaves which was applied to stomachaches and sore throats, took a tea of the roots for heartburn and anemia, and steeped the whole plant and took the liquid as a laxative. The hollow flowering stems were made into whistles.

Additional Notes

Comments

Dandelion is an abundant weed. From French dent de lion, "tooth of the lion", probably alluding to the leaf shape.

Special Notes: The basal rosette of leaves resembles that of tuber false dandelionPyrrhopappus grandiflorus
Quick Facts
Plant Type
Wildflower
Family
Asteraceae - Sunflower Family
Life Span
Perennial
Height
2-16 inches
Origin
Introduced
Last Updated
2009-05-01
Color Groups
Yellow Wildflowers
Flowering Period
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Blooms: April, May, June, July, August, September