Cirsium funkiae

Last updated

Funky thistle
Cirsium funkiae 62156559.jpg
Status TNC G3.svg
Vulnerable  (NatureServe)
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Cirsium
Species:
C. funkiae
Binomial name
Cirsium funkiae
Ackerf.

Cirsium funkiae, the funky thistle or Funk's thistle, is a species of thistle found in the United States. It was first described by American botanist Jennifer Ackerfield in 2022.

Contents

The funky thistle's common name refers to the plant's "funky" appearance, with a nodding woolly flower head, and additionally honors Ackerfield's mentor Vicki Funk, who was also described as funky. The funky thistle can be differentiated from the similar looking mountain thistle Cirsium scopulorum by the coloration of the style branches and corolla, and the nodding flowerhead that the funky thistle exhibits.

Taxonomy

Cirsium funkiae was discerned as a separate species by Jennifer Ackerfield, head curator at the Denver Botanic Gardens. [1] Ackerfield was cautious not to use the term "discovered", cautious that it was possible that local Indigenous peoples were already aware of the species' distinct identity prior to her description. [2] Ackerfield had begun studying the thistles in 2016 as a part of her PhD studies. [3] Jared Polis, Governor of Colorado, would later highlight the thistle's discovery on Twitter. [4] [5] The funky thistle was the first described living organism in the year of 2022 found in the Rocky Mountain Region. [2]

C. funkiae was formerly considered for more than 150 years as part of C. scopulorum , the mountain thistle. Specimens of both the funky and mountain thistle would be labeled under the same designation until it was separated. [3] Through molecular, geographic, and morphological analysis, it was deemed that the mountaintop thistle C. eatonii was polyphyletic and therefore should be split. [6] The species complex that was Cirsium eatonii was split in 2020, re-instating the former taxa C. clokeyi , C. murdockii , C. peckii , and C. tweedyi , as well as creating the taxa C. harrisonii and C. viperinum . [6] In addition, C. eatonii var. eriocephalum was additionally polyphyletic, and renamed Cirsium scopulorum. The original description for scopulorum described a "yellow corolla", but was in the geographic region of the pale purple variety. Additional notes stated that the flowers were possibly too young and thus unable to tell the color of the corolla in the first place. The pale purple variety thus received the designation of scopulorum, leaving the yellow variety undescribed. [6] Five species were separated from the former C. scopulorum complex. Cirsium culebraensis , C. funkiae, C. griseum , C. hesperium , and C. scopulorum . Two species, C. funkiae and C. culebraensis. [6] Discoveries of plants such as C. funkiae can help researchers determine climate change-induced effects on species distribution and interaction. [3]

The holotype specimen is housed in the Kathryn Kalmbach Herbarium at Denver Botanic Gardens. [7] It was selected to be the institution's 100,000th accession into the natural history collections on March 7, 2023. [8]

Description

Closeup of the funky thistle's flowers Cirsium funkiae 22671132.jpg
Closeup of the funky thistle's flowers

The funky thistle is a hairy perennial herb that grows up to 3 feet (0.91 m) in height. The plant has yellow branches with pale yellow flowers that turn brown with age that grow in fuzzy clusters. [4] [6] The leaves are oblong or narrowly elliptic and undulate. The leaves are pinnately divided and are 8–25 centimetres (3.1–9.8 in) in length and 1.5–3.5 centimetres (0.59–1.38 in) in width. The leaves range from smooth to hairy in texture. The seeds are dark brown or grayish brown in color, and are 4–6 millimetres (0.16–0.24 in) in length. It flowers from mid-July until late-August, the plant begins to fruit from mid-August to early September. [6] Jennifer Ackerfield, who described it, said it was the "funkiest of all new thistles". [4]

A bumblebee nestled in one of the funky thistle's flowerheads Cirsium funkiae 176331725.jpg
A bumblebee nestled in one of the funky thistle's flowerheads

Ackerfield described the coloration of the style branches, corolla, and the head position (whether erect or nodding), as the best characteristics toward identifying the alpine thistles in the Southern Rocky Mountains. [6] The style branches are yellow in color. The corolla is pale yellow in color, turning brown as it ages. The anther tube is white in color, alternatively pale yellow with brown stripes. The flower head grows in a nodding, terminal cluster. [6] The thistle differs from the similar Cirsium scopulorum in its style branches being yellow rather than white, pale pink, or purple, but similar due to their nodding terminal arrangement of the heads. [6]

The large plants serve as food sources for a variety of pollinators in its habitat. [3] The plant is visited by bumblebees ( Bombus sp.), who often overnight in the fuzzy flowerheads to stay warm. The leaves are often foraged by the American pika ( Ochotona princeps ) during the months of August and September. [6] [9] [3]

Range

The funky thistle in its native habitat Cirsium funkiae 22671131.jpg
The funky thistle in its native habitat

The type specimen was collected at the base of Mount Sherman in Pike National Forest. [6] The funky thistle is found on the mountaintops on the Sangre de Cristo Range, Mosquito Range, and Tenmile Range in central and southern Colorado. Its range extends as far north as Breckenridge, Colorado, and as far south as Santa Fe, New Mexico, where it exists as an isolated population. [6] [3]

Habitat

The plant grows in higher elevations above the tree line. [3] among spruce and fir forests and alpine tundra, although it is mainly grows in alpine meadows, boulder fields, or rocky scree slopes. At lower elevations it grows in association with Bistorta bistortoides , Picea engelmannii , Potentilla pulcherrima , and Sibbaldia procumbens . [6] In rocky slopes and meadows it grows in association with: Cirsium griseum , Carex scopulorum , Castilleja miniata , Castilleja occidentalis , Claytonia megarhiza , Geum rossii , Senecio atratus , Senecio fremontii , Polemonium confertum , and Trifolium dasyphyllum . In its highest locations on scree slopes, it is often the only species of plant found, or can be found associated with Senecio soldanella . [6] One specimen was growing in a rocky tundra environment alongside Cerastium beeringianum , Heuchera parviflora , Pentaphylloides floribunda , and Trifolium dasyphyllum . [10]

Conservation

The funky thistle is safe from some threats due a combination of its alpine distribution which make access difficult and its location primarily in US federally owned land. [6] The populations are currently thought to be stable. The thistle can be threatened by members of the public who assume the thistle is an invasive species and thus uproot and leave it on the side of hiking trails. [6]

Etymology

The specific epithet honors Vicki Funk, who passed away in 2019 just before the study was completed, and was Jennifer Ackerfield's mentor. [3] The name was chosen because of her work in the field of Compositae research at the Smithsonian Institution and to highlight her position of leadership in the study. [6] Funk was known for having a funky personality, [3] and Ackerfield remarked that Funk would have a special tune that she would sing when she was pricked by a thistle she was collecting, "Ooh Eeh Ooh Ah Aah Ting Tang Walla Walla Bing Bang" (Ross Bagdasarian's "Witch Doctor"), and that she wanted to honor the "funkiest of all thistles". [4] [9] [3] Ackerfield described the plant's dense mass of noddy wooly heads as "funky indeed". [6] [4]

Related Research Articles

<i>Cirsium</i> Genus of flowering plants in the daisy family Asteraceae

Cirsium is a genus of perennial and biennial flowering plants in the Asteraceae, one of several genera known commonly as thistles. They are more precisely known as plume thistles. These differ from other thistle genera in having feathered hairs to their achenes. The other genera have a pappus of simple unbranched hairs.

<i>Cirsium vulgare</i> Species of flowering plant in the daisy family Asteraceae

Cirsium vulgare, the spear thistle, bull thistle, or common thistle, is a species of the Asteraceae genus Cirsium, native throughout most of Europe, Western Asia, and northwestern Africa. It is also naturalised in North America, Africa, and Australia and is an invasive weed in some areas. It is the national flower of Scotland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Setaceous Hebrew character</span> Species of moth

The setaceous Hebrew character is a moth of the family Noctuidae. The species was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. It is found in the Palearctic realm. It is a common species throughout Europe and North Asia and Central Asia, South Asia, China, Japan and Korea. It is also found in North America, from coast to coast across Canada and the northern United States to western Alaska. It occurs in the Rocky Mountains from Montana to southern Arizona and New Mexico. In the east, it ranges from Maine to North Carolina. It has recently been recorded in Tennessee.

<i>Juniperus scopulorum</i> Western North American species of juniper

Juniperus scopulorum, the Rocky Mountain juniper, is a species of juniper native to western North America, from southwest Canada to the Great Plains of the United States and small areas of northern Mexico. They are the most widespread of all the New World junipers. They are relatively small trees, occasionally just a large bush or stunted snag. They tend to be found in isolated groves or even as single trees rather than as the dominant tree of a forest. Though they can survive fires, they are quite vulnerable to it and this is one of the factors that can limit their spread into grasslands. They are important to wildlife, providing shelter and food to a range of species from small birds and mammals to deer and bighorn sheep. The primary human use is in landscaping for aesthetic purposes, to shelter habitations, or attract fruit eating birds. Though they are also used in small amounts for their insect repellent and rot resistant wood or as firewood for heating.

<i>Cirsium fontinale</i> Species of thistle

Cirsium fontinale, the fountain thistle, is a flowering perennial herb in the family Asteraceae. It is endemic to California. The genus Cirsium is commonly known as the "thistle" genus, Cirsium being the Greek word for 'thistle.'

<i>Erigeron eatonii</i> Species of flowering plant

Erigeron eatonii is a North American species of flowering plants in the family Asteraceae known by the common name Eaton's fleabane.

<i>Zygaena lonicerae</i> Species of moth

Zygaena lonicerae, the narrow-bordered five-spot burnet, is a moth of the family Zygaenidae. The species was first described by Theodor Gottlieb von Scheven in 1777.

<i>Phlox diffusa</i> Species of flowering plant

Phlox diffusa is a species of phlox known by the common name spreading phlox. It is native to western North America from British Columbia to the southwestern United States to the Dakotas, where it grows in many types of habitat, including rocky, high elevation mountain slopes. It is a very compact mat-forming perennial herb growing in cushions or patches of short, decumbent stems. The linear, lance-shaped, or needle-like leaves are no more than 1.5 centimeters long and are oppositely arranged in bundles on the short stems. The inflorescence is a solitary tubular flower around a centimeter long. It has a flat white or pale pink or blue corolla with five lobes each just under a centimeter in length.

<i>Ribes montigenum</i> Berry and plant

Ribes montigenum is a species of currant known by the common names mountain gooseberry, alpine prickly currant, western prickly gooseberry, and gooseberry currant. It is native to western North America from Washington south to California and east as far as the Rocky Mountains, where it grows in high mountain habitat types in subalpine and alpine climates, such as forests and talus. It is a spreading shrub growing up to 1.5 meters tall, the branching stems covered in prickles and hairs and bearing 1 to 5 sharp spines at intervals.

<i>Senecio pattersonensis</i> Species of flowering plant

Senecio pattersonensis is an uncommon species of flowering plant in the aster family known by the common names Mono ragwort. and Mount Patterson senecio.

<i>Cirsium vinaceum</i> Species of thistle

Cirsium vinaceum is a rare species of thistle known by the common name Sacramento Mountains thistle. It is endemic to Otero County, New Mexico, in the United States, where it is known only from the Sacramento Mountains. The plant can be found in six canyon systems in a southern section of this mountain range spanning about 32 kilometers. It is rare because it is limited to a specific type of mountain wetland which is both naturally uncommon and threatened by a number of forces. The plant was federally listed as threatened in 1987.

<i>Cirsium eatonii</i> Species of thistle

Cirsium eatonii, commonly known as Eaton's thistle or mountaintop thistle, is a North American species of flowering plants in the family Asteraceae.

<i>Cirsium perplexans</i> Species of thistle

Cirsium perplexans is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae known by the common names Rocky Mountain thistle and Adobe Hills thistle. It is endemic to Colorado in the United States, where it occurs in the Colorado and Gunnison River Valleys in the Rocky Mountains.

Cirsium barnebyi, or Barneby's thistle, is a North American plant species native to the Rocky Mountains of the western United States. It grows in juniper woodlands, sagebrush scrub, etc., at elevations of 1,600–2,600 m (5,200–8,500 ft). It is reported from 6 counties in 3 states: Rio Blanco and Garfield Counties, Colorado; Uintah, Carbon and Duchesne Counties, Utah; and Carbon County, Wyoming.

Cirsium wheeleri is a North American species of plants in the tribe Cardueae within the family Asteraceae. Common names include Wheeler's thistle. It is native to northern Mexico and the southwestern United States.

<i>Penstemon secundiflorus</i> Species of flowering plant

Penstemon secundiflorus, commonly known as sidebells penstemon, or orchid beardtoungue is a species of Penstemon that grows in dry forests, high plains, and scrub lands from Wyoming to Mexico. It is a herbaceous perennial plant that typically grows to a height of 20 to 50 cm and has narrow, lance-shaped leaves that are grayish-green in color. The flowers of the sidebells penstemon are tubular in shape and are arranged in a one-sided spike, with the blooms all facing the same direction, and for this reason was named "secundiflorus", which means "one-sided flowers". The flowers are most often delicate shades of orchid or lavender. It is sometimes used in xeriscaping, rock gardens, and wildflower meadows, and is well-suited to dry, sunny locations with well-drained soil.

<i>Castilleja rhexiifolia</i> Species of flowering plant in the family Orobanchaceae

Castilleja rhexiifolia, commonly called rosy paintbrush, subalpine paintbrush, or rhexia-leaved paintbrush, is a species of plant in Orobanchaceae, commonly known as the broomrape family. They are a common flower found in moist habitats near or above timberline in the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Northwest. Like most members of the Castilleja genus, they are partially parasitic plants.

References

  1. Chavira, Danielle (15 February 2022). "Colorado Researchers Discover New Plant In Leadville's High Country". CBS Denver . Archived from the original on 17 February 2022. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  2. 1 2 Bird, Erin. "FUNKY THISTLE IS FIRST NEW SPECIES OF 2022". Denver Botanic Gardens . Archived from the original on 16 February 2022. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Gilbert, David (15 February 2022). "Researchers have found a new plant in Colorado's high country: the "funky thistle"". The Colorado Sun . Archived from the original on 15 March 2022. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Cutler, Alison (16 February 2022). "Plant? Alien? A newly identified thistle is 'funkiest of all,' Colorado botanist says". Idaho Statesman . Archived from the original on 26 April 2022. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  5. Nistel, Kelsey (17 February 2022). "New Plant Species Identified in Colorado's Rocky Mountains". Townsquare Fort Collins. Archived from the original on 20 March 2022. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Ackerfield, Jennifer (29 January 2022). "Hiding in plain sight: Two new species of alpine thistles, Cirsium culebraensis and C. funkiae (Cardueae) from the southern Rocky Mountains (United States)" (PDF). Capitulum. 1 (2): 1–15. doi:10.53875/capitulum.01.2.01. S2CID   246436726. Archived (PDF) from the original on 18 February 2022. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  7. "Cirsium funkiae holotyope". SEINet. Symbiota. Retrieved 9 March 2023.
  8. "100,000th Accession". Instagram. Retrieved 9 March 2023.
  9. 1 2 Hampton, Daniel (18 February 2022). "Hiding In Plain Sight: 'Funky' Thistle Species Found In Colorado". Denver, CO Patch. Archived from the original on 15 March 2022. Retrieved 26 April 2022.
  10. "Consortium of Intermountain Herbaria Detailed Collection Record Information". Kathryn Kalmbach Herbarium. Archived from the original on 26 April 2022. Retrieved 26 April 2022.