Brickellia californica (Torr. & A.Gray) A.Gray is a plant in the Asteraceae family, order Asterales, kingdom Plantae. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Brickellia californica (Torr. & A.Gray) A.Gray (Brickellia californica (Torr. & A.Gray) A.Gray)
🌿 Plantae

Brickellia californica (Torr. & A.Gray) A.Gray

Brickellia californica (Torr. & A.Gray) A.Gray

Brickellia californica is a branching shrub native to western North America, used traditionally by two Indigenous groups for medicinal purposes.

Family
Genus
Brickellia
Order
Asterales
Class
Magnoliopsida
⚠️ Toxicity Note

Insufficient toxicity evidence; avoid direct contact and ingestion.

About Brickellia californica (Torr. & A.Gray) A.Gray

Brickellia californica (Torr. & A.Gray) A.Gray is a thickly branching shrub that reaches 5–200 cm (2–78.5 in) in height. Its leaves are fuzzy, glandular, roughly triangular in shape, with toothed to serrated edges, and measure 1 to 6 centimeters long. Inflorescences at the end of stem branches hold many small leaves and clusters of narrow, cylindrical flower heads. Each flower head is around 13 millimeters long, wrapped in overlapping, flat, wide, purplish green phyllaries. The tip of each head holds a number of long white to pink disc florets. This species blooms from August through November. Its fruit is a hairy cylindrical achene 3 millimeters long, with a bristly pappus. This plant is native to northern Mexico, specifically the states of Baja California, Sonora, Chihuahua, and Coahuila, as well as most of the western United States. Its range extends from California north to Oregon, northeast to Idaho and Wyoming, and east through the Southwestern states to Colorado, New Mexico, and West Texas. It grows at elevations below 2,700 metres (8,900 ft) in a wide variety of habitat types, including forests, woodlands, scrub, grasslands, and deserts. It is a common species across many habitat types in California, including chaparral, coastal sage scrub, oak woodland, valley grassland, yellow pine forest, Sierra Nevada subalpine zone, and Mojave Desert sky islands. The Navajo and Kumeyaay (Diegueño) peoples have traditionally used this plant as a medicinal plant to treat fevers, coughs, and prenatal complications.

Photo: (c) Mark K. James, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Mark K. James · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Plantae Tracheophyta Magnoliopsida Asterales Asteraceae Brickellia

More from Asteraceae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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