Solidago nemoralis Aiton subsp. nemoralis

  • Filed As

    Asteraceae
    Solidago nemoralis Aiton subsp. nemoralis

  • Collector(s)

    P. Butter 576 with D. Cummings, 17 Sep 2022

  • Location

    United States of America. New York. Westchester Co. Pound Ridge. Ward Pound Ridge Reservation, Meadow, 55 meters south of Boutonville Road, 715 meters east of Kimberly Bridge.

  • Habitat

    Successional northern sandplain grassland. with Solidago rugosa, Rubus flagellaris, and Symphyotrichum patens. Infrequent.

  • Description

    Herb. Growing in small colonies on south edge of meadow. Plants to 65cm tall. Flowers yellow. Phenology of specimen: Flower.

  • Identifiers

    NY Barcode: 05027548

    Occurrence ID: 8d12d705-a17a-4fda-bab3-1bbc675002c5

  • Feedback

    Send comments on this specimen record

  • Region

    North America

  • Country

    United States of America

  • State/Province

    New York

  • County/Municipio

    Westchester Co.

  • City/Township

    Pound Ridge

  • Locality

    Ward Pound Ridge Reservation, Meadow, 55 meters south of Boutonville Road, 715 meters east of Kimberly Bridge

  • Elevation

    Alt. 126 m. (413 ft.)

  • Coordinates

    41.2583, -73.5685

  • Distribution

    Map all specimens of this taxon

    No botanical uses.

Flora of the Ward Pound Ridge Reservation
ASTERACEAE
Solidago nemoralis Aiton ssp. nemoralis
Det., Patricia Butter, 17 September 2022
United States of America. New York: Westchester County. Town of
Pound Ridge. Ward Pound Ridge Reservation, Meadow, 55 meters south of
Boutonville Road, 715 meter east of Kimberly Bridge, 41.2583384 Lat, -
73.5685311 Lon (WGS84 ±30m); 126 meters elev. Successional northern
sandplain grassland with Solidago rugosa, Rubus flagellaris, and
Symphyotrichum patens.
Infrequent. Growing in small colonies on south edge of meadow. Plants to
65cm tall. Flowers yellow.
Photographs of plant and habitat uploaded to iNaturalist
www.inaturalist.org/observations/135702298
Patricia Butter, Devon Cummings 574	17	SEPT 2022
Project funded by the Friends of Trailside Museum
05027548