Nomenclature

Common Name:

Florida goldenaster

Synonym(s):

Genus species:

Chrysopsis floridana

Family:

Asteraceae (Compositae)

Plant Specifics

Form:

flower

Size:

2 ft tall by 1 to 2 ft wide

Life Span:

Long-lived perennial

Flower Color:

yellow

Fruit Color:

brown,NA

Phenology:

Foliage is evergreen. Blooms late-October and November. Seeds in late-November to early-December.

Noted For:

Showy Flowers, Interesting Foliage

Landscaping

Recommended Uses:

Garden location where its silvery young foliage is visible but not where its somewhat weedy look at time of flowering (November) will be an issue.

Considerations:

This species is listed as Endangered by the USFWS and the State of Florida.  Please plant responsibly.

Availability:

Native Nurseries, Seed

Propagation:

Easily established from seed. Plant in December in sandy area at time of seed maturity.  

Light:

Full Sun

Moisture Tolerance:

Always Flooded------------------------------------------------Extremely Dry

Coming Soon!

Not wet but not extremely dry ---to--- 1Stays wet

Salt Water Flooding Tolerance:

Unknown

Salt Spray/Salty Soil Tolerance:

Low/no tolerance of salty wind or direct salt spray

Soil or Other Substrate:

Sand

Soil pH:

acidic to neutral

Suitable to Grow In:

9A,9B

Ecology

Wildlife:

Pollinators, Birds

Butterflies and bees including green metallic, sweat, leafcutter, bumble and mining bees ( Florida Wildflower Foundation ).

Primarily wind dispersed, but small birds consume seed.

Native Habitats:

Scrub. In openings and open ecotones. Disturbance is required for persistence of this species. This species can be seen at the Balm-Boyette and Golden Aster preserves in Hillsborough County.

Natural Range in Florida:

Comments:

Ethnobotany:

General Comments:

Foliage is showy, silvery gray green. Takes on a weed appearance at flowering time. This is an Endangered Florida endemic -- do not harvest plants from the wild.