| Description:Perennial from simple taproot, sometimes creeping.Stems erect, branching, 1 to 3-1/2 feet tall, white wooly. Lower leaves 3 to 10 inches long, hairy both sides, with spines 3/16 to 2-3/8 inches long. Upper leaves smaller, toothed, spiny. Flowers one to few, pink to lavender to white. Phyllaries tightly appressed to head, hairy on margins, with a prominent white glandular ridge. Habitat:Native from Nebraska to Texas, unintentionally introduced into California. Invades waste areas and rangelands, meadows of sagebrush communities.
Distribution: There is only one known location of wavyleaf thistle in northern California, a site near Loyalton (Sierra County). A yellowspine-wavyleaf thistle hybrid exists west of Termo (Lassen County).
Flowering Period: June to September.
 This page was created by the Bureau of Land Management |