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Collected on this day...

a weekly blog featuring specimens in the Carnegie Museum herbarium.
Each specimen has an important scientific and cultural story to tell.
This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation grant no. DBI 1612079 (2017-2019) and DBI 1801022 (2019-2022). Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

July 26, 1966: 54 years ago

7/26/2020

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Christmas in July...”santa claus” floating in the air.
 
(Or I guess, technically Boxing Day in July, if that’s a thing)

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Make a wish!

​Have you ever seen fluff floating by in the air, especially in late July, early August? Kids love chasing the fluff around, often referring to them as “Santas” or Santa Clauses.”  You catch it, make a wish, and let them go again, floating away.

 
These are seeds!  Most likely thistle seeds, like this specimen here.  Or other seeds that have similar “fluff’ like structures.  The botanical term for this “fluff” is pappus.  Pappus is a modified part of flowers in many species in the sunflower family, Asteraceae (think dandelion).  These structures help the seed disperse in the wind, floating away in the breeze, bringing the seed far away.  If you’ve tried to catch them, you know they float away in the air very easily.  The seeds are small, and often time have already disconnected from the pappus when you catch them.
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Check out the “santa claus” pappus on this specimen of bull thistle (Cirsium vulgare), collected on July 26, 1966 by Leroy Henry near Woodbine (Butler county), Pennsylvania.  Leroy Henry was a botany curator at the Carnegie Museum.  All species in the genus Cirsium are known as “thistles.”  They have distinctive spiny leaves and stems, with even more distinctive purple flower heads. There are native thistles, but many are introduced, common in disturbed areas and in and around agricultural fields across the country.  Bull thistle is native in Europe and Western Asia, but widely introduced across the world, including North America.  It is considered invasive in many areas.  It is the national flower of Scotland.
 
Keep an eye out for thistles, and “santa clauses.”  Don’t forget to make a wish.
 
Find this bull thistle specimens here: http://midatlanticherbaria.org/portal/collections/individual/index.php?occid=11831581&clid=0
​
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