Yellow Star-thistle

Yellow Star-thistle is a member of the sunflower family.  Each flowerhead is actually made up of 20-40 individual yellow flowers.  The spines on the sepals may still be sharp long after the plant is dead.  The Yellow Star-thistle plant is silvery-green when young and gray-green later in the season.  Yellow Star-thistle is not easily confused with any other species at Mather Field.

Scientific name: Centaurea solstitialis
Family: Asteraceae (sunflower)
Habitat: Disturbed areas, grassland
Size: Plant up to 2.5 feet tall, flower 5 cm across including spines

Life Cycle:

Yellow Star-thistle is an annual plant, so it dies off every year. It germinates in the late winter. In the beginning, it puts most of its energy into growing a very long taproot. Later, as most of the grassland begins to dry and turn brown, the Yellow Star-thistle grows above-ground very quickly. The long taproot allows it to find moisture still remaining in the soil, below the shallow grass roots. Yellow Star-thistle begins to bloom in May. It can bloom throughout the summer and fall.

Ecology:

Yellow Star-thistle is non-native and considered invasive because it competes with native species. It is particularly suited to occupy recently disturbed areas where it quickly becomes the dominant species. Yellow Star-thistle is so successful here because it uses the deep soil moisture which most native plants and non-native annual grasses cannot reach.

Yellow Star-thistle is insect-pollinated. During the late spring and summer when it is in bloom, there are very few native insects. Yellow Star-thistle is pollinated by domestic Honey Bees. If beekeepers were to remove their hives, few Yellow Star-thistle flowers would be pollinated. With reduced pollination, there would be fewer seeds produced.

Investigate:

Observe where Yellow Star-thistle grows at Mather Field. What are some of the reasons why it might grow there?