Antennaria plantaginifolia (known by the common names plantain leaf pussytoes and woman's tobacco)[1] is a perennial forb native to the eastern North America, that produces cream colored composite flowers in spring.
Antennaria plantaginifolia is rarely more than 15sp=usNaNsp=us tall, consisting of a basal rosette, and an erect stem which bears the inflorescence, a tight flat topped cluster of 4 to 17 fuzzy flower heads composed exclusively of disc flowers, with no ray flowers. The basal leaves are petiolate, oval to roundish, 3.5to long and 1.5to wide, with 3 to 7 prominent veins. The under side of the leaves is covered in thick silvery hair. Additional leaves along the stem are lanceolate and smaller. The fruit are cypselae with a pappus of white bristles. Antennaria plantaginifolia is dioecious, meaning that the male and female flowers are borne on separate plants. It often forms colonies, sometimes consisting entirely of male or female plants. It does so in part through vegetative reproduction. Stolons emerging from the basal rosette take root and develop into new plants.[2] [3]
Antennaria plantaginifolia is widely distributed in the eastern North America from Quebec and Nova Scotia west to Minnesota and south to Mississippi, Arkansas, and Florida, with isolated populations in eastern Texas and Saskatchewan. In Virginia, it grows in habitats including dry forests, barrens, and meadows.[4] The presence of this species is dependent on appropriate habitat, and it may be eliminated from an area by development, changes in land use, or competition with invasive species.
In North America, the plant was nominally called "Indian tobacco", as it was often chewed by children in place of real tobacco.[5]
This species is host to the following insect induced gall:
thumb|left|Asynapta antennariae gallexternal link to gallformers