Solidago gracillima

Gracile Goldenrod

Solidago gracillima range Semple draft

Solidago gracillima Torr. & A. Gray is a very distinctive species in subsect. Maritimae.  Only its lowermost stem leaves bases sheath the stem and these are oblanceolate and serrate and often absent by flowering.  The stem leaves are quickly reduced and become entire and linear lanceolate to linear.  The inflorescence usually has a few very long arching branches well below the terminal arching cluster of heads.  Small plants can produce simple inflorescences like small versions of the the inflorescences of S. virgataÌý(S. stricta sensu authors not Ait.). Semple (2012) clarified the limits of the species and noted that nomenclatural holotype exemplified the characteristic large plant inflorescence.  The species is diploid (2n=18) in South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida (see Semple and Cook 2022 for cytogeography).

The species has been treated in various ways in floras resulting in confusion in the literature about the application of the name.  Semple (2012) discussed the different applications of the name and how it had  included several species in synonymy in some treatments or was itself included in other species. For example, Solidago austrina was included in S. stricta Aiton subsp. gracillimaÌý(Torr. & A. Gray) Semple in FNA (), but all are treated here as a separate species.  In a multivariate analysis of the S. strictaÌý³¦´Ç³¾±è±ô±ð³æ,ÌýS. gracillima was well supported as a distinct species (Semple et al. 2016). In the polygenomic phylogeny of the genus (Semple et al. 2023), S. gracillima was the basal branch of the sect. Maritimae clade.

The species is native sandy soils at the the edges of woods and along road embankments in the southeastern U.S.  It appears to be adapted to more seasonally dry habitats that typical for species in subsect. Maritimae. It can be locally common but populations are scattered.  Its distribution is more restricted than indicated in the literature (e.g., FNA).

Semple, J.C.  2012.  Typification of Solidago gracillimaÌý(Asteraceae: Astereae) and application of the name.  Phytoneuron 2012-107: 1-10.

Semple, J.C., T. Shea, M. El-Swesi, H. Rahman, and Y. Ma. 2016.  A multivariate study of the Solidago stricta complex  (Asteraceae: Astereae: S.Ìý²õ³Ü²ú²õ±ð³¦³Ù.ÌýMaritimae). Phytoneuron 2016-86. 1-34.

Semple, J.C. and R.E. Cook. 2022. Cytogeography of SolidagoÌý²õ±ð³¦³Ù.ÌýMaritimaeÌý(Asteraceae: Astereae). Ann. Mo. Bot. Garden 107: 21-31.

Semple, J.C., H. McMinn-Sauder, M. Stover, A.Lemmon, E. Lemmon, and J.B. Beck. 2023. Goldenrod herbariomics: Hybrid-sequence capture reveals the phylogeny of diploid Solidago. Amer. J. Bot. 110(7): e16164.https://doi.org/10.1002/ajb2.16164


Last revised 12 April 2025 by J.C. Semple

© 2025 J.C. Semple, including all photographs unless otherwise indicated

1-6. Solidago gracillima. 1. Habitat, Semple & B. Semple 11836, Grady Co.Georgia. 2. Flowering shoot, Semple & Suripto 9814, Barnwell Co., South Carolina. 3. Godfrey 60447 MT, Florida. 4. Seedling-grown rosette, Anderson 25350, Florida. 5. Heads on lateral inflorescence branch, S & Su 9814. 6. Disc floret fruits, S & Su 9814.