Parthenium confertum, or Gray's feverfew, is a biennial plant belonging to the family Asteraceae.
As can be confirmed on a page displaying images of different Parthenium speciesâÂÂthe "feverfews"âÂÂdocumented by citizen scientists throughout the world, Gray's feverfew is typical of the 16 or so feverfew species by producing a certain kind of flowering arrangement with these traits:
Among features distinguishing Gray's feverfew from similar species of Parthenium are these:
Unlike some other Parthenium species whose injured parts produce white latex historically used as a natural source for rubber, Parthenium confertum produces no white latex.
In the Southwestern United States Parthenium confertum occurs in the states of Arizona, New Mexico and Texas. In eastern Mexico it reaches as far south as the state of Querétaro in the country's central highlands. In western Mexico it occurs in the states of Baja California, Sonora and Sinaloa.
In the US state of New Mexico Gray's feverfew inhabits dry, sandy, rocky soils of mesas, canyons, hillsides, prairies, pinyon-juniper woodlands, scrub, grasslands and disturbed areas such as roadsides, at elevations of ~1200 â 2100 meters (3580âÂÂ7000 feet). Pictures on this page show an individual occupying a patch of prairie in an open forest on a slope of the Edwards Plateau at an elevation of ~1750m (~5750 feet).
Four varieties of Parthenium confertum are accepted:
Through natural hybridization in northeastern Mexico, Parthenium confertum along with Parthenium bipinnatifidum are reported to have produced the famously invasive and toxic weed Parthenium hysterophorus.
Parthenium confertum, with a chromosome count of 35, is a polyploid.
The genus name Parthenium probably either derives from the Greek parthenos, which means "virgin", or parthenion, the ancient name of some kind of plant. The allusion is unclear.
The species name confertum apparently is derived from the New Latin confertus, meaning "crowded/pressed together/thronging," which is a good description of how the numerous disk florets are crowded into such a small space in the flowering heads.