By Judi Buckley, Native Plants Class

By Judi Buckley, Native Plants Class

<p>Achillea millefolium L. by Judi Buckley, Native Plants Class Common Names: Yarrow, thousand leaf, old man’s pepper, knight’s milfoil, soldier’s woundwort. Family: Asteracea Synonymy: Etymology: Achillea refers to the Greek hero, Achilles, who used this plant to heal his soldier’s wounds. The species name, millefolium, means “thousand leaves” in reference to the many fine dissections of the leaf (4).</p><p>Identification Growth Form: Rhizomatous, perennial forb, often growing in small clumps. Stems : Stems erect, 30 -80 cm tall, branching toward the top. Grayish-green appearance caused by white, silky, oppressed hairs. Roots: Vigorous, horizontal rootstalks (3). Leaves: Aromatic, finely dissected, bi-pinnate leaves with fern-like appearance (1). Narrowly oblong to lanceolate in outline, alternate. Sparsely woolly atop while glandular underneath (5). Those of basal offshoots and lower portion of the stem usually largest and longest petioled. Leaves reduced and sessile upward on the stem. Inflorescence/Flower: Small white, cream colored or sometimes pinkish flower heads arranged in rounded to flat topped terminal clusters. Fruiting/Reproduction: Fruits are small achenes. Regenerates from rhizomes and from colonization through short distance wind dispersal of seeds.</p><p>Ecology Life History: Perennial Native/ Introduced: Native to Eurasia but widely naturalized in the U.S. (3). Photosynthetic pathway: Phenology: Flowers from June - August. Fruiting from August – September. Distribution/habitat: Circumboreal in North America. Grows from Alaska, across Canada, throughout the U.S. and into northern Mexico. Common Yarrow occurs on grasslands and shrubby plains to subalpine zones (3, 5).</p><p>Uses Wildlife: Cattle graze it moderately, while sheep and pronghorn select flower heads. Deer, rabbits, small rodents and grouse use its foliage (3). Ethnobotanical: Used medicinally by at least 58 different Indian tribes to stop bleeding of wounds, to treat sores, to alleviate colds and as a mild laxative (2). The Lakota Sioux name for yarrow translates into “Wound Medicine”. Cheyenne call it “cough medicine” (2). </p><p>References</p><p>1. Christopher, John R. 1996. School of Natural Healing. Christopher Publications, Springville, Utah, USA. 2. Gilmore, Melvin R. 1991. Uses of Plants by the Indians of the Missouri River Regions. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, Nebraska, USA. 3. Johnson, James R., and Gary E. Larson. 1999. Grassland Plants of the Northern Great Plains. South Dakota State University, Brookings, South Dakota, USA. 4. Kindscher, Kelly. 1992. Medicinal Wild Plants of the Prairie. University Press of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas, USA. 5. Larsen, Gary E., and James Johnson. Plants of the Black Hills and ear Lodge Mountains. South Dakota State University, Brookings, South Dakota, USA.</p>

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