Language selection

Search


COSEWIC assessment and status report on the Annual Saltmarsh Aster Symphyotrichum subulatum in Canada / Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada.CW69-14/756-2017E-PDF

"Annual Saltmarsh Aster (previously assessed by COSEWIC as Bathurst Aster) is a small annual herb of brackish marshes and shores. In Canada, it is typically under 30 cm, and often under 10 cm tall, though it can grow much larger in the U.S.A. Stems are typically extensively branched with 5-60 heads (clusters of tiny bluish-white ray florets and yellow disk florets) in a pyramidal inflorescence. The short ray florets distinguish this species from co-occurring aster species"--Wildlife Species Description and Significance, p. iv.

Permanent link to this Catalogue record:
publications.gc.ca/pub?id=9.840665&sl=0

Publication information
Department/Agency
  • Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada.
  • Canadian Wildlife Service.
  • Canada. Environment and Climate Change Canada.
TitleCOSEWIC assessment and status report on the Annual Saltmarsh Aster Symphyotrichum subulatum in Canada / Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada.
Variant title
  • Annual Saltmarsh Aster Symphyotrichum subulatum in Canada
Publication typeMonograph
Language[English]
Other language editions[French]
FormatDigital text
Electronic document
Note(s)
  • Title from cover.
  • "Not at risk 2017"--Cover.
  • Issued also in French under title: Évaluation et rapport de situation du COSEPAC sur l'aster subulé Symphyotrichum subulatum au Canada.
  • Includes bibliographical references.
Publishing information
  • Ottawa : Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canadian Wildlife Service, 2017.
Descriptionxii, 52 p. : maps, photos
ISBN978-0-660-09233-1
Catalogue number
  • CW69-14/756-2017E-PDF
Subject terms
Request alternate formats
To request an alternate format of a publication, complete the Government of Canada Publications email form. Use the form’s “question or comment” field to specify the requested publication.

Page details