
Photo from Fort Bend County Master Gardeners, Texas Native Demonstration Garden |
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Skeleton-leaf goldeneye grows on rocky ground from the Rio Grande Valley to the Edwards Plateau, west to the Trans-Pecos. With its skeletal dark green leaves, golden daisies and rounded growth habit, it is an extremely ornamental shrub or sub-shrub. It adapts to most well-drained sites in full sun, and will benefit from being cut back to maintain a dense shrubby appearance. In its native habitat, skeleton-leaf goldeneye is evergreen, but farther north it will be only root hardy. This plant blooms intermittently through the summer and heavily in the fall. Its leaves contain aromatic oils which discourage heavy browsing by deer. It is a larval plant for some butterflies.
| Common Name | Skeleton-leaf Goldeneye, Golden Bush Daisy |
| Scientific Name | Viguiera stenoloba |
| Plant Habit or Use | small shrub |
| Exposure | sun |
| Flower Color | golden yellow |
| Blooming Period | summer fall |
| Fruit Characteristics | achene |
| Height | 1 1/2 to 3 feet |
| Width | 2 to 3 feet |
| Plant Character | herbaceous perennial evergreen |
| Heat Tolerance | very high |
| Soil Requirements | neutral alkaline |
Above information from aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu. |
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