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The Pale Purple Coneflower is a native wildflower to Eastern and Central North America. It may be found from Wisconsin and Michigan then south to Texas and Louisiana. It also is native to Ontario, Canada and has been found scattered in some eastern states between Maine and Georgia.
Echinacea pallida, commonly known as pale purple coneflower, is a coarse, hairy perennial of prairies, savannahs, glades and open dry rocky woods from Nebraska to Michigan south to Georgia and Texas. It features narrow, parallel-veined, toothless, dark green leaves (4-10” long) and large, daisy-like flowers with drooping, pale pinkish-purple ...
Aside from the subtle form and color of its elegant flowers, Echinacea pallida, commonly known as Pale Purple Coneflower also features a dark green foliage of long, slender, toothless leaves. Blooming from late spring to midsummer, this attractive upright perennial is worthy of a place in pollinator gardens, perennial borders, prairies, or ...
Pale Purple Coneflower grows up to 3' feet tall and has very pale purple to pink flowers. It blooms in early summer when only a few of the sun loving plants are in bloom and provides nectar for hummingbirds and butterflies, and the leaves provide food for the Ottoe-skipper larva.
Pale Purple Coneflower might be the most graceful of the native coneflowers. Their long, delicate petals droop down like modernist ballerina tutus. Sitting atop is a perfect waystation for pollinators and birds.
Pale purple coneflower is a hardy, adaptable, summer perennial that attracts a variety of pollinators. Low maintenance and stunning when in bloom, this plant could be a great addition to a butterfly, pollinator, native, or cottage garden.
Photos and information about Minnesota flora - Pale Purple Coneflower: 15 to 20 drooping narrow purplish-pink to nearly white petals and a large brown bulbous center disk.
A native of midwestern and southern states, pale purple coneflower is considered to be non-native in New England, where it is recorded from Connecticut, Massachusetts and Maine. It is sometimes grown in gardens, and the roots are used in herbal medicine, as are the roots of eastern purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea).
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The pale purple coneflower has a deep taproot that helps make the plant highly drought tolerant. Flower color can vary considerably from rose-purple to nearly white, a result of free natural hybridization and ecotype/genotype influence. Echinacea pallida is threatened in Tennessee and Wisconsin.