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These plants range from 46–120 centimetres (18–47 inches) in height. The flowers are usually yellow with a toothed tip, but can also be yellow-and-red bicolor or pink. [ 3 ] They have showy flower heads with involucral bracts in two distinct series of eight each, the outer being commonly connate at the base.
Coreopsis tinctoria, commonly known as plains coreopsis, garden tickseed, golden tickseed, or calliopsis, is an annual forb. The species is common in Canada (from Quebec to British Columbia ), northeast Mexico ( Coahuila , Nuevo León , Tamaulipas ), and most of the United States , especially the Great Plains and Southern States .
Coreopsis nuecensoides, commonly known as the Rio Grande tickseed, is a herbaceous, perennial flowering plant in the genus Coreopsis in the family Asteraceae. It is native to southern and southeastern Texas and may also occur in northern Mexico .
Hackelia virginiana, a biennial plant, is commonly known as beggar's lice, [2] [3] sticktight or stickseed. [3] However, the common names beggar's lice and stick-tight are also used for very different plants, such as Desmodium species that are also known as "tick-trefoil".
Coreopsis verticillata is a North American species of tickseed in the sunflower family.It is found primarily in the east-central United States, from Maryland south to Georgia, with isolated populations as far west as Oklahoma and as far north as Québec and Ontario. [2]
Coreopsis palmata is a North American species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae native to North America. Common names include stiff tickseed , wedgeleaf coreopsis , [ 2 ] prairie coreopsis , [ 3 ] prairie tickseed , [ 4 ] and finger coreopsis .
Coreopsis tripteris is a North American species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae. It is widespread across much of eastern and central North America from the Florida Panhandle west as far as eastern Texas and north to Québec and Ontario. [2] Its common names include tall tickseed, tall coreopsis, [3] and Atlantic coreopsis. [4]
Tickseed (also tick-seed and tick seed) is a common name for seeds of several plants that stick to fur, clothing, or other surfaces when the plant is brushed against. The term may refer to any such seed in general, but more specifically to: