Skip to content

Stemless carline thistle

Carlina acaulis

Family: Asteraceae Genus: Carlina Species: acaulis

Synonyms: Carlina subacaulis var. acaulis, Carlina subacaulis, Carlina grandiflora, Chromatolepis acaulis, Carlina officinalis, Carlina chamaeleon

Stemless carline thistle (en)
Carlina acaulis โ€” flower
Carlina acaulis โ€” flower

Western Herbalism Properties

Actions:
antispasmodiccarminativediaphoreticdiureticantimicrobial

Botanical Description

Carlina acaulis (stemless carline thistle, silver thistle) is a strikingly low-growing perennial in the daisy family (Asteraceae), forming a flat basal rosette of stiff, deeply pinnatilobate leaves with strongly spiny-toothed margins, the rosette reaching about 20 cm in diameter. True to its name, the plant is essentially stemless: a single large solitary flower head sits at the centre of the rosette directly on the ground (or, in subspecies caulescens, on a very short stem). The head can reach 7โ€“15 cm across and is surrounded by many spreading rows of dry, papery, silvery-white to straw-yellow inner involucral bracts that simulate ray florets, encircling a broad disc of tubular yellowish-brown to pinkish florets that bloom from July to September. The fruit is a hairy achene topped with a feathery pappus. Native to the mountain meadows, chalk grasslands, and dry stony pastures of central and southern European Alpine and sub-Alpine regions from lowland valleys up to about 2,800 m, the flower head famously closes in damp weather.

Native Region: Albania, Austria, Belarus, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Poland, Romania, Spain, Switzerland, Transcaucasus, Ukraine, Yugoslavia

Cultural & Historical Context

Traditional American Uses

None Documented

Chemistry & External Identifiers

Trefle ID
21916

Important Disclaimer

This information is for educational purposes only and is not intended to replace professional medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before using any herbal remedy, especially if you are pregnant, nursing, or taking medications.