Cupid's dart is a short-lived
perennial herbaceous plant, of 20–90 cm (8-36 in) high.
Leaves and stems There is a basal
rosette of many linear leaves of 2–20 cm long and .25-.75 cm wide, which may be entire or are
pinnately incised, creating linear lobes mostly directed towards the tip. The leaves are covered in long soft woolly hairs (pilose) lying on the surface, giving both leaf surfaces a greyish green color. The leaf tips may be blunt or pointy, and the leaf blade gradually narrows to the main vein at the base of the leaf. From the heart of the rosette one or a few, strongly branched, erect, again woolly haired and greyish green flowering stems rise. These stems carry only a few leaves, similar to the basal leaves, but up to 30 cm long, with up to four lateral lobes.
Flowerheads, florets and fruits Flowerheads are set individually at the end of a branch of up to 30 cm long, with a few small papery bracts, more densely set near the flowerhead. Flowerheads are enclosed in an
involucre of 1.5–2.5 cm long, which has a diameter of 1–2 cm. The individual bracts are papery, egg-shaped, 1–2.5 cm long, 0.3–0.5 cm wide, hairless and ending abruptly in a small sharp point as a continuation of the darker colored midrib. The common base at which the florets are implanted (or
receptacle) is flat, with a
scale subtending every floret. The
ligulate florets have a bluish purple strap ending in five teeth, 2.5–2.9 cm long, while the tube is darker. The one-seeded
indehiscent fruit (called
cypsela) is cylindrical with five to ten longitudinal ribs, 5–6 mm long, and is crowned with papery
pappus scales. The pollen is yellow. == Etymology ==