This species is a loosely-branched woody shrub that grows tall. The leaves have sawtooth-like edges, and are rigid and leathery, growing long. It is similar to
Hazardia rosarica and
Hazardia squarrosa, a shrubby congener with toothed leaves, with
Hazardia berberidis being distinguished by its ray flowers and erect, non-squarrose
involucral bracts.
Morphology The branches of this species are in diameter and reach in length, and are covered with sparse, villous hairs (
trichomes). The branches are leafy throughout, with the internodes measuring around , usually with small
fascicles in the axils. The leaves are
sessile, and are shaped ovate-oblong to oblong, long and wide. Most of the leaf is usually free of hair. On the lower surface of the leaf is a prominent midrib, towards the base of which the only hairs on the leaf may be found. The margins of the leaf are distinctly dentate, with acute and spiny serrations throughout. The
composite flowers have a radiate head, with disk flowers in the center surrounded by ray flowers, colored yellow and aging to a dark red to purple. The composite flowers are borne either solitary at the ends of branches, sessile in a racemose capitulescence, or on leafy
peduncles that grow up to long. The involucres are shaped like a broad, inverted cone or bell, and are shorter than the disk. The involucres measure high by wide, and have 30 to 60 erect bracts. There are 15 to 25 ray florets surrounding the center of disk florets. The ray florets have ligules that measure long by wide, and are faintly 3-lobed at their tip. There are 30 to 60 disk florets in the center of the composite flower. In fruit, achenes about long form in both types of florets, with a
pappus of 30 to 50 brown-colored bristles. == Taxonomy ==