Liatris cymosa grows from rounded or sometimes elongated
corms, that produce stems 20 to 75 centimeters tall. The upright growing stems have appressed hairs that point in the same direction. The basal and cauline leaves have one nerve. The leaves are long and thin, ranging from 8 to 12 centimeters long and 2 to 5 millimeters wide. The foliage is mostly hairless or may have some hairs on the margins; the leaves are gradually reduced in size as they ascend the stem or abruptly reduced halfway up the stem. The flowers are in dense heads with 20 to 25 florets, and the heads have stems that are 20 to 70 millimeters long. The heads are produced in loose
cyme-like clusters of 2 to 20, sometimes more, terminating the widely branched stems. The seed is produced in a
cypselae (a type of
fruit) that is 6 to 7 millimeters long with feathery
pappi. ==Habitat==