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Goldenrods: Food for pollinators in fall

A bank of goldenrod (solidago altissima); a gall is found on the foremost stem.

One of the autumn delights in Western Pennsylvania is the appearance of goldenrods (Solidago), whose bright golden inflorescence plumes grow in masse along roadsides, abandoned fields and meadows.

Goldenrods are members of the Asteracae family, which includes fall perennials such as asters and daisies. Solidago has 138 species worldwide, with 115 species native to Canada and the United States.

Goldenrods are perennial plants that often produce vertical woody shoots from horizontal rhizomatous stems, allowing the plants to spread quickly over favorable areas. Thus, the field of goldenrods along the highway may be one large, genetically identical clone. In addition to rhizome production, goldenrods reproduce by seed.

The beautiful yellow color of goldenrod blooms attracts a variety of pollinators, including insects, native and honey bees. Insects use their complex eyes to find the colored flowers that will give them a meal of pollen, transferring the pollen as they travel from flower to flower.

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