Meadow hawkweed

Prepared by Jennifer L. D’Appollonio, Assistant Scientist, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469. Updated February 2018.

Scientific name: Hieracium caespitosum Dumort.; old Hieracium pratense Tausch

Common name(s): meadow hawkweed, yellow hawkweed, field hawkweed, yellow paintbrush, devil’s paintbrush, yellow devil

Links: USDA PLANTS Profile, Go Botany

Images: (to see enlargements [PC]: click on image, then right click and choose “view image”)

Description:

– perennial

– generally flowers June to July in ME

– generally fruits July, August in ME

-can reach 1-2 feet tall

-mostly leafless stem

-leaves are

  • Ovate
  • alternate
  • hairy
  • basal untoothed leaves
  • 2″-5″ long and 1/2″-7/8″ wide.

-Dandelion-like flower, orange-yellow, up to 1/2″ across.

– may be confused with H. praealtum, which has a slight bloom and few hairs on the upper leaf surface; see left sidebar of Go Botany webpage

Habitat:

-disturbed sites

-meadows and fields

-shores of rivers

Natural History:

-Native to Europe

 

Source(s):

Hansen, R.W., S.B. Hansen and E.A. Osgood. 1991. Reproductive phenologies of selected flowering plants in eastern Maine forests. ME Agric. Exp. Station Tech. Bull. 143. 17 pp.

Heinrich, B. 1976. Flowering phenologies: Bog, woodland, and disturbed habitats. Ecology. 57(5):890-899.

Go Botany. “Hieracium Caespitosum Dumort.” Hieracium Caespitosum (Yellow Hawkweed): Go Botany, 2021, gobotany.nativeplanttrust.org/species/hieracium/caespitosum/.