Helianthus () is a genus comprising around 50 species of annual and perennial flowering plants in the daisy family Asteraceae commonly known as sunflowers. The species of Helianthus are native to North America and Mexico. The best-known species is the common sunflower (Helianthus annuus). This and other species, notably Jerusalem artichoke (H. tuberosus), are cultivated in temperate regions and some tropical regions, as food crops for humans, cattle, and poultry, and as ornamental plants. The species H. annuus typically grows during the summer and into early fall, with the peak growth season being mid-summer.
Several perennial Helianthus species are grown in gardens, but have a tendency to spread rapidly and can become aggressive. On the other hand, the whorled sunflower, Helianthus verticillatus, was listed as an endangered species in 2014 when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service issued a final rule protecting it under the Endangered Species Act. The primary threats to this species are industrial forestry and pine plantations in Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee. They grow to and are primarily found in woodlands, adjacent to creeks and moist, prairie-like areas.
The common sunflower is the national flower of Ukraine, cultivated there for several centuries.
Description
thumb|The disk of a sunflower is made up of many little flowers. The ray flowers here are dried
thumb|In [[North Carolina|alt=A field of sunflowers in North Carolina]]
thumb|A sunflower seed growing
Sunflowers are usually tall annual or perennial plants that in some species can grow to a height of or more. Each "flower" is actually a disc made up of tiny flowers, to form a larger false flower to better attract pollinators. The plants bear one or more wide, terminal capitula (flower heads made up of many tiny flowers), with bright yellow ray florets (mini flowers inside a flower head) at the outside and yellow or maroon (also known as a brown/red) disc florets inside. Several ornamental cultivars of H. annuus have red-colored ray florets; all of them stem from a single original mutant. While the majority of sunflowers are yellow, there are branching varieties in other colors including, orange, red and purple.
The petiolate leaves are dentate and often sticky. The lower leaves are opposite, ovate, or often heart-shaped. The rough and hairy stem is branched in the upper part in wild plants, but is usually unbranched in domesticated cultivars.
Variability is seen among the perennial species that make up the bulk of those in the genus. Some have most or all of the large leaves in a rosette at the base of the plant and produce a flowering stem that has leaves that are reduced in size. Most of the perennials have disk flowers that are entirely yellow, but a few have disk flowers with reddish lobes. One species, H. radula, lacks ray flowers altogether.
Overall, the macroevolution of the Helianthus is driven by multiple biotic and abiotic factors and influences various floral morphology.
Helianthus species are used as food plants by the larvae of many lepidopterans.
Growth stages
The growth of a sunflower depends strictly on its genetic makeup and background. Additionally, the season it is planted will have effects on its development; those seasons tend to be in the middle of summer and beginning of fall. Sunflower development is classified by a series of vegetative stages and reproductive stages that can be determined by identifying the heads or main branch of a single head or branched head. Sunflowers move back to their original position between the hours of 3am and 6am, and the leaves follow about an hour later.
By the time they are mature and reach anthesis, Helianthus generally stop moving and remain facing east, which lets them be warmed by the rising sun. Historically, this has led to controversy on whether or not Helianthus is heliotropic, as many scientists have failed to observe movement when studying plants that have already bloomed. The growth rate accumulation of the stem on the east side of the stem gradually pushes the flower from east to west during daytime. This matches with the Sun as it rises from the east and falls in the west. At night, the growth rate is higher in the west side of the stem that gradually pushes the flower from the west side back to the east side.
Heliotropism persists on cloudy days when the sun is not shining brightly, meaning that the movement is endogenous as a trained and continuous process. because its round flower heads in combination with the ligules look like the Sun.
- Helianthus agrestis <small>Pollard</small> – southeastern sunflower – Florida, Georgia
- Helianthus ambiguus <small>Britt.</small> – Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, New York
- Helianthus angustifolius <small>L.</small> – swamp sunflower – Texas, northern Florida to southern Illinois, Long Island, New York
- Helianthus annuus <small>L.</small> – common sunflower, girasol <!--(Spanish) -- No, it isn't. It is a word of Italian origin sometimes used in English--> – most of United States + Canada
- Helianthus anomalus <small>S.F.Blake</small> – western sunflower – Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico
- Helianthus argophyllus <small>Torr. & A.Gray</small> – silverleaf sunflower – Texas, North Carolina, Florida
- Helianthus arizonensis <small>R.C.Jacks.</small> – Arizona sunflower – Arizona, New Mexico
- Helianthus atrorubens <small>L.</small> – purpledisk sunflower – Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, Virginia
- Helianthus bolanderi <small>A.Gray</small> – serpentine sunflower – California, Oregon
- Helianthus × brevifolius <small>E.Watson</small> – Texas, Indiana, Ohio
- Helianthus californicus <small>DC.</small> – California sunflower – California
- Helianthus carnosus <small>Small</small> – lakeside sunflower – Florida
- Helianthus ciliaris <small>DC.</small> – Texas blueweed – United States: Washington, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah, Texas, Oklahoma, Colorado, Kansas, Illinois; Mexico: Tamaulipas, Coahuila, Chihuahua, Sonora
- Helianthus cinereus <small>Small</small> – Missouri, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio
- Helianthus coloradensis <small>Cockerell</small> – prairie sunflower – Colorado, New Mexico
- Helianthus cusickii <small>A.Gray</small> – Cusick's sunflower – Washington, Oregon, California, Idaho, Nevada
- Helianthus debilis <small>Nutt.</small> – cucumberleaf sunflower – Texas to Maine, Mississippi
- Helianthus decapetalus <small>L.</small> – thinleaf sunflower – eastern United States; Ontario, Quebec
- Helianthus deserticola <small>Heiser</small> – desert sunflower – Arizona, Nevada, Utah
- Helianthus devernii <small>T.M.Draper</small> – red rock sunflower – Nevada
- †Helianthus diffusus <small>Sims</small> – Missouri†
- Helianthus dissectifolius <small>R.C.Jacks.</small> – Chihuahua, Durango
- Helianthus divaricatus <small>L.</small> – woodland sunflower or rough woodland sunflower – eastern United States; Ontario, Quebec
- Helianthus × divariserratus <small>R.W.Long</small> Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Connecticut
- Helianthus × doronicoides <small>Lam.</small> – Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Minnesota, Illinois, Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, New Jersey, Virginia
- Helianthus eggertii <small>Small</small> – Alabama, Kentucky, and Tennessee
- Helianthus exilis <small>A.Gray</small> – California
- Helianthus floridanus <small>A.Gray ex Chapm.</small> – Florida sunflower – Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina
- Helianthus giganteus <small>L.</small> – giant sunflower – eastern United States; most of Canada
- Helianthus glaucophyllus <small>D.M.Sm</small> – whiteleaf sunflower – Tennessee, South Carolina, North Carolina
- Helianthus × glaucus <small>Small</small> – scattered locales in southeastern United States
- Helianthus gracilentus <small>A.Gray</small> – slender sunflower – California
- Helianthus grosseserratus <small>M.Martens</small> – sawtooth sunflower – Great Plains, Great Lakes, Ontario, Quebec
- Helianthus heterophyllus <small>Nutt.</small> – variableleaf sunflower – Coastal plain of Texas to North Carolina
- Helianthus hirsutus <small>Raf.</small> – hairy sunflower – central and eastern United States, Ontario
- Helianthus × intermedius <small>R.W.Long</small> – intermediate sunflower – scattered locales in United States
- Helianthus laciniatus <small>A.Gray</small> – alkali sunflower – United States: Arizona, New Mexico, Texas; Mexico: Coahuila, Nuevo León
- Helianthus × laetiflorus <small>Pers.</small> – cheerful sunflower, mountain sunflower – scattered in eastern and central United States; Canada
- Helianthus laevigatus <small>Torr. & A.Gray</small> – smooth sunflower – Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia
- Helianthus lenticularis <small>Douglas ex Lindl.</small> Minnesota to North Dakota, Idaho, Missouri, Texas
- Helianthus longifolius <small>Pursh</small> – longleaf sunflower – Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina
- Helianthus × luxurians <small>(E.Watson) E.Watson</small> – Great Lakes region
- Helianthus maximiliani <small>Schrad.</small> – Maximillian sunflower – much of United States and Canada
- Helianthus membranifolius <small>Poir.</small> – Cayenne Island French Guiana
- Helianthus microcephalus <small>Torr. & A.Gray</small> – eastern United States
- Helianthus mollis <small>Lam.</small> – downy sunflower, ashy sunflower – Ontario, eastern and central United States
- Helianthus multiflorus <small>L.</small> – manyflower sunflower – Ohio
- Helianthus navarri <small>Phil.</small> – Chile
- Helianthus neglectus <small>Heiser</small> – neglected sunflower – New Mexico, Texas
- Helianthus niveus <small>(Benth.) Brandegee</small> – showy sunflower – United States: California, Arizona; Mexico: Baja California, Baja California Sur
- Helianthus nuttallii <small>Torr. & A.Gray –</small> western and central United States, Canada
- Helianthus occidentalis <small>Riddell</small> – fewleaf sunflower, western sunflower – Great Lakes region, scattered in southeastern United States
- Helianthus × orgyaloides <small>Cockerell</small> – Colorado, Kansas
- Helianthus paradoxus <small>Heiser</small> – paradox sunflower – Utah, New Mexico, Texas
- Helianthus pauciflorus <small>Nutt.</small> – stiff sunflower – central United States, Canada
- Helianthus petiolaris <small>Nutt.</small> – prairie sunflower, lesser sunflower – much of United States, Canada
- Helianthus porteri <small>(A.Gray) Pruski</small> – Porter's sunflower – Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina
- Helianthus praecox <small>Engelm. & A.Gray</small> Texas sunflower – Texas
- †Helianthus praetermissus – New Mexico sunflower – New Mexico†
- Helianthus pumilus <small>Nutt.</small> – little sunflower – Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, Utah, Idaho
- Helianthus radula <small>(Pursh) Torr. & A.Gray</small> – rayless sunflower – Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, Florida
- Helianthus resinosus <small>Small</small> – resindot sunflower – Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Florida
- Helianthus salicifolius <small>A.Dietr.</small> – willowleaf sunflower – Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Wisconsin, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York
- Helianthus sarmentosus <small>Rich.</small> – French Guiana
- Helianthus scaberrimus <small>Elliott</small> – South Carolina
- Helianthus schweinitzii <small>Torr. & A.Gray</small> – Schweinitz's sunflower – South Carolina, North Carolina
- Helianthus silphioides <small>Nutt.</small> – rosinweed sunflower – Lower Mississippi Valley
- Helianthus simulans <small>E.Watson</small> – muck sunflower – southeastern United States
- Helianthus smithii <small>Heiser</small> – Smith's sunflower – Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee
- Helianthus speciosus <small>Hook.</small> – Michoacán
- Helianthus strumosus <small>L.</small> – eastern and central United States, Canada
- Helianthus subcanescens <small>(A.Gray) E.Watson</small> – Manitoba, north-central United States
- Helianthus subtuberosus <small>Bourg.</small>
- Helianthus tuberosus <small>L.</small> – Jerusalem artichoke, sunchoke, earth-apple, topinambur – much of United States and Canada
- Helianthus verticillatus <small>Small</small> – whorled sunflower – Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee
Formerly included
The following species were previously included in the genus Helianthus.
- Helianthella quinquenervis <small>(Hook.) A.Gray</small> (as H. quinquenervis <small>Hook.</small>)
- Helianthella uniflora <small>(Nutt.) Torr. & A.Gray</small> (as H. uniflorus <small>Nutt.</small>)
- Pappobolus imbaburensis <small>(Hieron.) Panero</small> (as H. imbaburensis <small>Hieron.</small>)
- Viguiera procumbens <small>(Pers.) S.F.Blake</small> (as H. procumbens <small>Pers.</small>)
Uses
The seeds of H. annuus are used for human consumption, for example, through sunflower oil, cakes, and meal. Most cultivars of sunflower are variants of H. annuus. However, H. tuberosus, the Jerusalem artichoke, which produces edible tubers is also domesticated.
There are many species in the sunflower genus Helianthus, and many species in other genera that may be called sunflowers.
- The Maximillian sunflower (Helianthus maximiliani) is one of 38 species of perennial sunflower native to North America. The Land Institute and other breeding programs are currently exploring the potential for these as a perennial seed crop.
- The sunchoke (Jerusalem artichoke or Helianthus tuberosus) is related to the sunflower, another example of perennial sunflower.
- The Mexican sunflower is Tithonia rotundifolia. It is only very distantly related to North American sunflowers.
- False sunflower refers to plants of the genus Heliopsis.
Ecology
thumb|Bees pollinating a sunflower head
Sunflowers have been proven to be excellent plants to attract beneficial insects, including pollinators. Helianthus spp. are a nectar producing flowering plant that attract pollinators and parasitoids which reduce the pest populations in nearby crop vegetation. Sunflowers attract different beneficial pollinators (e.g., honey bees) and other known insect prey to feed on and control the population of parasitic pests that could be harmful to the crops. Predacious insects are first attracted to sunflowers once they are planted. Once the Helianthus spp. reaches six inches and produces flowers it begins to attract more pollinators. Distance between sunflower rows and crop vegetation plays an important role in this phenomenon, hypothesizing that closer proximity to the crops will increase insect attraction.
An ecosystem is composed of both biotic (which are living elements of an ecosystem such as plants, animals, fungi, protists, and bacteria), and abiotic factors (non-living elements of an ecosystem such as air, soil, water, light, salinity and temperature).
It is thought that two biotic factors can explain for the evolution of larger sunflowers and why they are present in more drier environments.
