Family: Asteraceae
                                    
                                    
				
                                    
Group: Dicot
                                    
                                    
				
                                    
Substrate:
					
                                   Terrestrial
					
                                    
                                    
				
                                    
Habit:
					
                                    Herb
					 
                                    
                                    
				
                                    
Perennation:
					
                                   Perennial
					
                                    
                                    
				
                                    
Native Range: Endemic to South Florida.
                                    
                                    
				
                                    
State of Florida Status:
					
                                    Threatened
					
                                    
                                    
				
                                    
IRC SOUTH FLORIDA Status:
					
                                    Rare
					
              
                
                
				
                                     
Map of South Florida Locations
                                    
				
                                    SOUTH FLORIDA Occurrence:
				  
                                    Present
			      
                                    
                                    
		    
                                    
SOUTH FLORIDA Native Status:
					
                                    Native
                                    
                                    
                                    
				
                                    
South Florida History and Distribution: This is widespread in South Florida, and most common on the Miami Rock Ridge and in the Big Cypress.  It grows in pine rocklands, pine flatwoods, and marl prairies all of which have been subjected to continuous habitat loss and fragmentation outside of Everglades National Park and Big Cypress National Preserve. Using modern NatureServe criteria, we re-ranked this as Rare in South Florida in July 2018.
                                    
                                    
				
                                    
SOUTH FLORIDA Cultivated Status:
					
                                    Cultivated
					
                                    
                                    
	            
                                    
Comments: Visit our 
Natives For Your Neighborhood website for more information and images. For an image of the holotype specimen collected on Big Pine Key by John Loomis Blodgett, visit the 
New York Botanic Garden Virtual Herbarium.
                                    
                                    
				
          
            Synonyms:
           M. nivea, misapplied.
          
					
				
          
            FLORIDA KEYS Occurrence:
          
				  
						Present
			      
				  
				  
		      
            
FLORIDA KEYS Native Status:
					
            			Native
	            	
					
					
				
              
IRC FLORIDA KEYS Status:
					
						Critically Imperiled
					
					
					
                                   
				
                                      
Map of Florida Keys Locations
                                    
				
          Florida Keys History and Distribution: Reported in 
1913  by John Kunkel Small for pinelands and coastal sand dunes from the upper Keys to the lower Keys, but we have records only from Big Pine Key in the lower Keys, were we consider this native and extant.