The new genus is named for UC Davis botanist Donald Kyhos.
It is a plant of mountain meadows and other moist areas such as streambanks.
Its slender stem is bristly and covered in dark-colored, stalked resin glands.
The bristly linear or lance-shaped leaves may be up to 30 centimeters long; those occurring oppositely along the stem are sometimes fused together at the bases.
Each head has a bell-shaped involucre of bristly, glandular phyllaries at the base, a center of black-tipped yellow disc florets, and a fringe of 8 to 12 golden ray florets roughly 1 centimeter long.