Skip Navigation
Sign In
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Chicago Botanic Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Denver Botanic Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Desert Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • NY Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Sitemap

Eupatorium

Eupatorium
Family: Asteraceae
Eupatorium image
Scott Namestnik
  • FNA
  • Gleason & Cronquist
  • Resources
Kunsiri Chaw Siripun, Edward E. Schilling in Flora of North America (vol. 21)
Perennials, 30-200 cm. Stems erect, usually not branched proximal to arrays of heads (from caudices or rhizomes). Leaves mostly cauline; usually opposite (rarely whorled, distal sometimes alternate); petiolate or sessile; blades usually 3-nerved from or distal to bases, or pinnately nerved, mostly deltate or ovate to lanceolate or linear (and intermediate shapes, sometimes elliptic, oblong, rhombic, or suborbiculate, sometimes pinnatifid, 1-2-pinnately, ternately, or palmately lobed), ultimate margins entire or toothed, faces glabrous or puberulent, pubescent, scabrous, or setulose, usually gland-dotted. Heads discoid, in corymbiform or diffuse to dense, paniculiform arrays. Involucres obconic to ellipsoid, 1-3(-5+) mm diam. Phyllaries persistent, 7-15+ in 2-3(-4+) series, (usually green) 2-3-nerved, or not notably nerved, or pinnately nerved, elliptic, lanceolate, oblong, or obovate, usually unequal, sometimes ± equal (margins scarious, hyaline, apices rounded to acute or acuminate sometimes mucronate, faces usually puberulent or villous, usually gland-dotted, rarely glabrous). Receptacles flat or convex, epaleate. Florets (3-)5(-15+); corollas usually white, rarely pinkish, throats funnelform to campanulate, lobes 5, triangular; styles: bases sometimes enlarged, usually puberulent (glabrous in E. capillifolium), branches mostly filiform. Cypselae (brownish to black) prismatic, 5-ribbed, usually glabrous, usually gland-dotted; pappi persistent, of 20-50 (whitish) barbellulate bristles in 1 series. x = 10.

Eupatorium is treated here in a restricted circumscription, following R. M. King and H. Robinson (1987) in excluding genera that traditionally have been included in a broad Eupatorium (e.g., Ageratina, Chromolaena, Critonia, Conoclinium, Fleischmannia, Koanophyllon, Tamaulipa); Eutrochium (Eupatorium sect. Verticillatum) is also excluded here.

Species identification within Eupatorium is sometimes complicated; polyploidy and apomixis have contributed to the complications. Some species include both sexual diploid and apomictic polyploid plants or populations. V. I. Sullivan (1972) made important contributions to understanding Eupatorium in North America by showing that some fairly distinct, sexual diploid species may include apomictic polyploid plants or populations that do not differ greatly from the diploids. Other apomictic polyploids appear to be intermediate morphologically between pairs of diploid or diploid/polyploid species and were proposed by Sullivan to have originated from interspecific hybridization. Distinction and level of recognition of hybrid apomictic taxa have a large arbitrary component, in part because some apomicts appear to be ephemeral and others may be relatively stable and in part because differences in the relative genomic contributions of the progenitors through dosage effects or backcrossing may affect whether an apomict is morphologically distinctive or part of a continuous series of variation.

Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Heads discoid; the fls all tubular and perfect; invol bracts variously imbricate or subequal; receptacle naked; fls pink or purple to blue or white; style-branches elongate, linear or linear-clavate, obtuse, papillate, with inconspicuously ventromarginal stigmatic lines near the base (or sometimes for much of their length); achenes prismatic, mostly 5(-8)-angled and -nerved, glabrous, or inconspicuously hairy along the veins, or in most of our spp. atomiferous-glandular; pappus a single series of capillary bristles; perennial herbs (all ours) or shrubs, with entire or toothed to occasionally dissected, often glandular-punctate, mostly opposite, sometimes whorled or alternate lvs, all our spp. with the lowest lvs reduced and sometimes deciduous; heads small to large, in a mostly corymbiform infl, rarely solitary or forming a true panicle. Nearly 1000, mainly New World. Divided by some authors into numerous much smaller genera, these perhaps better regarded as sections or subgenera. Some of the segregates are indicated in parentheses in the key. In the system of King and Robinson our sp. 6 is referred to Conoclinium, 7 to Fleischmannia, and 8-10 to Ageratina; the others remain in Eupatorium. Spp. 1-5 form a closely related, hybridizing, mainly diploid group, with x=10. Spp. 8-10 form a closely related group of diploids with x=17. Spp. 11-25 form an intricately reticulate complex of diploids, autopolyploids, established or temporary allopolyploids, and temporary hybrids, based on x=10. The diploids are mainly sexual and outcrossing, the polyploids mainly apomictic. Some spp. here recognized are wholly diploid; others consist of both diploid and polyploid elements, the polyploids being taxonomically associated with the diploids they most resemble. Only E. godfreyanum, among our spp., appears to be wholly polyploid. In addition to the taxa recognized here, there are scattered small populations representing diverse sorts of allopolyploids that may not be permanently established. It does not seem useful to provide these with formal names.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
<< 1 - 50 taxa >>
Eupatorium acuminatum
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Eupatorium ageratifolium
Media resource of Eupatorium ageratifolium
Map not
Available
Eupatorium albicaule
Media resource of Eupatorium albicaule
Map not
Available
Eupatorium album
Media resource of Eupatorium album
Map not
Available
Eupatorium altissimum
Media resource of Eupatorium altissimum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium amambayense
Media resource of Eupatorium amambayense
Map not
Available
Eupatorium amblyolepis
Media resource of Eupatorium amblyolepis
Map not
Available
Eupatorium amygdalinum
Media resource of Eupatorium amygdalinum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium anomalum
Media resource of Eupatorium anomalum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium apiculatum
Media resource of Eupatorium apiculatum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium arborescens
Media resource of Eupatorium arborescens
Map not
Available
Eupatorium areolare
Media resource of Eupatorium areolare
Map not
Available
Eupatorium argentinum
Media resource of Eupatorium argentinum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium argutum
Media resource of Eupatorium argutum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium aromaticum
Media resource of Eupatorium aromaticum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium aschenbornianum
Media resource of Eupatorium aschenbornianum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium azureum
Media resource of Eupatorium azureum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium bertholdii
Media resource of Eupatorium bertholdii
Map not
Available
Eupatorium betonicifolium
Media resource of Eupatorium betonicifolium
Map not
Available
Eupatorium billbergianum
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Eupatorium boreale
Media resource of Eupatorium boreale
Map not
Available
Eupatorium borinquense
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Eupatorium brevipes
Media resource of Eupatorium brevipes
Map not
Available
Eupatorium brittonianum
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Eupatorium buddleaefolium
Media resource of Eupatorium buddleaefolium
Map not
Available
Eupatorium buniifolium
Media resource of Eupatorium buniifolium
Map not
Available
Eupatorium bupleurifolium
Media resource of Eupatorium bupleurifolium
Map not
Available
Eupatorium callilepis
Media
not available
Map not
Available
Eupatorium calophyllum
Media resource of Eupatorium calophyllum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium camiguinense
Media resource of Eupatorium camiguinense
Map not
Available
Eupatorium candolleanum
Media resource of Eupatorium candolleanum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium cannabinum
Media resource of Eupatorium cannabinum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium capillifolium
Media resource of Eupatorium capillifolium
Map not
Available
Eupatorium ceanothifolium
Media resource of Eupatorium ceanothifolium
Map not
Available
Eupatorium ceriferum
Media resource of Eupatorium ceriferum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium chapmanii
Media resource of Eupatorium chapmanii
Map not
Available
Eupatorium chiapense
Media resource of Eupatorium chiapense
Map not
Available
Eupatorium chinense
Media resource of Eupatorium chinense
Map not
Available
Eupatorium choricephalum
Media resource of Eupatorium choricephalum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium christieanum
Media resource of Eupatorium christieanum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium chrysostyloides
Media resource of Eupatorium chrysostyloides
Map not
Available
Eupatorium chrysostylum
Media resource of Eupatorium chrysostylum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium clematideum
Media resource of Eupatorium clematideum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium collodes
Media resource of Eupatorium collodes
Map not
Available
Eupatorium compositifolium
Media resource of Eupatorium compositifolium
Map not
Available
Eupatorium conspicuum
Media resource of Eupatorium conspicuum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium cordatum
Media resource of Eupatorium cordatum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium cordigerum
Media resource of Eupatorium cordigerum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium corymbosum
Media resource of Eupatorium corymbosum
Map not
Available
Eupatorium coulteri
Media resource of Eupatorium coulteri
Map not
Available
Institute for Museum and Library Services KU BI Logo Logo for the Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

EcoFlora is part of the SEINet Portal Network. Learn more here.

Powered by Symbiota.