'' '' '' Its English name,
fleabane, is shared with related plants in several other genera. It appears to be derived from a belief that the dried plants repelled
fleas or that the plants were poisonous to fleas. Botanist
Thomas Meehan, though, calls "fleabane" a misnomer for North American species, rarely used in the United States "until it was employed in botanical works". The generic name
Erigeron is derived from the
Ancient Greek words (
êri) "early in the morning" and (
gérōn) "old man", a reference to the appearance of the white hairs of the fruit soon after flowering or possibly alluding to the early appearance of the seed heads. The noun is
masculine, so that specific epithets should have masculine endings (e.g.
glaucus) to
agree with it. However, authors have incorrectly used neuter endings (e.g.
glaucum), because the ending
-on resembles the ending of Ancient Greek neuter
second declension nouns, as
Augustin Pyramus de Candolle did in his 1836 account of the genus. ==Description==