In 1987, Robert M. King and Harold E. Robinson wrote a book on Eupatorieae. In this book, they divided the tribe into 18 subtribes. These are Hofmeisteriinae, Oxylobinae, Oaxacaniinae, Mikaniinae, Trichocoroninae, Adenostemmatinae, Fleischmanniinae, Ageratinae, Eupatoriinae, Liatrinae, Praxelinae, Gyptidinae, Disynaphiinae, Ayapaninae, Alomiinae, Critoniinae, Hebecliniinae, and Neomirandeinae. In 1994, Kare Bremer did a cladistic analysis of Eupatorieae in his book on the family Asteraceae. He recognized only 16 subtribes, subsuming Neomirandeinae into Hebecliniinae. In 2007, D. J. Nicholas Hind and Harold E. Robinson covered Eupatorieae for
The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants. They recognized 17 subtribes equivalent to those of King and Robinson (1987) except that Oaxacaniinae was placed in the synonymy of Hofmeisteriinae. The division of this tribe into subtribes is provisional and likely to change when more data, especially DNA sequence data, becomes available. No DNA study has yet included a large number of species and sampled widely in Eupatorieae, but 3 studies have investigated Eupatorium and its relatives within the tribe. These 3 studies are the basis for the phylogeny shown below. In some of the older works, the genus
Eupatorium has been circumscribed to include as many as 1200 species, over a third of the species in the tribe. In more recent works,
Eupatorium has been defined to contain about 40–45 species, with the main differences between authors being whether to include
Eutrochium and whether certain populations should be considered species, varieties, or hybrids. As more becomes known about the Eupatorieae, other genera will surely have to be revised as well. A partial phylogeny of the tribe (focusing on
Eupatorium and some of the other North American genera) is: |1=
Brickellia Alomiinae |2= }} }} From the positions of
Stevia and
Stomatanthes in the phylogeny, some of the subtribes are probably polyphyletic. Many of the branches in the tree above have only weak statistical support, so this tree can not serve as a basis for re-classification. For convenience, the genera will remain in their current subtribes until a much larger data set enables the production of a more robustly supported phylogeny.
Subtribes In terms of the number of genera, the largest subtribes are Critoniinae (40), Gyptidinae (29), Ageratinae (26), Alomiinae (23), Ayapaninae (13), and Oxylobinae (9). • Gyptidinae, found mostly in eastern Brazil, is known to be polyphyletic. Hind and Robinson divide it into 3 groups based on Gyptis, Agrianthus, and Litothamnus. Includes:
Gyptis,
Trichogonia,
Campuloclinium,
Conoclinium,
Agrianthus,
Lasiolaena, and
Litothamnus. • Critoniinae. Includes:
Critonia,
Fleischmanniopsis,
Ophryosporus, and
Neocabreria. ==References==