Classification Symphyotrichum lateriflorum is a member of the genus
Symphyotrichum, and is classified in the
subgenus Symphyotrichum,
section Symphyotrichum, subsection
Dumosi. It is one of the "bushy asters and relatives". Its
basionym (original
scientific name) is and it has sixty
taxonomic synonyms. Its name with
author citations is
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum . Swedish botanist
Carl Linnaeus, in 1753, was the first to
describe what we know today as
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum.
Subgenus cladogram History In 1748, Linnaeus'
apostle Pehr Kalm traveled to North America from Europe. He stayed for two and a half years studying flora and fauna and gathering specimens for study by Linnaeus, returning home in 1751. Kalm's travels in North America took him to Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, and southeastern Canada. One of the samples he gathered was described by Linnaeus as
Solidago lateriflora, now the basionym of
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum. Linnaeus recorded the specimen's origin as "" (Latin for "It grows in North America"), and that it was provided by Kalm. Linnaeus classified this plant in the genus
Solidago which now contains over 130 of the many species known today as
goldenrods. At that time, Linnaeus sorted fifteen of his available specimens into this genus and included them in his two-volume
Species Plantarum (1753). . Carl Linnaeus (1753), '''', 2: 879. Latin. In 1789, Scottish botanist
William Aiton included
Solidago lateriflora in his
Hortus Kewensis, the first edition of a catalogue of the plants cultivated at
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, where he had been the director since 1759. In separate entries, he also described an
Aster diffusus,
Aster divergens, and
Aster miser, all as separate species definitions from
Solidago lateriflora. In the section, Aiton referenced the of Linnaeus "". The
Plants of the World Online (POWO) entry for
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum includes
Aster diffusus as a synonym, but not
Aster miser or
Aster miser . It does include
Aster miser which was described by English naturalist
Thomas Nuttall in 1818. Nuttall stated that what he described appeared "to be the of Linnaeus, but probably not that of Aiton".
Aster divergens is also listed as a taxonomic synonym. It was not until 1889 that American botanist
Nathaniel Lord Britton combined
Solidago lateriflora with
Aster species, identifying
Aster diffusus and
Aster miser as the same. This resulted in one species named
Aster lateriflorus , with
Solidago lateriflora as the basionym, as it had been the first described. Other names and combinations occurred before and after this, but
Aster lateriflorus was the only one associated with the original
Solidago lateriflora until the broad and
polyphyletic circumscription of the genus
Aster was divided.
Aster lateriflorus was moved to the genus
Symphyotrichum in 1982 by Áskell and Doris Löve during their study of plant chromosomes making its
binomial name Symphyotrichum lateriflorum where it currently remains. The
infraspecies were subsequently moved by American botanist
Guy L. Nesom in 1994. In a 1928 study of
Aster lateriflorus and close relatives, while pondering the "endless confusion in the naming of specimens" of this species, American botanist
Karl McKay Wiegand noted how environmental differences likely affected leaf and flower head characteristics, causing botanists to name specimens of this plant as different varieties or species when they may not have been. In this study, Wiegand compared characteristics among the specimens which largely had been ignored up to that point, namely, "the exact length of the involucre and the inner involucral bracts, the number of rays, and the shape of the limb in the disk-corolla as well as the length and character of its lobes."
Varieties The
Catalogue of Life (COL) recognized six
varieties of
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum on its 2009 Annual Checklist. By 2017, all had been reduced to taxonomic synonyms.
hirsuticaule was reduced five years prior, in 2012. According to
Flora of North America, "[m]uch genetic and phenotypic variation is encountered within the complex; a thorough study is needed before a coherent taxonomy can be achieved." Although the following varieties are neither accepted by COL nor POWO, they were accepted by one or more of USDA PLANTS Database, NatureServe,
World Flora Online (WFO),
Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS), and Database of Vascular Plants of Canada (VASCAN). The
autonym is
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var.
lateriflorum.
Variety angustifolium Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var.
angustifolium is commonly known as narrow-leaved calico aster. In 1903, American botanist
Edward Sandford Burgess described a new species he named
Aster agrostifolius which, along with other characteristics, had very thin grass-like leaves. Karl McKay Wiegand, in 1928, then described a new variety of which he named
angustifolius. He based the name on the appearance of the leaves: "", in English, "with narrowly lanceolate or linear leaves". He did not associate his variety with the of Burgess. Wiegand identified the
holotype for his variety as collected from Cheshire, Massachusetts, 1915, by and held in the
herbarium of the New England Botanical Club. He noted that " may be nothing more than a separation of the narrow leaved individuals of the typical form." After Nesom reclassified the varieties from genus
Aster to
Symphyotrichum,
angustifolium was created, and the two former taxa became its taxonomic synonyms.
Variety flagellare In 1953, Canadian-American botanist
Lloyd Herbert Shinners named specimens as two new varieties of
Aster lateriflorus:
flagellaris and
indutus . In his
protologues, Shinners said specifically that both had deeply lobed disk corollas and no rhizomes, and these characteristics were his reasoning for placing them both with
A. lateriflorus. abaxial midribs, but did not say that his two new varieties had the same. He said the opposite: in the protologue for
flagellaris, Shinners wrote in Latin "", which in English is "leaves totally glabrous on the abaxial side". Thus, no hair abaxially on the leaves of this variety. In the
indutus protologue, Shinners wrote "", translated to English is "leaves with some hairs on the abaxial side, on the
adaxial side densely scabrous". There is no mention of an exclusivity of hair on its midrib either. The type specimens of
flagellaris and
indutus were both collected in Texas, the former in 1947 in
Henderson County, and the latter in 1946, two miles southeast of
Daingerfield, which is in
Morris County. Shinners was working from only the type specimen for
indutus, and he viewed multiple specimens for
flagellaris, mostly from Texas, and one from
McCurtain County, Oklahoma, which is the southeasternmost county of that state and on the north side of the
Red River of the South bordering Texas. Specimens collected by American botanist Alfred Traverse in
Harris County, Texas, and verified by Shinners as
flagellaris are stored at the
Botanical Research Institute of Texas Philecology Herbarium, as is one collected in 1934 by American botanist
Eula Whitehouse at the
Ottine wetlands in
Gonzales County, Texas, and determined by German-American botanist
Almut Gitter Jones to be
indutus. The current name of
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var.
flagellare was created in 1994, and the two prior taxa became its taxonomic synonyms.
Variety hirsuticaule Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var.
hirsuticaule is known as rough-stemmed calico aster and starved aster.
Aster hirsuticaulis, its basionym, was originally published by Swiss botanist
Augustin Pyramus de Candolle in 1836 as having been defined by English botanist
John Lindley. Latin translates to
hairy stem. An abundance of flower cluster stem hair ("") and the existence of abaxial leaf rib hair ("") were both in the Latin protologue published by de Candolle. Subsequent authorities reduced
Aster hirsuticaulis to infraspecies. American botanists
John Torrey and
Asa Gray did so first in 1841 with
hirsuticaulis, using the abaxial pubescent or hirsute (very hairy) midrib as a primary defining factor. They also stated that the leaves of the variety were "more or less hirsute". Gray followed up in 1884 with
hirsuticaulis. Here, Gray specified an environmental factor, "probably growing in much shade", also writing that the abaxial midrib and the stem were "very hirsute". In 1894, German botanist and horticulturist
Andreas Voss further reduced
Aster hirsuticaulis to a
form of Voss placed his form classifications of and under
thyrsoideus. He stated that these forms "", in English, "are just luxurious plants growing at shady and moist places, less branched and taller". That same year, Pennsylvania botanist
Thomas Conrad Porter reduced to a variety of Britton's which took precedence. After Nesom reclassified the varieties from genus
Aster to
Symphyotrichum, these became taxonomic synonyms of the new
hirsuticaule.
Variety horizontale Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var.
horizontale is commonly called horizontal calico aster. It has been in
cultivation in Europe since the mid-1700s, and possibly before. The protologue for the earliest taxonomic synonym,
Aster pendulus, was by William Aiton in 1789 who stated that the plant he was describing was cultivated in 1758 by English botanist
Philip Miller who was chief gardener at the
Chelsea Physic Garden from 1722 to 1770. In the preface of
Hortus Kewensis, Aiton wrote that he remembered "several Plants to have been cultivated by in the Physick Garden at Chelsea, though no reference is made to them in [Miller's]
Gardener's Dictionary." Nuttall reduced
Aster pendulus to a variety of in 1818. In 1833, American botanist
Lewis Caleb Beck created
pendulus from His short description states that the leaves of the branches are "rather remote". In 1829, French botanist
René Louiche Desfontaines described and named
Aster horizontalis with a focus on , or "horizontal branches". In 1884, Asa Gray placed this as a variety of His description included that it was a "cultivated form ... a plant of the gardens, not exactly matched by indigenous specimens, but evidently of this species." He gave the synonyms as and the latter described by German botanist
Carl Ludwig Willdenow in 1803. American botanist
Oliver Atkins Farwell placed
Aster horizontalis as a variety of describing it in 1895 as "a tall plant with long straggling horizontal branches". In 1898, Burgess reduced to a variety of
Aster lateriflorus. Finally, Nesom created
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var.
horizontale when he moved the varieties to genus
Symphyotrichum. Its taxonomic synonyms are listed as
Aster horizontalis ,
horizontalis ,
horizontalis , and
pendulus . The
Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) presents an
Award of Garden Merit as a "seal of approval that the plant performs reliably in the garden". This variety is cultivated and marketed as an
ornamental garden plant in Europe and gained this award in 1993.
Variety spatelliforme Herbarium, now in the NYBG Steere Herbarium
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var.
spatelliforme was described by Burgess in 1903 as species
Aster spatelliformis, making it the basionym of this variety. Burgess' protologue primarily focused on leaf characteristics which he said were how it differed from Leaves were described, in part, as small, rounded, and spatulate-shaped, with fine, reticulate veins and a short wedge-shaped base. In 1984, Almut Gitter Jones reduced
Aster spatelliformis to a variety of In 1982, Löve and Löve began moving species to the genus
Symphyotrichum. Two years before, in 1980, Jones had placed
Symphyotrichum as a subgenus of
Aster. It was not until Nesom's evaluation of Aster
sensu lato in 1994 that Jones' subgenus was combined with the genus. After this,
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var.
spatelliforme was created, and the two former taxa became its taxonomic synonyms.
Variety tenuipes Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var.
tenuipes is commonly called slender-stalked calico aster. It was said by American botanists
Henry A. Gleason and
Arthur Cronquist to be a lax plant, with wiry stems, often larger heads in open panicles, and involucres to . Wiegand first described it as a variety in 1928,
tenuipes , with slender and "somewhat
zigzag" stems, larger heads, and longer rays than the standard form of the species. He attached as holotype a specimen from Dundee,
Prince Edward Island, collected in 1912 by
Fernald,
St. John, stored as in the
Gray Herbarium. In 1943, Shinners promoted the variety to species level as
Aster tenuipes , specifying that it lacked the "pubescent midveins" of This name had been in use since 1898 as native to Japan. The following year, Shinners renamed his to
Aster acadiensis . Nesom created
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum var.
tenuipes when he moved the varieties to genus
Symphyotrichum. These three names,
Aster lateriflorus var.
tenuipes , and are now its taxonomic synonyms.
Hybrids The following naturally occurring
hybrids have been reported: • • • • •
Etymology The
specific epithet (second part of the scientific name)
lateriflorum is a combination of the Latin words for
side and
flower, so named because the flowers are seen to grow on one side of the branches.
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum is commonly known as calico aster, starved aster, white woodland aster, side-flowering aster, side-flower aster, goblet aster, one-side aster, one-sided aster, farewell summer, and calico American-aster. Along with other asters that bloom in the fall, may be called a
Michaelmas daisy. There are
Indigenous American names for this plant including the
Meskwaki word and the
Potawatomi word , both as spelled by
ethnobotanist Huron Herbert Smith.
Aster comes from the
Ancient Greek word (
astḗr), meaning
star, referring to the shape of the flower. The word
aster was used to describe a star-like flower as early as 1542 in , a book by the German physician and botanist
Leonhart Fuchs. An old common name for
Astereae species using the suffix
-wort is starwort, also spelled or star wort. An early use of this name can be found in the same work by Fuchs as , translated from German literally as star herb ( ). The name was in use by Aiton in his 1789
Hortus Kewensis. Scientific names that were later changed to be taxonomic synonyms of
Symphyotrichum lateriflorum had common names such as diffuse white-flower'd star-wort and pendulus star-wort in this work (
Aster diffusus and
Aster pendulus, respectively). ==Distribution and habitat==