TL;DR: In response to the recent segregation of Virgulus from Aster by Semple and Brouillet, members of all sections of North American Aster s.l. (except Machaeranthera), plus six of the Old World groups, were subjected to phenetic and cladistic analyses and proposed to retain a more traditional generic concept.
Abstract: Many attempts have been made at splitting certain groups from the large and complex genus Aster. For North American species, however, most authors have adhered to the broad generic concept espoused by A. Gray in his Synoptical Flora of North America. In response to the recent segregation of Virgulus from Aster by Semple and Brouillet (under the name Lasallea), members of all sections of North American Aster s.l. (except Machaeranthera), plus six of the Old World groups, were subjected to phenetic and cladistic analyses. Nine "aster-like" species of Erigeron subg. Erigeron were selected to represent an out-group, and 47 OTUs (operational taxonomic units) were scored for 41 characters. The results of this study may not decisively favor a broad or a narrow generic concept of Aster but, in the shortest tree obtained to date, Aster subg. Oreostemma is the sister group of all other subgenera of Aster included in the investigation. At least six groups emerge that seem as well defined as Virgulus and deserving of equal rank: 1) Macrocephali, 2) Symphyotrichum (linked with Conyzopsis), 3) Tripolium (including Oxytripolium), 4) Aster s.str. (linked with Sericocarpus), 5) Galatella (including Doellingeria), and 6) Oreostemma. Symphyotrichum, comprising the entire x = 8 chromosome number assemblage, certainly could be recognized at the generic level with as much justification as Virgulus. Furthermore, Heleastrum consistently is linked with Virgulus. If the two taxa were segregated as a single genus or placed in the same subgenus, the name Heleastrum would have priority. However, because the supporting evidence for the breakup of Aster rests primarily upon karyotypic characters (i.e., chromosome number and structurecharacters not suitable for identification of plants in the field or herbarium), we propose to retain a more traditional generic concept. The above-mentioned potential segregates, including Virgulus, are considered distinct at the subgeneric level. Beginning with the first monograph of the genus by Nees von Esenbeck (1832), several attempts have been made at segregating certain definable species groups from the large and complex genus Aster L. Nees, for example, established the genus Machaeranthera. Species allied to Aster solidagineus were recognized by him (perhaps justifiably) under Sericocarpus, and the species related to A. umbellatus Miller were included in his new genus Doellingeria. De Candolle established Heleastrum to include A. paludosus Sol. in Aiton, as well as A. ptarmicoides Nees [= Solidago ptarmicoides (Nees) Boivin]. He also treated as generically distinct the Biotian complex, i.e., species related to A. macrophyllus L. Rafinesque (1837) established Virgulus to accommodate A. concolor L., and Greene (1903) described Lasallea, typified by the closely related A. sericeus Vent. Several other generic names were applied by Greene to species traditionally considered as belonging in Aster, e.g., Leucosyris (1897), to include the species now known as A. intricatus (A. Gray) S. F. Blake and A. spinosus Benth.; lonactis (1897), for the species placed by A. Gray (1882) in subg. Ianthe; and Oreostemma (1900), for taxa related to A. alpigenus (Torrey & A. Gray) A. Gray. Nuttall (1841) described Eucephalus to include the western North American species related to A. perelegans Nelson & J. F. Macbr. After extensive study and much agonizing, Gray (1880, 1882, 1884) decided that, on morphological grounds, most of the above-mentioned segregates of Aster could not be maintained at the generic level. Except for Greene, most later authors adopted Gray's broad generic concept for North American taxa. Machaeranthera, however, was reconstituted by Cronquist
TL;DR: Agarwal et al. as discussed by the authors proposed to retain a more traditional generic concept of the genus Aster, which they called Erigeron subg.str. (Erigeron is the sister group of all other subgenera of Aster).
Abstract: Many attempts have been made at splitting certain groups from the large and com- plex genus Aster. For North American species, however, most authors have adhered to the broad generic concept espoused by A. Gray in his Synoptical Flora of North America. In response to the recent segregation of Virgulus from Aster by Semple and Brouillet (under the name Lasallea), mem- bers of all sections of North American Aster s.l. (except Machaeranthera), plus six of the Old World groups, were subjected to phenetic and cladistic analyses. Nine "aster-like" species of Erigeron subg. Erigeron were selected to represent an out-group, and 47 OTUs (operational taxonomic units) were scored for 41 characters. The results of this study may not decisively favor a broad or a narrow generic concept of Aster but, in the shortest tree obtained to date, Aster subg. Oreostemma is the sister group of all other subgenera of Aster included in the investigation. At least six groups emerge that seem as well defined as Virgulus and deserving of equal rank: 1) Macrocephali, 2) Symphy- otrichum (linked with Conyzopsis), 3) Tripolium (including Oxytripolium), 4) Aster s.str. (linked with Sericocarpus), 5) Galatella (including Doellingeria), and 6) Oreostemma. Symphyotrichum, com- prising the entire x = 8 chromosome number assemblage, certainly could be recognized at the generic level with as much justification as Virgulus. Furthermore, Heleastrum consistently is linked with Virgulus. If the two taxa were segregated as a single genus or placed in the same subgenus, the name Heleastrum would have priority. However, because the supporting evidence for the break- up of Aster rests primarily upon karyotypic characters (i.e., chromosome number and structure- characters not suitable for identification of plants in the field or herbarium), we propose to retain a more traditional generic concept. The above-mentioned potential segregates, including Virgulus, are considered distinct at the subgeneric level.
TL;DR: The eurybioid asters Oreostemma, Herrickia, Eurybia, and Triniteurybia form a complex that is part of the North American clade of tribe Astereae, which comprise 31 species of perennial herbs.
Abstract: The eurybioid asters Oreostemma, Herrickia, Eurybia, and Triniteurybia form a complex that is part of the North American clade of tribe Astereae. They comprise 31 species of perennial herbs that ar...
TL;DR: P phylogenetic relationships within the eurybioid asters Oreostemma, Herrickia, Eurybia, and Triniteurybia form a complex that is part of the North American clade of tribe Astereae are investigated, showing poor resolution among the four genera and among the species.
Abstract: The eurybioid asters Oreostemma, Herrickia, Eurybia, and Triniteurybia form a complex that is part of the North American clade of tribe Astereae. They comprise 31 species of perennial herbs that are widely distributed on the continent. Previous analyses had shown poor resolution among the four genera and among the species, particularly within Eurybia (23 spp.), which includes diploids and polyploids. We investigated phylogenetic relationships within the group us- ing the nuclear ribosomal ITS and ETS regions, in separate and combined parsimony and Bayesian analyses. We detected incongruence between the ITS and ETS regions when polyploids were included, and so only diploids were considered in the combined analyses. Eurybia pygmaea (Lindl.) G.L. Nesom is confirmed as a member of Symphyotrichum; Eurybia is monophyletic once this species is re-classified. The eurybioids form a paraphyletic grade with Oreostemma, sister to the remaining taxa, followed in succession by Herrickia, Eurybia, and Triniteurybia, and with the latter genus sister to sub- tribe Machaerantherinae. Thus the xeric Machaerantherinae (x = 6, 5, 4) is nested within the grade of mesic eurybioids (x = 9). Although largely grouping together, the polyploid taxa of Eurybia apparently do not constitute a clade and their relationships to the diploid taxa and to each other could not be assessed further. Among the diploids, two clades emerge: one including the western Eurybia integrifolia (Nutt.) G.L. Nesom and Eurybia sibirica (L.) G.L. Nesom, and the south- eastern Eurybia eryngiifolia (Torr. & A. Gray) G.L. Nesom; and a second including the western Eurybia radulina (A. Gray) G.L. Nesom, the eastern cordate-leaved (sect. Eurybia) and the narrow-leaved, mostly coastal plain species of Eurybia. Our analyses, therefore, do not support the current classifications of Eurybia. Resume´ : Les asters eurybioides Oreostemma, Herrickia, Eurybia et Triniteurybia forment un complexe faisant partie du clade nord-americain de la tribu des Astereae. Ce complexe comprend 31 herbes vivaces largement reparties sur le conti- nent. Des analyses precedentes avaient montrepeu de resolution entre les quatre genres et entre les especes, particuliere-