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Sericocarpus
Nees
The genus Sericocarpus includes five x=9 species native to North
America. Members of the genus are distinguished from other typcial asters by having heads
with cylindrical to ovoid involucres with cartilaginous phyllaries and only a few
white ray florets and white to creamy disk florets. The chlorophyllous zone on the
phyllaries is similar to typical asters. The heads of usually grouped in tight
clusters in a flat-topped arrangement.
The genus was recognized as distinct from Aster in the broad sense by Fernald
(1950) following older treatments, while Cronquist (1980) included the genus in Aster.
Nesom (1993) argued for treating Sericocarpus as a separate genus.
Sericocarpus
was found to be the sister group to Aster s.s. by Xiang and Semple (1996), but
this was an artifact of not including samples of African and South American genera in the
RFLP study of cpDNA. Brouillet, Allen, Semple and Ito (2001) found Sericocarpus
to be a near basal member of the clade including Solidago,
Chrysothamnus, Petradoria
and Tonestus and other yellow-rayed Asteraeae of the Solidagininae s.s.
Leonard, Cook & Semple (2005) presented the results of a multivariate
morphometric analysis of Sericocarpus and presented a taxonomic treatment
with detailed descriptions, detailed illustrations of each species and dot
distributions. This was used to prepare the treatment of the genus for Flora
North America (Semple & Leonard 2006).
- Sericocarpus asteroides (syn: Aster paternus); habit,
heads
- Sericocarpus tortifolius (syn: Aster bifoliatus); habit,
heads
- Sericocarpus linifolius (syn: Aster solidagineus); habit,
inflorescence, heads
- Sericocarpus oregonensis; habit
- Sericocarpus rigidus (syn: Aster curtus)
Leonard, M.R, R.E. Cook and J.C. Semple. 2005. A multivariate morphometric
study of the aster genus Sericocarpus Nees (Asteraceae: Astereae). Sida
21: 1471-1505.
Semple, J.C. and M.R. Leonard. 2006. Sericocarpus Nees. pp. 101-105.
In Flora North America Editorial Committee, eds. Flora of North
America. Vol. 20. Asteraceae, Part 2. Astereae and Senecioneae. Oxford
University Press, New York.
Last update 19 April 2006 by J.C. Semple
© 2006 J.C. Semple |