Symphyotrichum ascendens
Symphyotrichum ascendens is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae known by the common names western aster, long-leaved aster, and Rocky Mountain aster. Blooming July–September, it is native to western North America and can be found at elevations of in several habitats.
Description
Symphyotrichum ascendens is a rhizomatous, perennial, and herbaceous plant growing a branching, erect stem to heights between. Leaves are widely lance-shaped to oblong and pointed, the largest ones near the base of the stem reaching up to long. The stem and leaves are roughly hairy in places.The inflorescence is an array of many flower heads with many narrow violet to nearly white ray florets around a center of golden disc florets that open July–September. The fruit is a hairy cypsela with a long pappus. S. ascendens is similar to Symphyotrichum chilense, which has smaller flower heads.
Chromosomes
Symphyotrichum ascendens has a chromosome base number of x = 13. There are diploid individuals which occur in the western portion of its range, and tetraploid ones found eastward.Taxonomy
S. ascendens is a member of the genus Symphyotrichum, sometimes called American-asters, classified in the subgenus Ascendentes. Its basionym is and it has many taxonomic synonyms. Its name with author citations is Symphyotrichum ascendens. In 1834, English botanist John Lindley formally described the plant that now is named Symphyotrichum ascendens.This species is allopolyploid, derived from the hybridization of S. spathulatum with S. falcatum, each from a different subgenus, Symphyotrichum and Virgulus, respectively. This produced a plant with a unique base number of x = 13, also written x2 = 13, and it warranted its own subgenus, Ascendentes, and its own species name. One other species is placed within subgenus Ascendentes: S. defoliatum.