The green links below add additional plants to the comparison table. Blue links lead to other Web sites.
enable glossary links

Crofton weed, eupatory, Mexican devil, sticky snakeroot, thoroughwort

snakeroot

Habit Subshrubs, 50–220 cm. Perennials, subshrubs, or shrubs [trees], mostly 20–220 cm.
Stems

(usually purplish when young) erect, stipitate-glandular.

usually erect, rarely scandent, sparsely to densely branched.

Leaves

opposite;

petioles 10–25 mm;

blades (abaxially purple) ovate-lanceolate or ovate-deltate to lanceolate-ovate, (1.5–)2.5–5.5(–8) × 1.5–4(–6) cm, bases cuneate to obtuse or nearly truncate, margins serrate, apices acute to acuminate, abaxial faces stipitate- to sessile-glandular.

cauline; mostly opposite (distal sometimes alternate); petiolate;

blades 3(–5)-nerved from bases, usually deltate, lanceolate, ovate, rhombic, or triangular, sometimes orbiculate, margins entire, crenate, dentate, or serrate, faces glabrous or hispidulous, pilose, or puberulent, sometimes gland-dotted (A. occidentalis, A. adenophora).

Peduncles

5–12 mm, densely stipitate-glandular and sometimes also sparsely viscid-puberulent.

Involucres

3.5–4 mm.

campanulate, 3–6 mm diam.

Receptacles

convex (glabrous or hairy), epaleate.

Florets

10–60;

corollas white or lavender, throats obconic to campanulate (lengths 1.5–2 times diams.);

styles: bases sometimes enlarged, glabrous, branches linear, seldom distally dilated.

Corollas

white, pink-tinged, lobes sparsely hispidulous.

Phyllaries

apices acute, abaxial faces stipitate-glandular.

persistent, 8–30 in 2(–3) series, 0- or 2-nerved, lanceolate to linear, ± equal (herbaceous).

Heads

clustered.

discoid, usually in compact, (terminal and axillary) corymbiform arrays, sometimes borne singly.

Cypselae

glabrous.

prismatic or ± fusiform, usually 5-ribbed, scabrellous and/or gland-dotted;

pappi usually persistent, sometimes fragile, rarely falling, of 5–40, barbellulate bristles in 1 series.

x

= 17.

2n

= 51.

Ageratina adenophora

Ageratina

Phenology Flowering Mar–Aug(–Sep).
Habitat Stream margins, ditches, road embankments, hillsides
Elevation 400–900 m (1300–3000 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
CA; Mexico; Intoduced [Also introduced in Europe, Pacific Islands (New Zealand)]
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from USDA
North America; Mexico; Central America; Andean South America
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Species ca. 250 (14 in the flora).

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Key
1. Shrubs
→ 2
1. Perennials or subshrubs
→ 3
2. Petioles (2–)3–5 mm; leaf blades 1–2 cm, margins entire or shallowly crenate, facesgland-dotted
A. wrightii
2. Petioles 3–10(–15) mm; leaf blades (2–)3–5(–7) cm, margins coarsely crenate, facesnot gland-dotted
A. havanensis
3. Leaves alternate on at least distal 1/4–1/2 of stems
→ 4
3. Leaves opposite
→ 6
4. Heads usually borne singly (rarely 2s or 3s); involucres 11–12 mm
A. shastensis
4. Heads usually 5–10 (axillary clusters usually forming elongate or broad aggregates); involucres 2.5–3.5(–4) mm
→ 5
5. Leaves alternate on distal 1/4–1/2 of stems; involucres 3–3.5(–4) mm; corollas pink, bluish, or white tinged with purple (not orange-veined); cypselae sessile-glandular
A. occidentalis
5. Leaves alternate (from bases to apices of stems); involucres 2.5–3 mm; corollaswhite (prominently orange-veined); cypselae eglandular
A. thyrsiflora
6. Peduncles densely stipitate-glandular
A. adenophora
6. Peduncles puberulent, glabrous, or glabrescent (not glandular)
→ 7
7. Flowering in spring; leaves usually narrowly lanceolate, 0.5–1.5 cm wide,apically long-acuminate; involucres 2.5–3 mm; cypselae glabrous
A. paupercula
7. Flowering in fall; leaves ovate to lanceolate-ovate, triangular, or lanceolate, (0.5–)1.5–9 cm wide, apically acute to acuminate; involucres (in A. jucunda 2.5–)3.5–7 mm; cypselae usually hairy (glabrous in A. altissima)
→ 8
8. Leaves mostly sessile; heads in open, loose arrays, peduncles 10–60 mm
A. lemmonii
8. Leaves distinctly petiolate; heads in compact clusters, ultimate peduncles 1–15(–20) mm
→ 9
9. Petioles 1–22 mm (distal leaves greatly reduced in size well proximal to heads); leaf blades 2–7(–9) × 1.5–4 cm (relatively thick)
→ 10
9. Petioles (5–)10–70 or 2–20 (in A. rothrockii) mm; leaf blades 2–11(–13) × 1.5–9 cm (relatively thin)
→ 11
10. Petioles 1–8(–12) mm; leaf margins crenate or less commonlycrenate-serrate to dentate or subentire
A. aromatica
10. Petioles 7–15(–22) mm; leaf margins coarsely serrate or incised orless commonly crenate to subentire
A. jucunda
11. Leaves (yellow-green or grayish yellow-green): blades triangular to lanceolate-ovate or ovate, 2–5(–7) × 1.5–3.5(–4.5) cm; phyllariesusually granular-puberulent
A. herbacea
11. Leaves (green, rarely yellowish): blades lanceolate to lanceolate-ovate, 4–11(–13) × 2.5–9 cm; phyllaries glabrous, villous, or villous-puberulent
→ 12
12. Stems glabrous; leaf blades broadly deltate-ovate (thin, delicate), apices obtuse; corolla lobes glabrous or sparselypuberulent
A. luciae-brauniae
12. Stems puberulent; leaf blades deltate-ovate to ovate or broadly lanceolate, apices acute to acuminate; corolla lobes short-villous
→ 13
13. Peduncles 1–5 mm; involucres 4–5 mm; cypselae glabrous;e United States and Canada
A. altissima
13. Peduncles 5–12(–20) mm; involucres 5–7 mm; cypselae sparsely and finely strigose-hirsute; Arizona, New Mexico, sw Texas
A. rothrockii
Source FNA vol. 21, p. 553. FNA vol. 21, p. 547. Author: Guy L. Nesom.
Parent taxa Asteraceae > tribe Eupatorieae > Ageratina Asteraceae > tribe Eupatorieae
Sibling taxa
A. altissima, A. aromatica, A. havanensis, A. herbacea, A. jucunda, A. lemmonii, A. luciae-brauniae, A. occidentalis, A. paupercula, A. rothrockii, A. shastensis, A. thyrsiflora, A. wrightii
Subordinate taxa
A. adenophora, A. altissima, A. aromatica, A. havanensis, A. herbacea, A. jucunda, A. lemmonii, A. luciae-brauniae, A. occidentalis, A. paupercula, A. rothrockii, A. shastensis, A. thyrsiflora, A. wrightii
Synonyms Eupatorium adenophorum
Name authority (Sprengel) R. M. King & H. Robinson: Phytologia 19: 211. (1970) Spach: Hist. Nat. Vég. 10: 286. (1841)
Web links