Entry From
Flora of North America, Vol 20,
Names
Erigeron divergens Torrey & A. Gray [family COMPOSITAE], Fl. N. Amer., 2: 175. 1841
Erigeron divaricatus Nuttall [family COMPOSITAE], Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc., n.s., 7: 311. 1840,. not Michaux 1803
Erigeron accedens Greene [family COMPOSITAE]
Erigeron incomptus A. Gray [family COMPOSITAE]
Erigeron solisaltator G. L. Nesom [family COMPOSITAE]
Phenology
feb (winter), apr-may (spring), jun-aug (summer), sep-oct (fall)
Discussion
Polyploidy and agamospermy apparently are common in Erigeron divergens and contribute to the variability and, probably to some extent, the polymorphism characteristic of this species. Diploids appear to be scattered through the range of the species, at least in its southern part.
The form of Erigeron divergens with persistent, deeply pinnatifid basal leaves with relatively long petioles and tendency toward perenniality (woody taproots) has been named E. accedens [occurs at 200–1000(–1200) m and flowers Feb–Apr(–May)]. Such plants have sometimes been identified as E. lobatus, and it is possible that they may have originated as hybrids with it; in most ways they are similar to E. divergens and apparently intergrade with it. The E. accedens form occurs in California, Arizona, New Mexico, southwest Texas, Baja California, northern Sonora, Durango, and Chihuahua, apparently sympatrically with more typical E. divergens, suggesting that the former is stabilized and self-reproductive (probably agamospermic). Available chromosome counts are triploid. Rare plants (e.g., E. incomptus) may have filiform rays barely extending past the involucre.
Another common form of Erigeron divergens in the broad sense (mostly in Chihuahua, also southern Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona) has bowl-shaped plants with decumbent stems, a discrete taproot, persistent, lobed basal leaves, and solitary heads topping usually simple stems, and usually is early-season in phenology. Further comments related to variation in E. divergens are found under 163. Erigeron multiceps.