Panicled aster (Symphyotrichum lanceolatum) flowerheads. Top: a portion of a panicle with numerous flowerheads. The flower stems that come off the axis of the panicle always have a strap-like bract (arrows) at their base in addition to several similar but smaller bracts along the length of the flower stem. Bottom right: a single panicled aster flowerhead. Newly opened flowerheads have yellow disk florets. This flowerhead is older; a tinge of brown can be seen in the disk florets. Bottom left: close-up of the phyllaries covering the base of a panicled aster flowerhead. Note that the phyllaries are narrow, with a gradient of pale to darker green from base to tip.
Panicled aster’s central stem gives rise to an 8″ long panicle (4″ wide) of flowerheads; panicles may also arise form lateral stems and the axils of upper leaves. The panicle branches tend to be hairier and more often grooved than the stems; there are bracts (1.5″ long, 8 mm wide) at the base of the panicle branches and the base of the flowerhead stalks. Individual flowerheads are 1/2-3/4″ across with 1.5″ long flower stalks (peduncles). Flowerheads have 20-40 white (less often blue or violet), pistillate (no stamens) ray florets, and an equal number of perfect (pistils and stamens) disc florets that are initially yellow, turning red orange with age. Phyllaries (bracts) cover the back of the flowerhead in 3-6 overlapping layers; the phyllaries are narrow, green with paler bases, appressed or slightly spreading, with the outer layer shorter than the inner. The fruit is a 1.5-2 mm long gray seed with a tuft of dull white or yellowish hairs. It’s easy to confuse panicled aster with other asters that have small, white flowerheads. Look for: (1) leaves with wedge-shaped (not rounded or heart-shaped) bases, (2) mature leaves hairless on both sides, (3) stems with lines of white hairs, and (4) flowerheads with at least 20 ray florets. (Count the “petals.”)
Panicled aster (Symphyotrichum lanceolatum) stems and leaves. (1) A flowering stem branching off a main stem. Note the small, strap-like bracts along the length of the flowering stem. (2) The characteristic “reticulated” veins in a panicled aster stem leaf (best seen in transmitted light). (3) A lower stem leaf showing the upper side (3a) of the leaf and the underside (3b) of the same leaf. (4) The upper side of a stem leaf from the middle regions of a panicle aster. Note the restricted, subdued marginal teeth. (5) A strap-like bract from the base of a flowering stem showing the upper surface (5a) of the bract and the underside (5b) of the same leaf.
Panicled aster is a widely distributed native aster found in all the lower 48 states of the U.S. and the lower provinces of Canada. The central and lateral (non-woody) stems are 1-3 feet tall, light green to dull red, round in section, sometimes shallowly grooved, and usually with vertical lines of white hairs. Older stems may be brownish, woody looking, and hairless. The leaves are alternate, stalkless, and hairless except on the edges; the upper surface is dark green, the lower surface is lighter. Leaves near the base of the stem are large (up to 5″ long and 3/4″ wide), but leaf size decreases up the stem. The leaves are lance-shaped or elongated ellipses with sharp tips, have wedge shaped bases, and have smooth margins or a few marginal teeth (especially in the lower and middle leaves); they are sessile (upper leaves) or have short, winged, sheathing petioles (basal leaves that usually wither before flowering). There is a distinct pattern of reticulated veins on the lower and (sometimes) the upper surface of the leaves.
A low thicket of panicled aster (Symphyotrichum lanceolatum) plants growing on the north shore of West Lagoon. (The Nancy Hays Bridge and the northern tip of Wooded Island are in the background.) The insert on the lower right shows a few panicled aster flowerheads; the insert on the upper right shows a well-developed flower panicle of panicled aster.
Panicled aster is a widely distributed native aster found in all the lower 48 states of the U.S. and the lower provinces of Canada. The central and lateral (non-woody) stems are 1-3 feet tall, light green to dull red, round in section, sometimes shallowly grooved, and usually with vertical lines of white hairs. Older stems may be brownish, woody looking, and hairless. The leaves are alternate, stalkless, and hairless except on the edges; the upper surface is dark green, the lower surface is lighter. Leaves near the base of the stem are large (up to 5″ long and 3/4″ wide), but leaf size decreases up the stem. The leaves are lance-shaped or elongated ellipses with sharp tips, have wedge shaped bases, and have smooth margins or a few marginal teeth (especially in the lower and middle leaves); they are sessile (upper leaves) or have short, winged, sheathing petioles (basal leaves that usually wither before flowering). There is a distinct pattern of reticulated veins on the lower and (sometimes) the upper surface of the leaves. The central stem gives rise to an 8″ long panicle (4″ wide) of flowerheads; panicles may also arise form lateral stems and the axils of upper leaves. The panicle branches tend to be hairier and more often grooved than the stems; there are bracts (1.5″ long, 8 mm wide) at the base of the panicle branches and the base of the flowerhead stalks. Individual flowerheads are 1/2-3/4″ across with 1.5″ long flower stalks (peduncles). Flowerheads have 20-40 white (less often blue or violet), pistillate (no stamens) ray florets, and an equal number of perfect (pistils and stamens) disc florets that are initially yellow, turning red orange with age. Phyllaries (bracts) cover the back of the flowerhead in 3-6 overlapping layers; the phyllaries are narrow, green with paler bases, appressed or slightly spreading, with the outer layer shorter than the inner. The fruit is a 1.5-2 mm long gray seed with a tuft of dull white or yellowish hairs. It’s easy to confuse panicled aster with other asters that have small, white flowerheads. Look for: (1) leaves with wedge-shaped (not rounded or heart-shaped) bases, (2) mature leaves hairless on both sides, (3) stems with lines of white hairs, and (4) flowerheads with at least 20 ray florets. (Count the “petals.”)
Jackson Park asters (genus Symphyotrichum) — phyllaries
First row, left to right: Drummond’s aster (S. drummondii), heath aster (S. ericoides), smooth blue aster (S. laeve).
Second row, left to right: panicled aster (S. lanceolatum), calico aster (S. lateriflorum), New England aster (S. novae-angliae).
Third row, left to right: skyblue aster (S. oolentangiense), hairy aster (S. pilosum), Short’s aster (S. shortii).
Fourth row: white arrowleaf aster (S. urophyllum).
Phyllaries are small bracts that cover the underside of aster flowerheads. Often the most reliable character to distinguish among the species of aster in Jackson Park are the size, shape, and color of the phyllaries. Here I offer a single montage showing the phyllaries of all of the Jackson Park asters; if you have a picture of the phyllaries of some hard-to-ID species, this page may resolve your issues.


