Eutrochium is a North American genus of herbaceous flowering plants in the family Asteraceae. They are commonly referred to as Joe-Pye weeds. They are native to the United States and Canada, and have non-dissected foliage and pigmented flowers. The genus includes all the purple-flowering North American species of the genus Eupatorium as traditionally defined,[2] and most are grown as ornamental plants, particularly in Europe and North America.
Taxonomy
Eupatorium has recently undergone some revision and has been broken up into smaller genera.[3][4] Joe Pye weeds were initially included in the genus Eupatorium, but as early as the 19th century Franco-American botanist Constantine Samuel Rafinesque proposed separating them into their own genus Eutrochium.[5][a] Unaware of this,[5] research botanists Robert M. King and Harold Robinson proposed assigning them to a new genus Eupatoriadelphus in 1970.[7] This was widely accepted, and Joe Pye weeds began to be referred to as such.[5]
In 1987, Robinson and King reincluded the genus Eupatoriadelphus in Eupatorium, while recognizing this former genus as being the same group of plants as Rafinesque's Eutrochium.[8] This decision was also widely accepted.[9]
Based on chloroplast DNA analysis published by Edward E, Schilling et al. in 1999,[10] the Joe Pye weeds were again separated into their own genus, Eutrochium,[11] as Eutrochium is the senior synonym of Eupatoriadelphus.[12][13] This usage quickly became formalized.[5]
Eupatorium in the revised sense (about 42 species of white-flowered plants from the temperateNorthern hemisphere) is apparently a close relative of Eutrochium. In addition to flower color, another difference between Eutrochium and Eupatorium is that the former has mostly whorled leaves and the latter mostly opposite ones.[13][14]Eupatorium and Eutrochium are both placed in the subtribe Eupatoriinae, but South American plants which have sometimes been placed in that subtribe, such as Stomatanthes, seem to belong elsewhere in the tribe Eupatorieae.[4]
All of the Joe Pye weed species except E. steelei are widely cultivated as ornamental landscape plants.[17] Cultivars have been developed for a more compact habit (e.g. E. dubium ‘Little Joe’, E. dubium ‘Baby Joe’, E. maculatum ‘Little Red’) and varied flower color.
Joe Pye weeds have traditionally been ascribed with medicinal powers. A peer-reviewed study suggests that Joe Pye was a Mohican sachem named Schauquethqueat who lived in the mission town of Stockbridge, Massachusetts from c. 1740 to c. 1785 and who took as his Christian name, Joseph Pye.[18] Sources (although without citation) claim the plant was used to treat typhus outbreaks[19] and for the treatment of kidney stones and other urinary tract ailments.[20]
Notes
^Or as Eupatorium sect. Verticillatum by de Candolle in 1836.[6]
^Ito, Motomi; Watanabe, Kuniaki; Kita, Yoko; Kawahara, Takayuki; Crawford, D.J. & Yahara, Tetsukazu (2000): Phylogeny and Phytogeography of Eupatorium (Eupatorieae, Asteraceae): Insights from Sequence Data of the nrDNA ITS Regions and cpDNA RFLP. Journal of Plant Research113(1): 79-89. doi:10.1007/PL00013913 (HTML abstract)
^ abcd"Spotted Joe Pye weed (Eutrochium maculatum)" at Minnesota Seasons web page. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
^Alan Whittemore. "The Sectional Nomenclature of Eupatorium (Asteraceae)." Taxon.36:3 (August 1987): 619. JSTOR1221856doi:10.2307/1221856
^R. M. King and H. Robinson. "Eupatorium, a Composite Genus of Arcto-Tertiary Distribution." Taxon.19.5: 770 (October 1970). JSTOR3562296doi:10.2307/1219289
^Robert Merrill King and Harold Robinson. The Genera of the Eupatorieae (Asteraceae). Missouri Botanical Garden, 1987. p. 65.ISSN0161-1542
^Eric E. Lamont. Taxonomy of Eupatorium Section Verticillata (Asteraceae). New York Botanical Garden, 1995. ISBN9780893273910
^Pearce, Richard B & Pringle, James S. (2017). Joe Pye, Joe Pye’s Law, and Joe-Pye-Weed: The History and Eponymy of the Common Name Joe-Pye-Weed for Eutrochium Species (Asteraceae),The Great Lakes Botanist, 56(3-4):177-200.Fulltext
^Audubon Society (1988). The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Wildflowers, Eastern Region. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
^Hemmerly, T. E. (2000). Appalachian Wildflowers. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press.