The Importance of Stellar Symphyotrichums and Asters as the Fall Blooms for Pollinators

Symphyotrichum novae-anglia New England Aster. Photo Blake Ketchum
Asters are the stars of Autumn for pollinators.
Asteracea, is a large family of flower species. The word “Aster” comes from the Greek word for “star” because of the star shape of the flower head. Asters look like daisies. Petals radiate from centers like shining stars.
Yesterday, I saw a Monarch butterfly check out a purple perennial phlox, then fly away. Do you see pollinators hover over your flower garden this time of year and then quickly move on?
- Butterflies and bees fly with clear intent, on a mission from flower to flower. Bees check each flower thoroughly moving petals apart. All attention is focused on nectar and pollen levels. Pollinators are hungry and need food and drink to maintain energy.
What is energy needed for?
Pollinators need food for energy because they spend most of their time in the air. As aviators and flying conditions, to keep butterflies and bees airborne takes fuel which is a lot of nectar and pollen. Think of the act of flight and how much fuel and energy is needed to defy gravity, takeoff and stay in the air with wind currents. Honey bees do not fly in strong winds. Strong winds toss and turn smaller bees off course more than the larger bumble bees. Larger “wide-body” bumble bees are better adapted to fly on windy days, but Bumble bees are solitary bees and do not live in hives. Bumble bees need to forage constantly.
Bees and butterflies are very active flyers in Autumn. Honey bee scouts are the “frequent flyers” of honey bee world. Watch a bee hive. Scouts “take off” from hive entrances and you count seconds and minutes during the flurry of mid-August through September. Meanwhile back at the beehive, the Queen, her attendants, nurse bees, young bees, housekeeping bees and workers do not leave the hive in Fall. The scouts fly out and pick up nectar and pack pollen on furry legs to return to the hive to share food. Honey bees use mutualism and community effort. Workers move extra to storage cells for winter months. One reason for bee colony decline is bees run out of food stored in beehives by January and February.
Monarch butterflies fly a migratory route that covers Canada, United States and Mexico. Monarchs do not fly in the rain. Water weighs down delicate wings. Monarchs need heat energy to “warm up” to move their wings. Monarchs fly12 miles per hour and fly 50 miles a day in good weather.
Because of these special flying needs, Monarchs and honey bees face competition among other pollinators like the “all-weather” wasps and flies.
- By mid-August, summer flowers are depleted of nectar and pollen. It takes time to regenerate nectar in flowers, and many have simply gone to seed.
Now you can begin to understand and appreciate the importance of planting late blooming flowers to feed pollinators when they need it the most.
Which native perennials are available in your region for late season pollinators?
Native perennials to the rescue!
- Blue Asters, Sneezeweed, Purple Coneflower, Goldenrod, Spotted Joe Pye Weed, Ironweed and Boneset are perennial plants in the Aster family. Asters come in all shapes and sizes: eight inches to eight feet.
- A good tip is to plant taller asters along back borders and set low growing Sneezeweed or Stiff Goldenrod in front for a full, two-tier meadow look in Fall gardens.
- Imagine seeing a patch of hardy blue New England Asters, deep purple and pink daisies, mixed in with Panicled White Asters to naturalize a wildflower look.
- Pollinators see Asters as a Fall harvest banquet that comes just in time.
- Gardeners see complimentary colors of purple and yellow blooms creates a warm and lively combo together.
In American Beekeeping “How Bees See and Why It Matters” bees see differently than humans. They see more blues and ultraviolets.
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-11971274
Bees see halos in center of daisies. This blue halo directs bees to flowers.
See the blue halo. Photo Science Magazine
Stellar Symphyotrichums Variety – Seven Stars of Fall Blooming Gardens
Here are five “blue star” pollinator plants:
New England Aster, Smooth Blue Aster, Blue Wood Aster, Aromatic Aster and Ironweed are all true blue flowers.
- Bees are attracted to blue colors and blue-violet flowers. Grow blue Asters and see bees visit your Symphyotrichums.
- Blue flowers are more rare in the plant world than other colors.
Four Blue Stars of Fall Gardens
What makes Asters so stellar, besides having the name Aster which means star?
Asters thrive in clay soils. Native perennials that can grow in clay are hardy plants and able to establish roots in dense clay soil and spread the next year.
1Symphyotrichum novae-anglia
New England Aster

Symphyotrichum novae anglia New England Aster

Symphyotrichum novae-anglia New England Asters can be deep pink or purple colors.
1 Symphyotrichum novae-anglia New England Aster is a blue, pink to deep purple, vigorous plant that goes in open sunny and dry soils. New England Asters look great as a back border of home gardens. It grows two to three feet. In a naturalized look, New England Asters create a spectacular deep purple meadow in a wildflower garden.
2 Symphyotrichum laeve
Smooth Blue Aster

Symphyotrichum laeve Smooth Blue Aster. Photo pfag.org Plants For A Future
Smooth Blue Aster is used for prairie gardens. Smooth Blue Aster is a popular native wildflower for butterfly pollinator gardens. It is light to Pale purple with a yellow center. Smooth Blue Aster grows in August up to frost.
Symphyotrichum laeve Smooth Blue Aster grows as a mass of blue blooms. Grows in full sun, but tolerates some wet soils.
3 Symphyotrichum cordifolium
Blue Wood Aster

Symphyotrichum cordifolium Blue Wood Aster. Photo pfaf.org Plants For A Future
3 Symphyotrichum cordifolium Blue Wood Aster looks charming below trees and wooded settings. Grows in sun and shade. Plant Blue Wood Asters near the edge of where the sun meets the shade of trees or near a clearing of woodlands.
4 Eurybia divaricata

Eurybia divaricata White Wood Aster
Eurybia divaricata White Wood Aster grows in shade.
In home gardens, plant White Wood Asters in shady spots. White Wood Aster grows well in open, dry woodlands. Reclassified recently to the Eurybia family, White Wood Aster was in the Aster family. White Wood Aster grows well in forests and woods.
White Wood Aster grows very well here in Pennsylvania. “Penn’s Woods” is a mostly forested state.
5 Symphyotrichum oblongolium
Aromatic Aster

Symphyotrichum oblongifolium Aromatic Aster. Wildflower.org
Smell Aromatic Aster and the name says it all. Crush a leaf in your hand and release a wonderful balsam fragrance. On a late summer day, walk through a garden and follow your nose to the warm spicy scent of blue Aromatic Asters. This is an Aster for the senses. Aromatic Aster engages sight, smell and touch to remember a warm sunny day in Fall.
6 Symphyotrichum ascendens

Symphyotrichum ascendens Western Aster. USDA photo
6 Symphyotrichum ascendens Western Aster is a native perennial, pale blue Aster with a yellow center. Western Aster grows to four feet. The Western Aster blooms late July to October in Western states.
7 Symphyotrichum lanceolatum
Panicled Aster or White Panicled Aster

White Panicled Aster. Plants For A future. pfaf.org Photo

White Panicled Aster www.illinoiswildflowers.info/prairie/plantx/pan_asterx.htm photo
Symphyotrichum lanceolatum White Panicled Aster or Panicled Aster is the only Aster found in all of the Continental United States.
Panicled Aster is a “natural” choice for all Wildflower gardens. Panicled Aster is a dainty white wildflower. Panicled Aster looks “fresh as a daisy” in meadow, wildflower gardens and visually interesting in rock gardens.
See USDA map of green of Panicled Aster in all continental United States.
https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=SYLA6#
More Fall Blooming Flowers in the Aster Family for Pollinators
Four Yellow Asters
1 Helenium autumnale Sneezeweed
https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=HEAU

Helenium autumnale Sneezeweed or Dog Tooth Daisy

Sneezeweed
Helenium autumnale Sneezeweed is like the Panicled Aster as it is also found native to all of the Continental United States.
If you closely look at the petal edge of Sneezeweed or Dog Tooth Daisy, you can see the distinctly notched “dog tooth. Sneezeweed is a member of the Aster family (Asteraceae).
Helenium autumnale Sneezeweed is a yellow daisy flower for Fall blooms. Sneezeweed brings a sunny summer day feel to cool brisk days. It grows low to the ground, eight inches to a foot.
Often called Sneezeweed because it was used to cure sneezes, not cause sneezes.
2 Coreopsis tinctoria Plains Coreopsis

Plains coreopsis. USDA photo
https://plants.usda.gov/java/largeImage?imageID=coti3_1h.jpg
Coreopsis tinctoria Plains Coreopsis, or Golden Tickseed, is used in gardens. As a native perennial in the Aster family, Plains Coreopsis or Golden Tickseed needs some fertilizer. Plains Coreopsis grows to four feet. Plains Coreopsis is a red/yellow flower that looks similar to Blanket Flowers. The difference is this Golden Tickseed needs moisture or grows in bottomland locations. Plains Coreopsis needs extra care to grow in larger meadows.
3 Rudbeckia hirta Black Eyed Susan

Rudbeckia hirta Black Eyed Susan. USDA photo
Rudbeckia hirta Black Eyed Susan has deep golden yellow petals and a velvety brown “eye” center. Rudbeckia hirta is a well recognized Aster.
- A field of Black Eyed Susans is a glitter of gold used for erosion control on hillsides and fields.
- Black Eyed Susans is a classic “anchor” for wildflower home gardens.
- A hardy plant, Rudbeckia hirta grows in sun and dry soils.
- Once established, Black Eyed Susans reseed and perpetuate indefinitely as a stand of wildflowers.

Rudbeckia hirta Black Eyed Susan. USDA photo
4 Solidago rigida Stiff Goldenrod

Solidago rigida Stiff Goldenrod. USDA photo
USDA Solidago rigida Stiff Goldenrod
Solidago is in the Asteracea family, which shows just how many different flowers and shapes are Asters. Solidago rigida Stiff Goldenrod is a fuzzy “gold” yellow flower that blooms in late season.
Goldenrod does not cause allergies or hay fever. Goldenrod is often mistaken for ragweed.
Echinaceas in the Aster Family
Four species of Echinacea Coneflower
No matter where you live in the continental United States, you can find a native perennial coneflower. Wildflower gardens include coneflowers to attract pollinators and wildlife.
The popular Echinacea Coneflower can be found in every region according to the University of Illinois, according to land grant university extension services at Illinois extension.”
1 Echinacea purpurea Purple Coneflower

Purple Coneflower
Echinacea purpurea Purple Coneflower is a popular flower in Eastern and Central region. This deep pink “star” Aster has a distinct “cone” head or “hedgehog” center. The cone description Echinacea comes from the Greek word hedgehog, because of the raised spikes of the flower head.
Echinacea likes sun and dry soil. Echinacea is a native and cultivated flower. Pairs well with Black Eyed Susans in gardens.
Golfinches love purple coneflowers for plucking the dried brown seeds in late August and September. Goldfinches come in flocks to coneflowers.

Goldfinch and Purple Coneflower. Photo copyright Will Stuart.
Purple coneflower and American Goldfinch. Copyright Photo: Will Stuart
2 . Echinacea pallida Pale Purple Coneflower for Central region.

Pale Purple Coneflower
Pale Purple Coneflower is used in prairie restoration and landscaping. Grows in dry soils.
3 Echinacea angustifolia Narrow leaf Purple Coneflower

Narrow Leaf Purple Coneflower. USDA photo
Narrow Leaf Purple Coneflower
Echinacea angustifolia Narrow Leaf Purple Coneflower is native to the Plains and Plains Indians medicine.
4 Echinacea paradoxa, Yellow Coneflower, is native specifically to the Ozarks.
USDA also lists name known as Bush’s Purple Coneflower. Maybe the paradox is the Bush’s Purple Coneflower is yellow and not purple.
Also, Echinacea paradoxa, Yellow Coneflower, is a coneflower and not to be confused with Black Eyed Susan, a Rudbeckia.

Echinacea paradoxa Yellow Coneflower
USDA Echinacea paradoxa, Yellow Coneflower
https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=ECPA2

Rudbeckia hirta Black Eyed Susan
Two White Asters that Attract Pollinators in Fall With a Carpet of White
Eupatorium perfoliatum Common Boneset or Thoroughwort
Boneset has the umbel shape of flower that is a favorite of all pollinators. This flattened top is easy to land and retrieve nectar. A good way to remember umbel shape is an open umbrella of blooms and a carpet of white flowers. Eupatorium perfoliatum grows to two to four feet. Boneset is an Aster.
Achillea millefolium White Yarrow

White Yarrow. USDA photo
White Yarrow is in the Aster family. White Yarrow looks like a large landing field of white blooms to a bee or butterfly. Honey bees prefer this flower because it is “easy to get in and easy to get out” of the flower throat. White Yarrow is like a fast food place for bees and butterflies.
Two Deep Pink and Purple Asters that Grow in Moist Soil
Eutrochium maculatum Spotted Joe Pye Weed
USDA photo of Eutrochium maculatum Spotted Joe Pye Weed
Eutrochium maculatum Spotted Joe Pye Weed is not a weed. Spotted Joe Pye Weed is an Aster. It is a pink to light purple native plant that likes moist, but sunny soil. Stem color ranges from green to light purple. Spotted Joe Pye Weed grows two to four feet with a more compact habit than other larger Joe Pye Weed species.
Vernonia fasciculata Ironweed
Photo copyright by Minnesota Wildflowers
https://www.minnesotawildflowers.info/flower/prairie-ironweed
Vernonia fasciculata Ironweed lives in moist soil and part shade. It grows two to four feet. Ironweed has an intense purple color and upright form. Naturalize to form a purple blanket. Ironweed is a striking plant where it grows. Ironweed is one of my favorite plants. You can not miss it in a landscape.
Blanket Flower is in Sunflower and Aster Family
Gaillardia aristata Blanket Flower
USDA Gaillardia aristata Blanket Flower
https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=GAAR#
Gaillardia aristata Common Gaillardia Blanket Flower
The adaptable Blanket Flower is a member of the sunflower and Aster family. Blanket flower grows in a wide range of soils, loams, rocky to gravelly-sandy textures.
- A low profile plant, Blanket Flowers tolerate a soil pH range from slightly acidic to mildly alkaline.
- Blanket Flower is a bright red and yellow ornamental flower in gardens. Blanket Flower is a fine rustic wildflower for low maintenance landscaping. Prefers sunny, well-drained soils.
This Fall season plant a collection of Asters to see a lively active garden of blooming native wildflowers for pollinators.
References
Morgridge Institute for Research Blue Sky Science “Do Plants Produce Nectar Every Day?”
Bee Culture, the American Beekeeping magazine article: How Bees See and Why It Matters
Mother Nature Network the science of blue flowers
www.audubon.org/native-plants
“Bring more birds to your home with native plants.
thewildflowerprojectmn.org
Plants USDA.gov
University of Illinois Extension
University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension
University of California Davis Arboretum
BONAP net map