Oenanthe silaifolia ye una especie de la familia de les apiacees.
Difier de Oenanthe pimpinelloides nos lóbulos de les fueyes basales, llinial-llanceolaes, tarmu buecu y tubérculos radicales cerca del tarmu. Esta umbelífera ye alta, ente 30-80 cm, pocu ramificada, anque puede tener dellos tarmos dende'l gruesu raigañu. Hasta 5 umbeles en cada tarmu, con unos 20 radios primarios, ensin bráctees, umbelas secundaries con bracteolas. La flor blanca, de 3 mm de diámetru, con 5 pétalos arrondaos, fendíos fondamente, formando una gorguera saliente, 5 estames y 2 estilos. Frutu con costielles pocu fondes, non esgañáu, arredondiáu na parte cimera, estrechándose escontra la base. Fueyes cimeres con 2-3 segmentos, lacinies, o una vegada pinnaes, les basales dos vegaes pinnaes, con llargu peciolu, los segmentos estrechu y apuntar, un pocu acanalaos, abrazadoras nun llargu trechu, dixébrense llueu.[1]
Centro, oeste y sur d'Europa. Habita en llugares húmedos.[2]
Oenanthe silaifolia describióse por Friedrich August Marschall von Bieberstein y espublizóse en Fl. Taur.-Caucas. 3: 232. [Dec 1819 or early 1820][3]
Oenanthe: nome xenéricu que remanez del griegu oinos = "vieno", pa una planta de golor a vinu, y el nome griegu antiguu pa dalguna planta espinosa.[4]
silaifolia; epítetu
Oenanthe silaifolia ye una especie de la familia de les apiacees.
Inflorescencia
Oenanthe silaifolia, narrow-leaved water-dropwort, is a flowering plant in the carrot family, which is native to Europe and adjacent parts of Asia and North Africa. It is an uncommon plant of water-meadows and wetlands.
Narrow-leaved water-dropwort is a hairless, tuberous perennial growing up to 100 cm tall with a stem that is solid below and hollow in the upper parts, grooved and striated, 0.7 cm in diameter. The upper leaves are once to twice pinnate with linear or lanceolate (sword-shaped) leaflets up to 3 cm long; the lower ones are 2-4 pinnate, with similarly narrow leaflets. The leaf stalks of the lower leaves are long, but the upper leaves have stalks that are shorter than the leaf blade. They do not form a sheath around the stem at their base.[1][2]
It flowers in June in northern Europe, with primary umbels of 4-8 smaller rounded umbellules about 2 cm in diameter, each of which has numerous white flowers. There are no bracts on the main umbel and many (10-17) small, lanceolate bracteoles at the base of each of the individual secondary umblets. Plants are monoecious, with hermaphroditic and male flowers on the terminal umbels and only male flowers on the lateral ones.[3] Each flower has 5 unequal petals with the outer ones slightly larger, 5 stamens and 2 prominent styles arising from a swollen base (stylopodium) at the top of the ovary. After flowering, the flower stalks thicken, and the umbels do not become flat-topped in fruit. The fruit are 3-3.5 mm long, cylindrical, with prominent ridges.[1][4]
The first description of narrow-leaved water-dropwort was by the German botanist Friedrich August Marschall von Bieberstein in his Flora Taurico-Caucasica[5] in 1819. It has dozens of synonyms (i.e. other authors have subsequently named the same plant, but Bieberstein's name has precedence), including O. biebersteinii Simon (1903), O. peucedanifolia Heuff. ex Boiss. (1873) and Phellandrium lobelii Bubani (1899). A full list can be found in the Synonymic Checklists of the Plants of the World.[6] A few forms and varieties have also been named, but none is currently accepted. It is not known to hybridise with any other species.[4]
Its chromosome number is 2n = 22 (based on British specimens).[1]
The name of the genus, Oenanthe, is derived from the Greek οίνος, "wine" and άνθος, "flower", and refers to the intoxicating effect of hemlock water-dropwort, which is a different plant in the same genus. The specific epithet "silaifolia" means "with leaves like silaum" and refers to its uniformly narrow leaflets. A "dropwort" is a plant with drop-shaped tubers.[7][8]
Great care must be taken to distinguish this species from several very similar ones. In Britain, it can most easily be confused with corky-fruited water-dropwort and parsley water-dropwort. Both of these are likely to have slightly broader segments on the lower leaves and will usually have bracts on the main umbels. Unlike the other two, parsley water-dropwort has rays and pedicels that do not thicken in fruit, while corky-fruited water-dropwort is the only one to have umbels that become flat-topped in fruit.[1] Fine-leaved water-dropwort also has stems which remain hollow as they age, with thin walls (<0.5 mm thick) while the other species often develop solid stems or thicker stem walls.[3]
The global range of narrow-leaved water-dropwort is centred on Europe, the main populations being in France, England, Spain, Italy and Greece. It extends as far north as The Netherlands, east to the Caspian Sea, and southwards as far as Israel and North Africa. It is not recorded as an introduction beyond its natural range.[9]
In Britain, it is found from southern England as far north as Yorkshire, and as far west as SE Wales.
In Britain and France, it is classified as Least Concern, meaning that it is not rare nor declining at a particularly high rate. In certain counties and regions, however, it is judged to have a higher threat status.[10][11] Overall, it appears to be increasing slightly in Britain, although there is uncertainty about the veracity of some records.[12]
It is considered an axiophyte in all the British counties in which it occurs.[13]
It is a plant of wet meadows, typically those which are flooded with calcareous river water during winter, but it is not tolerant of agricultural intensification and is common only in unimproved grasslands. It is also found on river banks and ditch sides.[12]
Its Ellenberg values in Britain are L = 8, F = 9, R = 7, N = 5, and S = 0,[14] whereas in the Czech Republic the assigned values are L = 8, T = 6, F = 8, R = 7, N = 6, and S = 2.[15]
In a study of grasslands in the Marais Poitevin region of France, Oenanthe silaifolia was found not to contribute to the soil seed bank, which the authors of the study considered was because it primarily reproduces vegetatively. Any seeds that are produced may be short-lived.[16] In Britain, populations in unimproved fields can number tens of thousands of plants, but the meadows are typically mown before flowering, so seed production is rare.[17]
The vegetation community in which it grows is described in Croatia as Alopecurus pratensis-Oenanthe silaifolia grassland, in periodically flooded meadows with a slightly acidic reaction and high nutrient status, along with rare species such as Allium angulosum, Alopecurus rendlei and Fritillaria meleagris.[18] The British equivalent is MG4 Alopecurus pratensis-Sanguisorba officinalis flood meadow grassland,[19] which is also known for having populations of F. meleagris.
The parsnip moth is the only insect known to feed on narrow-leaved water-dropwort in Britain.[20] The caterpillars eat this, and various other types of umbellifer.
Most water-dropworts (Oenanthe spp.) are toxic to some degree but, as a widespread component of pastures and hay meadows, narrow-leaved water-dropwort is clearly not harmful to livestock, although the tubers may be.[21] It is not widely consumed by humans, but there are reports of the leaves being eaten as a vegetable or salad in Biga, Çanakkale, where it is known as Kazayağı.[22]
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(help) Oenanthe silaifolia, narrow-leaved water-dropwort, is a flowering plant in the carrot family, which is native to Europe and adjacent parts of Asia and North Africa. It is an uncommon plant of water-meadows and wetlands.
Oenanthe silaifolia es una especie de la familia de las apiáceas.
Difiere de Oenanthe pimpinelloides en los lóbulos de las hojas basales, lineal-lanceoladas, tallo hueco y tubérculos radicales cerca del tallo. Esta umbelífera es alta, entre 30-80 cm, poco ramificada, aunque puede tener varios tallos desde la gruesa raíz. Hasta 5 umbelas en cada tallo, con unos 20 radios primarios, sin brácteas, umbelas secundarias con bracteolas. La flor blanca, de 3 mm de diámetro, con 5 pétalos redondeados, hendidos profundamente, formando una gorguera saliente, 5 estambres y 2 estilos. Fruto con costillas poco profundas, no estrangulado, redondeado en la parte superior, estrechándose hacia la base. Hojas superiores con 2-3 segmentos, lacinias, o una vez pinnadas, las basales dos veces pinnadas, con largo peciolo, los segmentos estrechos y apuntados, un poco acanalados, abrazadoras en un largo trecho, se separan pronto.[1]
Centro, oeste y sur de Europa. Habita en lugares húmedos.[2]
Oenanthe silaifolia fue descrita por Friedrich August Marschall von Bieberstein y publicado en Fl. Taur.-Caucas. 3: 232. [Dec 1819 or early 1820][3]
Oenanthe: nombre genérico que deriva del griego oinos = "vino", para una planta de olor a vino, y el nombre griego antiguo para alguna planta espinosa.[4]
silaifolia; epíteto
Oenanthe silaifolia
L'œnanthe à feuilles de silaüs (Oenanthe silaifolia) est une plante herbacée du genre Oenanthe, de la famille des Apiaceae.
Weidekervel-torkruid (Oenanthe silaifolia, synoniem: Oenanthe peucedanifolia) is een overblijvende kruid, dat behoort tot de schermbloemenfamilie (Apiaceae). De soort staat op de Nederlandse Rode lijst van planten als zeer zeldzaam en zeer sterk afgenomen. De plant komt van nature voor in Zuid- en Zuidwest-Europa, Noord-Afrika en Zuidwest-Azië.
De plant wordt 30 - 60 cm hoog. Aan de plant zitten raapvormige wortelknolletjs, die geleidelijk naar de stengelvoet versmallen. De stengel is gegroefd en hol. De onderste bladeren zijn 2 - 4-voudig geveerd met lijnvormig-langwerpige bladslippen, die snel verdorren. De stengelbladeren zijn 1 tot 2-voudig geveerd.
De plant bloeit van mei tot in juli met witte of soms roze, 3 mm grote bloemen, die in een eindstandig scherm met 4 - 8 (10) stralen zitten. Er is geen of 1 omwindselblad. De omwindseltjes zijn korter dan de bloemsteel. De vijf kroonbladen zijn zeer ongelijk en de randbloemen zijn stralend, doordat de aan de buitenzijde staande kroonbladen groter zijn dan de aan de binnenzijde staande kroonbladen.
De 2,5 - 4 mm grote vrucht is een tweedelige splitvrucht met 1-zadige deelvruchtjes. De uitstaande stijlen zijn vrijwel even lang als de vrucht. De vruchtsteel is aan de top ingesnoerd, en in de vruchttijd verdikt tot 0,4 - 0,6 mm.
Weidekervel-torkruid komt voor in uiterwaarden en aan rivieroevers.
Weidekervel-torkruid (Oenanthe silaifolia, synoniem: Oenanthe peucedanifolia) is een overblijvende kruid, dat behoort tot de schermbloemenfamilie (Apiaceae). De soort staat op de Nederlandse Rode lijst van planten als zeer zeldzaam en zeer sterk afgenomen. De plant komt van nature voor in Zuid- en Zuidwest-Europa, Noord-Afrika en Zuidwest-Azië.
De plant wordt 30 - 60 cm hoog. Aan de plant zitten raapvormige wortelknolletjs, die geleidelijk naar de stengelvoet versmallen. De stengel is gegroefd en hol. De onderste bladeren zijn 2 - 4-voudig geveerd met lijnvormig-langwerpige bladslippen, die snel verdorren. De stengelbladeren zijn 1 tot 2-voudig geveerd.
De plant bloeit van mei tot in juli met witte of soms roze, 3 mm grote bloemen, die in een eindstandig scherm met 4 - 8 (10) stralen zitten. Er is geen of 1 omwindselblad. De omwindseltjes zijn korter dan de bloemsteel. De vijf kroonbladen zijn zeer ongelijk en de randbloemen zijn stralend, doordat de aan de buitenzijde staande kroonbladen groter zijn dan de aan de binnenzijde staande kroonbladen.
De 2,5 - 4 mm grote vrucht is een tweedelige splitvrucht met 1-zadige deelvruchtjes. De uitstaande stijlen zijn vrijwel even lang als de vrucht. De vruchtsteel is aan de top ingesnoerd, en in de vruchttijd verdikt tot 0,4 - 0,6 mm.
Weidekervel-torkruid komt voor in uiterwaarden en aan rivieroevers.
Oenanthe silaifolia é uma espécie de planta com flor pertencente à família Apiaceae.
A autoridade científica da espécie é M.Bieb., tendo sido publicada em Fl. Taur.-Caucas. 3: 232. [Dec 1819 or early 1820].[1]
Trata-se de uma espécie presente no território português, nomeadamente em Portugal Continental.
Em termos de naturalidade é nativa da região atrás indicada.
Não se encontra protegida por legislação portuguesa ou da Comunidade Europeia.
Oenanthe silaifolia é uma espécie de planta com flor pertencente à família Apiaceae.
A autoridade científica da espécie é M.Bieb., tendo sido publicada em Fl. Taur.-Caucas. 3: 232. [Dec 1819 or early 1820].
Oenanthe silaifolia là một loài thực vật có hoa trong họ Hoa tán. Loài này được M. Bieb. mô tả khoa học đầu tiên.[1]
Oenanthe silaifolia là một loài thực vật có hoa trong họ Hoa tán. Loài này được M. Bieb. mô tả khoa học đầu tiên.