Hypericum sect. Androsaemum | |
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Hypericum androsaemum, the type species of the section | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Clade: | Rosids |
Order: | Malpighiales |
Family: | Hypericaceae |
Genus: | Hypericum |
Section: | Hypericum sect. Androsaemum (Duhamel) Godron |
Type species | |
Hypericum androsaemum | |
Species | |
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Androsaemum, commonly called tutsan, is a section of flowering plants in the family Hypericaceae. It is made up of Hypericum androsaemum (its type species), H. foliosum , H. grandifolium , and H. hircinum , as well as the hybrid H. × inodorum. When it was first described, it was considered its own independent genus, but was later placed under Hypericum and demoted to a section. It is also the namesake of an "Androsaemum-group" of related taxa that includes several other sections of Old World species. The Latin name Androsaemum comes from a Greek work to describe plants with red sap, and literally means "blood-man".
The members of Androsaemum are deciduous shrubs of medium size. They are characterized by their lack of hairs and by not having small dark glands. Plants possess clusters of many yellow flowers, each of which has several dozen male reproductive stamens, as well as a seed capsule that regularly dry out and split open. Extracts taken from the species have diverse profiles of essential oils. These are made up mostly of organic compounds consisting entirely of hydrogen and carbon, but they also sometimes contain high amounts of other chemicals.
The habitat of most of the species is in evergreen forests, and all but H. hircinum prefer damp shady areas. There are no species in Androsaemum that are considered to be in danger of extinction, and the section is distributed widely across Europe, Africa, and Western Asia. Its species have become invasive in numerous locations after escaping from gardens in non-native environments, including in Australia, California, and much of Western Europe.
The genus name Hypericum derives from the Greek words hyper, meaning above, and eikon, meaning picture. This refers to the practice of hanging the flower "above pictures" to ward off evil spirits. The term Androsaemum derives from the Greek term androsaemus, which denoted plants possessing red sap. It is a combination of the words andros, meaning man, and haima, meaning blood. [1] The common name tutsan is French in origin, and derives from the phrase tout-saine, which means heal-all, in reference to the medicinal properties of the plants. [2]
Androsaemum was first taxonomically described as an independent genus. It was included in the 1754 Gardeners Dictionary , with the common names "tutsan" and "park-leaves". It was stated to have one species known in England referred to as Androsæmum maximum frutescens, [3] which was later synonymized with Hypericum androsaemum . [4] Another early description of the genus was by Carlo Allioni in Flora Pedemontana in 1785. Using the sexual system of Linneaus, Allioni placed the genus as most closely related to Hypericum and Croton. [5]
The modern conception of Androsaemum as a section within Hypericum was first created in Flore de France in 1847. It included H. hircinum and H. androsaemum , and had a description that noted its berries that dry out and split. [6] However, the status of Androsaemum as a section and not a genus was contested over the next century. A publication on botanical tautonyms [note 1] by Ernst Huth in 1893 rejected the name Hypericum androsaemum, [8] which meant that the new and invalid name Androsaemum androsaemum would take priority. [9]
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Cladogram showing the phylogeny and relationships of H. sect. Androsaemum within the "Androsaemum-group" based on Meseguer et al. 2013 [10] |
Norman Robson included Hypericum sect. Androsaemum as one of his 36 sections of the genus Hypericum. Androsaemum was described in the 1985 installation of his monograph on the genus, in which its common characteristics were outlined, and a key was given for its four species and one hybrid. [11] Because Robson used only morphological and geographic characteristics to organize Hypericum, further taxonomic studies were required. [12] In 2010, cladistic analysis suggested that Androsaemum was a part of a clade called the " Myriandra - Ascyreia " group, which included those sections and several other species. [13] The following year, a study reaffirmed the monophyletic nature of section Androsaemum, [14] and established that H. hookerianum and H. canariense were closely related to the section. [12] A 2013 study used Bayesian inference to establish the phylogeny and close relations of Hypericum species. Section Androsaemum was placed into a new Old World taxon called the "Androsaemum-group" along with several other sections. It also established the relationships of the species within section Androsaemum to each other. [10]
Hypericum androsaemum is the type species of the section. It was known and studied before Carl Linnaeus, but he was the first to describe it in his Species Plantarum in 1753. [15] Several invalid synonyms were published in the following years, but the only valid synonym was Androsaemum officinale in 1785. [16] There are two distinct infraspecific variants that have a unique appearance: H. androsaemum var. aureum has yellow-green leaves, and H. androsaemum f. variegatum has variegated leaves. [17]
Hypericum foliosum was described by William Aiton in Hortus Kewensis in 1789. [18] This nomenclature remained constant, with no synonyms arising following the original description. [19]
Hypericum grandifolium was described by Jacques Denys Choisy in 1821. [20] Throughout the 19th century, there was confusion about the identity of the species. It was confused with H. × inodorum (under the synonym H. elatum), and was also called H. anglicum and Androsaemum webbianum. [21]
Hypericum hircinum was known as "Ascyroides", "Androsaemum foeditum", and "Tragôdes" in pre-Linnaean botany. [22] [23] Carl Linnaeus described the species twice, and established the current name Hypericum hircinum in Species Plantarum in 1753. [24] The only time a synonym arose was in 1836, when Édouard Spach moved the species into the genus Androsaemum and created the new combination Androsaemum hircinum. [25] Today, four subspecies are recognized: subsp. obstusifolium, subsp. cambessedesii, subsp. majus, and subsp. albimontanum. [26] [27]
Hypericum × inodorum is a hybrid of H. hircinum and H. androsaemum. The taxonomic history of the nothospecies is highly convoluted, and several aspects of it have been mischaracterized. It has two distinct appearances: one that is large-flowered and has been referred to as H. elatum, and one that is small-flowered and was called H. multiflorum. Additionally, some cultivated forms of the plant were called H. × persistens, while specimens found on the island of Madeira have been confused with H. grandifolium. [28]
Species in Androsaemum are shrubs standing 30–200 centimetres (12–79 in) tall. They are deciduous and do not have hairs or dark glands. The stems branch laterally from the center and have 2–4 visible lines running along them. They are a flattened shape in cross section when the plant is young, but become more cylindrical as the plant matures. The bark varies in texture, and can be smooth, scaly, or have fissures. The leaves are situated on opposite sites of the stem, and either lack a leafstalk or have a very short one. Their edges are smooth, and they have visible veins in pairs on each side of the midrib, as well as dense tertiary veins. There are pale glands on the top and sides of the leaves, but not the bottom. [11]
Plants usually have clusters of 3–20 flowers that grow from one or two nodes. The bracts are either similar in appearance to the leaves and persist through flowering, or are smaller and deciduous. The flowers are star-shaped with five petals and sepals. The petals are deciduous, have smooth edges, and are covered in many pale glands. There are five bundles of 20–40 stamens, with amber anther glands. There are usually three styles of the same length. The seed capsule has a leathery or papery texture, and either partially or completely dries and cracks open. The seeds inside are a cylindric shape, with unilateral wings. [11]
Plants in the section usually have a chromosome number of 2n = 40, and are tetraploid. [11] However, a 2006 study found that there may be variability in the chromosome number in every species of the section, with counts of 2n = 32 being regularly reported. [29]
The species of section Androsaemum have a diverse profile of essential oils and other phytochemicals. Extracts from H. androsaemum are dominated by sesquiterpene hydrocarbons, [30] those from H. foliosum by monoterpenes, [31] H. hircinum by sesquiterpenes in the leaves and monoterpenes in the flowers, [32] H. grandifolium by sesquiterpenes and alkanes. [33] H. hircinum has several unique chemicals, such as amentoflavone, as well as the caproic acid that causes its goat-like smell. [34]
Species of the section are found in evergreen forests at elevations of 200–1100 metres. H. hircinum is found in dry open areas, while all other species prefer damp shady places. The section has a wide distribution across Europe, Africa, and Asia. Species are found in Macaronesia, Northwest Africa, Western and Southern Europe, Greece, Turkey, the Caucasus, Iran, Turkmenistan, the Levant, and Saudi Arabia. [11]
All four species are highly prolific, and are not endangered. Because they are widely cultivated as garden plants, they are prone to escaping captivity and becoming invasive. For example, H. androsaemum has been dispersed across Australia and New Zealand after being introduced by the Royal Horticultural Society, [2] while H. grandifolium is rapidly spreading in the San Francisco Bay Area and is displacing native species. [35] This propensity for invasiveness is likely due to their ability to quickly colonize open spaces, like H. foliosum in deposits of volcanic ash and man-made clearings. [36] Sometimes, the species become naturalized and integrate into their new environments, as H. hircinum has in Spain, France, and Sicily. [37]
Hypericum is a genus of flowering plants in the family Hypericaceae. The genus has a nearly worldwide distribution, missing only from tropical lowlands, deserts and polar regions. Many Hypericum species are regarded as invasive species and noxious weeds. All members of the genus may be referred to as St. John's wort, and some are known as goatweed. The white or pink flowered marsh St. John's worts of North America and eastern Asia are generally accepted as belonging to the separate genus TriadenumRaf.
Hypericum androsaemum, the shrubby St. John's wort, is a flowering plant in the family Hypericaceae. Commonly called tutsan or sweet-amber, the species is cultivated as an ornamental plant because of its striking red-tinted foliage, bright yellow petals, and its large clusters of fruit. Cultivars like 'Albury Purple' and 'Golden Tutsan' which have leaves with more pronounced purple and golden coloring, respectively.
Hypericum grandifolium, the large-leaved St John's wort, is a species of flowering plant in the family Hypericaceae. The plant is a bushy shrub that can grow to almost 2 meters tall. It has large leaves, golden yellow petals, and seed capsules that split open. H. grandifolium is native to the Canary Islands and Madeira in Macaronesia, but has become invasive in other regions, including California, after escaping from cultivation as an ornamental plant. It is parasitized by wasps and fungi, and is capable of reproducing through its rhizomes.
Hypericum aegypticum is a species of flowering plant of the St. John's wort family (Hypericaceae) which is native to the Eastern Mediterranean. It was described by Carl Linnaeus in the second volume of his Species Plantarum in 1753, who named it after Egypt despite it not being distributed there. The plant is commonly known as shrubby St. John's wort or Egyptian St. John's wort in English. Like other members of section Adenotrias, it is found among limestone rocks in coastal areas. While it has been evaluated as threatened on the island of Malta, the species has no legal protections.
Hypericum annulatum is a species of flowering plant in the family Hypericaceae. It is a perennial herb of varying heights which grows upright, with more than a hundred flowers of a golden yellow color. First described in 1827, the species has a wide distribution from Eastern Europe to East Africa, and its appearance can vary greatly based on its geographic location. It has been used in Bulgarian folk medicine, and has more recently been investigated for its effectiveness in slowing the growth of or killing certain types of human cancer.
Hypericum bupleuroides is a species of perennial flowering plant in the St John's wort family, Hypericaceae. It grows 45–80 centimeters tall, and notably has perfoliate leaves that are fused at the stem. It has pyramid-shaped flower clusters of 1 to 25 flowers with yellow petals in a star-shaped arrangement. The species is found along the Black Sea coast near the Turkish–Georgian border. Hypericum bupleuroides has a small distribution and specific habitat requirements that make it vulnerable to environmental pressures.
Hypericum hircinum is a species of perennial flowering plant in the St John's wort family, Hypericaceae. It is known as goat St John's wort and stinking tutsan; both names refer to the plant's distinctive odor. The species is a bushy shrub that can grow up to 1.5 meters tall, is many-stemmed, and has golden yellow flowers with conspicuous stamens. The plant has been well-documented in botanical literature, with mentions dating back to at least 1627. Carl Linnaeus described H. hircinum several times, including in his 1753 Species Plantarum which established its binomial. At one point the plant was placed into the defunct genus Androsaemum, but it was returned to Hypericum by Norman Robson in 1985.
Hypericum foliosum, the shining St John's wort, is a species of flowering plant in the family Hypericaceae. It is a bushy shrub endemic to the Portuguese Azores Islands with golden yellow petals and many stems. The species was described by William Aiton in 1789 and was later placed into section Androsaemum of the genus Hypericum by Norman Robson in 1984. It has a diverse essential oil profile made up mostly of monoterpene hydrocarbons, and significant concentrations of various medicinally useful phenols and carotenoids. Populations of the plant are small in number, but quick to colonize cleared areas like groves, landslide areas, and volcanic ash deposits. It is parasitized by fungus and by moth species, but is not considered endangered by the IUCN. H. foliosum is used in traditional medicine on the Azores for diuretic, hepatoprotective, and antihypertensive purposes. It also has in vitro antibiotic and antioxidizing capabilities.
Adenotrias is a section of flowering plants in the family Hypericaceae. It is made up of Hypericum aciferum, H. aegypticum, and H. russeggeri. When it was first described, it was considered its own independent genus, but was later placed under Hypericum and demoted to a section. Its Latin name Adenotrias is made of the Greek prefix adeno- and the Latin word trias. Species in the section are shrubs up to 2 metres (6.6 ft) tall with smooth leaves and bark, and are the only species in Hypericum with heterostylous flowers. They are found around the Mediterranean coast, with H. aciferum restricted to the island of Crete and H. russeggeri present only in parts of Turkey and Syria. Plants of the section have a habitat among limestone and other calcareous rocks. While H. aegypticum has a wide and generally secure distribution, H. aciferum was evaluated as endangered several times since the 1980s, although it is now considered only vulnerable because it is protected in part by a plant micro-reserve near Agia Roumeli.
Hypericum sect. Adenosepalum is one of 36 sections in the genus Hypericum. Its type species is Hypericum montanum.
Hypericum huber-morathii is a species of flowering plant in the St John's wort family Hypericaceae. It is a small perennial herb with few stems. It has narrow and brittle stems, thick leaves, flowers in clusters of varying numbers, small yellow petals, around twenty stamens, and three styles. H. huber-morathii is closely related to H. minutum and H. sechmenii, and also shares characteristics with H. lanuginosum. The plant is endemic to Turkey, and is found among limestone rocks in a limited region of southwestern Anatolia. Originally excluded from a comprehensive monograph of Hypericum, the species' placement within the genus is unclear. It has been placed in both section Adenosepalum and section Origanifolium.
Hypericum aucheri, also known as Koramanotu in Turkish, is a herbaceous perennial flowering plant in the St. John's wort family Hypericaceae.
Hypericum russeggeri is a species of flowering plant in the St John's wort family Hypericaceae. The plant is a small shrub with many branches that spread across the ground, and it has many small flowers with pale yellow petals. It is found only among calcareous rocks along the coast and in the foothills of the Nur Mountains of eastern Turkey and northern Syria. While H. russeggeri has an array of phytochemicals present in its flowering structures and leaves, these are found in lower concentrations than other species of Hypericum. The species was first described in 1842 as Triadenia russeggeri, and it has been placed into various defunct genera including Elodea and Adenotrias. It is now known as Hypericum russeggeri and is the type species of Hypericum section Adenotrias, a small section that also includes H. aegypticum and H. aciferum.
Hypericum coris, the heath-leaved St. John's wort, also called yellow coris, is a species of flowering plant in the family Hypericaceae, and is the type species of sect. Coridium. It is a low shrub, and it is found in Switzerland and northwestern Italy. The species has been a popular garden plant since the 18th century, valued for its long flowering period and for how well it adapts to cultivation.
Hypericum × inodorum, called tall tutsan or the tall St John's wort, is a bushy perennial shrub with yellow flowers native to Western Europe. It has been known since 1789, but confusion around its name, identity, and origin persisted throughout the 19th and 20th centuries.
Hypericum minutum is a species of flowering plant in the St John's wort family Hypericaceae. It is a small perennial herb that grows in tufts. It has slender and brittle stems, flowers in clusters of one to three, yellow petals with black and amber glands, few stamens, and a seed capsule with narrow grooves. H. minutum is closely related to H. huber-morathii and H. sechmenii and resembles a smaller form of the latter plant. The plant is endemic to Turkey, and is found among limestone rocks in a limited region of southwestern Anatolia. Originally excluded from a comprehensive monograph of Hypericum, the species' placement within the genus is unclear. It has been placed in both section Adenosepalum and section Origanifolium.
Hypericum decaisneanum is a species of flowering plant in the St John's wort family Hypericaceae. Named for French botanist Joseph Decaisne, it is a small perennial herb that grows mostly upright. It has thick, papery leaves and up to twenty flowers with bright yellow petals. Endemic to the Jebel al Akhdar province of Libya, H. decaisneanum is found in the cracks of limestone rocks on steep escarpments. It is a member of numerous plant communities and associations of chasmophytes, of which it is sometimes a key species. First described in 1899, the species was originally placed in section Taeniocarpium of the genus Hypericum, but conflicting relationships have meant it has been treated more recently as a member of section Adenosepalum.
Hypericum iwatelittorale, originally styled Hypericum iwate-littorale, is a species of flowering plant in the family Hypericaceae. Named for its habitat in the coastal regions of the Iwate Prefecture in Japan, little is known about the ecology and conservation status of the plant. The species is a small perennial herb with five bright yellow petals on its up to thirty flowers. It has many stamens, and an array of pale and black glands on its leaves, sepals, and petals. Described in 1937 by Hideo Koidzumi, it has at times been considered a synonym of Hypericum pseudopetiolatum. However, it was affirmed to be a valid species in 2003 and was placed into the type section of Hypericum, with its similarities to H. tosaense being noted.
Hypericum origanifolium is a species of flowering plant in the family Hypericaceae. It is native to Turkey, the Caucasus, and northwestern Syria. The species can be found in dry, often rocky, soil and on cliff slopes and ledges.