Parakeelya

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Parakeelya
Calandrinia balonnensis flowers.jpg
Parakeelya balonensis
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Montiaceae
Genus: Parakeelya
Hershk.
Type species
Rumicastrum chamaecladum
(Diels) Ulbr. [1]
Species [2]

See text

Synonyms [2]

Rumicastrum Ulbr.

Parakeelya is a genus of plants in the family Montiaceae with species native to Australia and New Guinea. [2] These species were formerly classed in genus Calandrinia , which was discovered to be paraphyletic. [3]

Contents

Species

The following species are accepted in the genus Parakeelya: [2]

Uses

Parakeelya balonensis is recorded in the 1889 book The Useful Native Plants of Australia as being called "periculia" by Indigenous Australians and that the plant was eaten by Europeans with bread while Indigenous Australians used it as a food when mixed with baked bark. "The seed is used for making a kind of bread, after the manner of that of Portulaca oleracea. (Mueller, Fragm., x., 71.)." [4]

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<i>Parakeelya balonensis</i> Species of plant

Parakeelya balonensis is a species of succulent plant native to arid and semi-arid regions of Australia. Common names for the plant include parakeelya, broad-leaf parakeelya, broad-leaved parakeelya and Balonne parakeelya. Parakeelya derives from one of the many Aboriginal Australian names for the plant. The scientific name for the species comes from the Balonne River in Queensland, where the first specimen was found. Calandrinia, its former genus, is named for Jean Louis Calandrini, a 19th-century Genevan professor and botanical author, P. balonensis is marketed as a garden plant under the name Calandrinia ‘Mystique’.

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<i>Rumicastrum corrigioloides</i> Annual herb

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<i>Rumicastrum granuliferum</i> Species of plant

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References

  1. Rumicastrum Ulbr. Australian Plant Names Index. Accessed 17 November 2023.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Parakeelya Ulbr. Plants of the World Online . Retrieved 31 December 2024.
  3. Hershkovitz, M.A. (2020). "Rumicastrum Ulbrich (Montiaceae): a beautiful name for the Australian calandrinias". Phytologia. 102: 116–123.
  4. J. H. Maiden (1889). The useful native plants of Australia : Including Tasmania. Turner and Henderson, Sydney.