Scorzonera judaica

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Scorzonera judaica
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Scorzonera
Species:
S. judaica
Binomial name
Scorzonera judaica
Eig
Synonyms [1] [2] [3]
List
  • Gelasia psychrophila(Boiss. & Hausskn.) Zaika, Sukhor. & N.Kilian
  • Scorzonera psychrophilaBoiss. & Hausskn.
  • Scorzonera pseudolanataGrossh.
  • Scorzonera persicaBoiss. & Buhse

Scorzonera judaica, commonly called Jordanian viper's grass, [1] Judean viper's grass, [1] or what was earlier known as salsify, [4] is a species of geophyte of the family Asteraceae. It is native to the eastern Mediterranean as far as Afghanistan.

Contents

Description

Scorzonera judaica is a perennial herbaceous plant with a cylindrical rhizome ending in a globose tuber. [5] [6] It bears a yellow inflorescence which, in Israel, blossoms between January and April. The petals are connate and tongue-shaped.

The plant lacks an inflorescence stem, and its flowers grow on long spikes (8–10 cm) that grow out of a rosette of elongated leaves. [7] The rosette of leaves grows immediately following the first rains. [7] The leaves are elongated, glossy and narrow, and covered with long white hairs that resemble spider webs (also the flower spikes and the involucral bracts of the inflorescence are covered with hairs). [7]

What is special about the plant are actually its seeds, which are hairy all over their surface and have a feathery tuft. [7] Upon ripening, the seeds disperse at once in the wind, and look like cotton balls dancing in the wind. [7]

Distribution

Scorzonera judaica has a broad geographical area, stretching from the sub-desert and steppe regions of the western part of the Irano-Turanian Region: Anatolia, Transcaucasus, Syria, Israel, Jordan, northern Egypt, Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan. [5] It is the only species of its genus that thrives in desert regions, with all other similar species growing in high mountainous elevations in the Middle East and in Asia. [7]

Uses

The taproots of this herb are edible and eaten raw when young, but when the plant grows older they require either cooking or roasting before they can be eaten. [7] [8] The vegetable root (salsify) is harvested in the autumn of the first or second year. The roots, once dug up, were thoroughly rinsed, cut into sections and boiled in salt water for a few minutes, before being sautéed in a frying pan with a dash of olive oil.[ citation needed ] A palatable soup can be made from 20 roasted corms, flavored with spring onions, olive oil and a dash of salt. [9]

Scorzonera judaica is one of eighteen species of geophytes and hemicryptophytes that were found to be consumed by porcupines in the Negev Desert highlands. [10]

Related Research Articles

<i>Tragopogon</i> Genus of plants

Tragopogon, also known as goatsbeard or salsify, is a genus of flowering plants in the family Asteraceae. It includes the vegetable known as salsify, as well as a number of common wild flowers.

<i>Asphodelus ramosus</i> Species of flowering plant

Asphodelus ramosus, the branched asphodel, is a perennial herbaceous plant in the order Asparagales. Similar in appearance to Asphodelus albus and particularly Asphodelus cerasiferus and Asphodelus aestivus, it may be distinguished by its highly branched stem and smaller fruits. There has been a lot of confusion over the nomenclature and taxonomy of the species, owing to its similarity to Asphodelus aestivus.

<i>Pseudopodospermum hispanicum</i> Species of plant

Pseudopodospermum hispanicum, commonly known as black salsify or Spanish salsify, also known as black oyster plant, serpent root, viper's herb, viper's grass or simply scorzonera, is a perennial species of plant in the sunflower family (Asteraceae), cultivated as a root vegetable in the same way as purple salsify, also in the sunflower family. It is native to Southern Europe and cultivated as a crop in Southern and Central Europe. It grows on nutrient poor soils, dry pasture, rocky areas, in thickets and on limy or marly soils of temperate zones.

<i>Helichrysum sanguineum</i> Species of flowering plant

Helichrysum sanguineum, known in English as red everlasting and red cudweed, is a flowering plant of the genus Helichrysum in the family Asteraceae. It grows in mountain forests in the Levant where it blooms in April–June. The flower, known in Hebrew as "Blood of the Maccabees", has become the icon of Yom Hazikaron, Memorial Day for Israel's Fallen Soldiers and Victims of Terrorism.

<i>Gundelia</i> Genus of flowering plants

Gundelia or tumble thistle is a low to high (20–100 cm) thistle-like perennial herbaceous plant with latex, spiny compound inflorescences, reminiscent of teasles and eryngos, that contain cream, yellow, greenish, pink, purple or redish-purple disk florets. It is assigned to the family Asteraceae. Flowers can be found from February to May. The stems of this plant dry-out when the seeds are ripe and break free from the underground root, and are then blown away like a tumbleweed, thus spreading the seeds effectively over large areas with little standing vegetation. This plant is native to the eastern Mediterranean and the Middle-East. Opinions differ about the number of species in Gundelia. Sometimes the genus is regarded monotypic, Gundelia tournefortii being a species with a large variability, but other authors distinguish up to nine species, differing in floret color and pubescence. Young stems are cooked and eaten in the Middle-East and are said to taste like a combination of artichoke and asparagus.

<i>Tragopogon pratensis</i> Species of plant

Tragopogon pratensis is a biennial plant in the family Asteraceae, distributed across Europe and North America, commonly growing in fields and on roadsides. It is found in North America from southern Ontario to Massachusetts; most of England; on the eastern and southern edges of Scotland; and central Ireland but not the coastal edges.

<i>Moringa peregrina</i> Species of plant

Moringa peregrina is a species of flowering plant in the family Moringaceae that is native to the Horn of Africa, Sudan, Egypt, the Arabian Peninsula, and as far north as Syria. It grows on rocky wadis and on cliffs in drier areas.

<i>Suaeda vera</i> Species of flowering plant in the amaranth family Amaranthaceae

Suaeda vera, also known as shrubby sea-blite, shrubby seablight or in the USA sometimes as alkali seepweed, is a species of flowering plant in the family Amaranthaceae. It is a small shrub, with very variable appearance over its wide range. It is a halophyte, and occurs in arid and semi-arid saltflats, salt marshes and similar habitats.

<i>Suaeda aegyptiaca</i> Species of plant

Suaeda aegyptiaca is a species of succulent plant in the family Amaranthaceae, and salt-tolerant (halophyte) plant that is distributed in eastern North Africa, the Near East and West Asia.

<i>Launaea nudicaulis</i> Species of flowering plant

Launaea nudicaulis, commonly known as the bold-leaf launaea, is a species of plant native to an area from Spain in the west through North Africa, the Arabian Peninsula and western Asia to India in the east, including the Negev and Judean desert. In India it is known under a common name bhatal and is found in Hazara, Mansehra, Multan, Rawalpindi and Scinde districts of Punjab and Lahore.

<i>Colchicum ritchii</i> Species of plant

Colchicum ritchii, or the Egyptian autumn crocus, is a plant species native to the southeastern Mediterranean east to the Arabian Peninsula.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Naomi Feinbrun-Dothan</span> Israeli botanist and professor (1900–1995)

Naomi Feinbrun-Dothan was a Russian-born Israeli botanist, who became part of the academic staff at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She studied the flora of Israel and published dozens of articles and several analytical flora books. Just after her 91st birthday, she received the 1991 Israel Prize for her unique contribution to the Land of Israel studies.

<i>Iris atrofusca</i> Species of plant

Iris atrofusca is a species in the genus Iris, where it is placed in the subgenus Iris and the section Oncocyclus. It is a rhizomatous perennial from the deserts of Israel/Palestine and Jordan. The species has long falcate (sickle-shaped) or ensiform (sword-shaped) leaves, a long thick stem and large fragrant flowers that come in shades of purple brown, reddish-black, black-brown, dark brown, dark lilac or dark purple. The flowers also have a black or brownish-black signal patch and a thick beard that is brown-black, light brown or yellow tipped with brown. It is rarely cultivated as an ornamental plant in temperate regions.

<i>Pseudopodospermum libanoticum</i> Species of plant in the family Asteraceae

Pseudopodospermum libanoticum, also known as Lebanese salsify and Lebanese viper's grass, is a species of perennial plant in the family Asteraceae.

<i>Iris petrana</i> Species of plant

Iris petrana, commonly known as the Petra iris, is a species in the genus Iris, it is also in the subgenus of Iris and in the Oncocyclus section. It has spring blooming flowers that come in shades from burgundy, dark brown to dark violet and purple. They have yellow or dark 'beards' and flower over sword-like grey-green leaves. It is normally found in the desert sands between the countries of Jordan and Israel.

<i>Verbascum sinuatum</i> Species of plant

Verbascum sinuatum, commonly known as the scallop-leaved mullein, the wavyleaf mullein, or Candela regia, is a species of perennial herbaceous plants in the genus Verbascum (mullein), growing in heavy soils in Central Asia and the Mediterranean region. It grows to 1.2–1.5 m (3.9–4.9 ft). The plant has an erect inflorescence stem, and is entirely covered with stellate hairs (trichomes) which are not pleasant to the touch.

<i>Anchusa strigosa</i> Species of Anchusa

Anchusa strigosa is a non-succulent species of herbaceous plants in the Boraginaceae family endemic to the Eastern Mediterranean regions, particularly Greece, Turkey, Lebanon, Israel, Jordan, and Iran. It is known widely by its common names of strigose bugloss and prickly alkanet.

<i>Echium judaeum</i> Species of flowering plant

Echium judaeum, commonly known as the Judean viper's bugloss, is an annual plant endemic to southern Lebanon, southern Syria and Israel, of the Boraginaceae family, and which, like other herbaceous flowering plants of the same genus, derives its name from the style's resemblance to the forked-tongue of a serpent during the flower's pistillate-stage of development.

<i>Leontice leontopetalum</i> Species of plant

Leontice leontopetalum, commonly known as leontice, lion's foot, lion's turnip, and lion's leaf, is a perennial geophyte having a wide distribution, and growing primarily in semi-desert regions. The name "lion's foot" is derived from the Greek λεοντοπέταλη [= "lioness"] in reference to a fancied resemblance between the shape of the leaves and the pads of a lioness’s paw.

References

  1. 1 2 3 The Jerusalem Botanical Gardens, Flora of Israel and adjacent areas / Scorzonera judaica, by Prof. Avinoam Danin and Dr. Ori Fragman-Sapir
  2. Royal Botanic Gardens Kew
  3. MA Zaika, N. Kilian, K. Jones, AA Krinitsina, MV Nilova, AS Speranskaya, AP Sukhorukov (2020), "Scorzonera sensu lato (Asteraceae, Cichorieae) – taxonomic reassessment in the light of new molecular phylogenetic and carpological analyses". In: PhytoKeys, Volume 137, pp. 1–85. doi:10.3897/phytokeys.137.46544
  4. At the start of the 20th-century, the genus Scorzonera was generally thought to be species of "wild salsify," as shown by the 1900 Library of Congress photograph of Scorzonera papposa from Palestine.
  5. 1 2 Léonard, J. (1983). "Contribution à la connaissance de la flore de l'Iran. V (Compositae: Heteroderis, Scorzonera, Taraxacum)". Bulletin du Jardin botanique National de Belgique / Bulletin van de Nationale Plantentuin van België (in French). 53 (3/4): 439. JSTOR   3667802.
  6. Zohary & Feinbrun (1931), Plants of Palestine, An analytical key, Jerusalem, p. 399 OCLC   718138261
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Shmida, Avi (2005). MAPA's Dictionary of Plants and Flowers in Israel (in Hebrew). Tel-Aviv: MAPA. p. 154. OCLC   716569354.
  8. Bailey, Clinton; Danin, Avinoam (1981). "Bedouin Plant Utilization in Sinai and the Negev". Economic Botany. 35 (2). Springer on behalf of New York Botanical Garden Press: 154. doi:10.1007/BF02858682. JSTOR   4254272. S2CID   27839209.
  9. Ḳrispil, Nissim (1987). Amos Shapira (ed.). A Bag of Plants (The Useful Plants of Israel) (Yalḳuṭ ha-tsemaḥim) (in Hebrew). Vol. 2 (D.-Ḥ.). Jerusalem: Yara Publishing House. pp. 156–161. OCLC   21934597., s.v. הרדופנין
  10. Gutterman, Yitzchak (1987). "Dynamics of Porcupine (Hystrix indica kerr) Diggings: Their Role in the Survival and Renewal of Geophytes and Hemicryptophytes in the Negev Desert Highlands". Israel Journal of Botany. 36 (3). doi:10.1080/0021213X.1987.10677077.

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