Cleome ornithopodioides

Cleome ornithopodioides
bird spiderflower
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Rosids
Order: Brassicales
Family: Cleomaceae
Genus: Cleome
Species: C. ornithopodioides
Binomial name
Cleome ornithopodioides
L.

Cleome ornithopodioides or bird spiderflower is the type species of the genus Cleome which is part of the family Cleomaceae or Brassicaceae. The species epithet means "birds-foot like" (ornithopodi + oides).[1][2]

Description

C. ornithopodioides is an annual plant growing to a height of .3 m.[3]

Flowers possess both male and female reproductive organs.[3]

Taxonomy

Illustration 1700

The first samples of bird spiderflower to arrive in Europe came from explorations of the area called Levant and were successfully cultivated by James Sherard in 1732.[4]

Joseph Pitton de Tournefort named the Claude Aubriet illustration of C. ornithopodioides Sinapistrum Orientale in the 1700 Institutiones rei herbariæ.[5] Being named before the 1753 Species plantarum disqualifies the name from being considered to be a synonym.[6]

When Carl Linnaeus first published this species with its current name in his 1753 Species plantarum[7] he referenced descriptions of Sinapistrum Ornithopodiisiliquis found in Johann Christian Buxbaum's herbarium Plantarum minus cognitarum centuria, that was published posthumously by Johann Georg Gmelin in 1728,[8] Johann Jacob Dillenius's 1732 Hortus Ethamensis.[9] a collection whose list was published in 1907 by George Claridge Druce[10] and also the description he wrote of Cleome ornithopodioides in his own Hortus Cliffortianus from 1737[11] and of Sinapestrum orientale triphyllum from his 1748 Hortus Upsaliensis.[12]

In 1754 when Philip Miller described the genus Sinapistrum in The Gardeners Dictionary, he described the species with English words "Three-leav'd Eastern Sinapistrum, with Birds-foot-pods" and called it by the Latin name Sinapistrum Oriental triphyllum as it had been assigned by Tournefort who had described it before him.[13]

Taxonomy references
International Association for Plant Taxonomy (March 2007). "ICBN: International Code of Botanical Nomenclature". Retrieved 2009-04-30. 
Miller, F.R.S., Philip (1754). The Gardeners Dictionary Containing the Methods of Cultivating and Improving All Sorts of Trees, Plants, and Flowers, for the Kitchen, Fruit, and Pleasure Gardens; as Also Those which are used in Medicine. With Directions for the Culture of Vineyards, and Making of Wine, in England. In Which Likewise are Included the Practical Parts of Husbandry. In Three Volumes. Vol. III (Fourth ed.). London: Printed for the Author. Retrieved 2009-04-19. 
Linnæi, Caroli (1753). Species plantarum:exhibentes plantas rite cognitas, ad genera relatas, cum differentiis specificis, nominibus trivialibus, synonymis selectis, locis natalibus, secundum systema sexuale digestas. Tomus II. Holmiæ: Impensis Laurentii Salvii. ISBN 0-665-52874-4. Retrieved 2009-04-24. 
Linnæi, Caroli (1737). Hortus Cliffortianus Plantas exhibens Quas In Hortistam Vivis quam Siccis, Hartecampi in Hollandia. Clifford, Georgius. Amstelaedami. Retrieved 2009-04-24. 
Linnæi, Caroli (1748). Hortus Upsaliensis, Exhibens Plantas Exoticas, Horto Upsaliensis Academiæ A Sese Illatas, Ab anno 1742, in annum 1748, Additis Differentiis, Synonymis, Habitationibus, Hospitiis, Rariorumque Descriptionibus, In Gratiam, Studiofæ juventutis. Vol. I. Stockholmiæ: Sumtu & literis Laurentii Salvii. Retrieved 2009-04-30. 
Dillenius, Johann Jacob (1732). Hortus Ethamensis. Oxford University. p. 359, Tab 266. 
Buxbaum, Acad. Scient. Socium., J. C. (1728). Plantarum Minus Cognitarum Centuria compectens Plantas circa Byzantium & in Oriental Observatas. Volume I. Petropolis. 
Tournefort, Joseph Pitton de; Aubriet, Claude (1700). Corollarium Institutiones Rei Herbariæ in Quo. Tomus Primus. Paris: Typographia Regia. Retrieved 2009-04-25. 

Ecology

Native to the area of the eastern Mediterranean,[4] C. ornithopodioides was described in 1865 as living in the wild along with Trifolium stellatum in a fertile valley at the foot of Mount Serbal.[14]

Cultivation

Philip Miller wrote of the ease of cultivation of C. ornithopodioides in his 1754 The Gardeners Dictionary: "...will thrive in open Air; so the Seeds of this may be sown on a Bed of light Earth in April (late Spring), where the Plants are to remain; and will require no other Culture, but to keep them clear from Weeds: in June (early Summer) they will flower, and the Seeds will ripen in August (late Summer); and the Plants will soon after perish."[15]

References

Notes

External links

Media related to Cleome ornithopodioides at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, March 28, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.