Cicerbita

Summary

Cicerbita is a genus of flowering plants in the family Asteraceae, native to Asia and Europe.[1][2] They are known commonly as blue sow thistles.[3] The word Cicerbita is from the Italian, meaning "chickory-like", a comparison to Cichorium, the chicory genus.[4]

Cicerbita
Cicerbita alpina
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Subfamily: Cichorioideae
Tribe: Cichorieae
Subtribe: Lactucinae
Genus: Cicerbita
Wallr.
Synonyms
  • Agathyrsus D.Don, (1829)
  • Eunoxis Raf., (1838), nom. superfl.
  • Galathenium Nutt., (1841)
  • Garacium Gren. & Godr., (1850)
  • Kovalevskiella Kamelin, (1993)
  • Steptorhamphus Bunge, (1851)

Description edit

Cicerbita are usually perennial plants, often with rhizomes.[5] Annual species are also known.[6] The leaves are undivided or pinnate. The flower head has 5 to 30 florets in shades of blue or purple, or occasionally white[5] or yellow.[6] The achene is ribbed and has a pappus of bristles and hairs.[5]

Systematics edit

The plants of this genus were included in genus Lactuca, the lettuces, until 1822,[7] when the first of them were separated based on the morphology of the fruits.[6] The definition of the genus is still in debate and very unclear.

Species edit

The following species are recognised in the genus Cicerbita:[8]

  • Cicerbita acuminata Grossh.
  • Cicerbita adenophora (Boiss. & Kotschy) Beauverd
  • Cicerbita alii Roohi Bano & Qaiser
  • Cicerbita alpina (L.) Wallr.
  • Cicerbita auriculiformis (C.Shih) N.Kilian
  • Cicerbita azurea (Ledeb.) Beauverd
  • Cicerbita benthamii (C.B.Clarke) Roohi Bano & Qaiser
  • Cicerbita boissieri (Rouy) C.Jeffrey
  • Cicerbita bourgaei (Boiss.) Beauverd
  • Cicerbita brassicifolia (Boiss.) Beauverd
  • Cicerbita chiangdaoensis H.Koyama – Thailand
  • Cicerbita crambifolia (Bunge) Beauverd
  • Cicerbita crassicaulis (Trautv.) Beauverd
  • Cicerbita cyprica (Rech.f.) M.Güzel, Coșkunç. & N.Kilian
  • Cicerbita deltoidea (M.Bieb.) Beauverd
  • Cicerbita × favratii Wilczek
  • Cicerbita garrettii (Kerr) H.Koyama
  • Cicerbita kovalevskiana Kirp.
  • Cicerbita ladyginii (Tzvelev) N.Kilian
  • Cicerbita macrophylla (Willd.) Wallr.
  • Cicerbita madatapensis Gagnidze
  • Cicerbita microcephala (DC.) M.Güzel, Coșkunç. & N.Kilian
  • Cicerbita mulgedioides Beauverd
  • Cicerbita neglecta (Tzvelev) N.Kilian
  • Cicerbita nepalensis Kitam. – Nepal
  • Cicerbita nuristanica Kitam. – Afghanistan
  • Cicerbita olgae Leskov
  • Cicerbita pancicii Beauverd
  • Cicerbita persica Beauverd
  • Cicerbita picridiformis (Boiss.) Roohi Bano & Qaiser
  • Cicerbita plumieri (L.) Kirschl.
  • Cicerbita prenanthoides (M.Bieb.) Beauverd
  • Cicerbita putii (Kerr) H.Koyama
  • Cicerbita racemosa (Willd.) Beauverd
  • Cicerbita rechingeriana (Tuisl) Coșkunç., M.Güzel & N.Kilian
  • Cicerbita roborowskii (Maxim.) Beauverd
  • Cicerbita sonchifolia (Vis. & Pančić) Beauverd
  • Cicerbita songarica (Regel) Krasch.
  • Cicerbita subplumosa (Kovalevsk.) M.Güzel, Coșkunç. & N.Kilian
  • Cicerbita thianschanica BeauverdAltay Republic, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Xinjiang
  • Cicerbita variabilis (Bornm.) Bornm.
  • Cicerbita zeravschanica Popov – Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan
  • Cicerbita zhenduoi (S.W.Liu & T.N.Ho) N.Kilian

Uses edit

Cicerbita alpina is eaten as a vegetable in Italy, part of its native range. The young shoots are boiled and served in olive oil or tomato sauce. They are considered a delicacy and can be had in restaurants.[9] The shoots in oil can be purchased in markets under the local name insalata dell'orso ("bear salad").[4] The plant is collected from the wild and there is some concern that it may be threatened with overexploitation, so local ordinances now limit wild collection in some areas. Field trials are underway to examine the possibility of cultivating the plant in agriculture.[9]

References edit

  1. ^ Wallroth, Carl Friedrich Wilhelm. 1823. Schedulae Criticae de Plantis Florae Halensis Selectis. Corollarium novum ad C. Sprengelii Floram halensem. Accedunt generum quorundam specierumque omnium definitiones novae, excursus in stirpes difficiliores. Tom. I. Phanerogamia 1: 433
  2. ^ Tropicos, Cicerbita Wallr.
  3. ^ Genus Cicerbita Wallr. Archived 2012-09-21 at the Wayback Machine Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN).
  4. ^ a b Scartezzini, F., et al. (2012). Domestication of alpine blue-sow-thistle (Cicerbita alpina (L.) Wallr.): six year trial results. Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution 59(3) 465-71.
  5. ^ a b c Cicerbita. Flora of China.
  6. ^ a b c Bano, R. and M. Qaiser. (2010). The genus Cicerbita Wallr. (Cichoriae-Asteraceae) in Pakistan and Kashmir. Pakistan Journal of Botany 42, 35-56.
  7. ^ Chu, S. (1991). On circumscription of the genus Cicerbita Wall., and two new genera of Compositae from Sino-Himalayan Region. Archived 2014-11-26 at the Wayback Machine Acta Phytotaxonomica Sinica 29(5) 394-417.
  8. ^ "Cicerbita Wallr. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 7 November 2023.
  9. ^ a b Scartezzini, F., et al. Domestication and field management trials of Cicerbita alpina (L.) Wallr. In: First International Conference on Crop Wild Relative Conservation and Use. September 14–17, 2005. Agrigento, Sicily, Italy. pg. 14-17.