Biology:Gentianella amarella

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Short description: Species of plant

Gentianella amarella
Gentiana amarella L ag1.jpg
Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Gentianales
Family: Gentianaceae
Genus: Gentianella
Species:
G. amarella
Binomial name
Gentianella amarella
(L.) Börner
Synonyms[1]
  • Gentianella amarella subsp. euamarella Eyrythalia pulchella
  • Gray L.
  • Á.Löve & D.Löve Gentianusa amarella
  • Gentiana pulchella (L.) Pohl
  • Gentiana amarella Salisb.
  • (L.) Delarbre Opsantha amarella

Gentianella amarella, the autumn gentian, autumn dwarf gentian,[2] or autumn felwort,[3] is a short biennial plant flowering plant in the gentian family, Gentianaceae. It is found throughout Northern Europe, the western and northern United States, and Canada.[2][4][5]

Description

Gentianella amarella the autumn gentian, autumn dwarf gentian,[2] or autumn felwort is a biennial herbaceous plant, which only produces a low leaf rosette with elliptical to lanceolate leaves in its first year. In the second year it usually grows a stem from 5 to 30 (3 to 50) centimeters long. The stem is straight or branched just above the base; at flowering time it is without leaves which distinguishes it from similar species.

Generative characteristics

The flowering period is from July to early October, and the axils produce numerous flowers.

The relatively small, hermaphrodite flowers are purplish bells (reddish-violet corolla) are trumpet-shaped between 12 and 22 mm long and have five petals with double perianth (calyx and corolla). The cup is much shorter than the crown tube. The five vestibules are upright and mostly somewhat unequal. The coronet is bearded. The ovary and the fruit are sedentary or rarely short-stalked.

The number of chromosomes is 2n = 36.

Taxonomy and distribution

Gentianella amarella was first published in 1753 under the name (basionym) Gentiana amarella by Carl Linnaeus. The new combination to Gentianella amarella was published in 1912 by Carl Julius Bernhard Börner. The epithet amarella means somewhat bitter.[6]

There are about five subspecies of Gentianella amarella:[citation needed]

Image Subspecies Distribution
Gentianella amarella ssp. acuta kz01.jpg Gentianella amarella subsp. acuta (Michx.) J.M.Gillett (syn.: Comastoma acutum (Michx.) Y.Z.Zhao & X.Zhang, Gentiana acuta Michx., Gentianella acuta (Michx.) Hiitonen It is widespread in temperate Asia and North America, e.g. Mongolia, Inner Mongolia, the Chinese provinces Heilongjiang, Hebei, Jilin, Liaoning, Shanxi, Shandong, Shaanxi as well as Ningxia, the Eastern Russian territories of Magadan, Buryatia, Gorno-Altay, Tuva, Yakutia-Sakha, Krasnoyarsk, Chita and Irkutsk, the Canadian provinces of Quebec, Nova Scotia, Ontario, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Northwest Territory, Yukon Territory, Saskatchewan, Alberta, Manitoba, British Columbia and Nunavut, the US states Alaska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Maine, Vermont, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Utah and California and the northern Mexican states of Durango and Nuevo León.
Gentianella amarella subsp. amarella (syn.: Gentiana livonica Eschsch. ex Griseb., Gentianella amarella subsp. hibernica N.M.Pritch. It is located in North, South, Southeast, Central and Eastern Europe, in Caucasus and Central Asia, [Siberia] widespread. Armenia, Azerbaijan, Dagestan, Ciscaucasia, Kazakhstan, Magadan, Buryatia, Gorno-Altay, Tuva, Yakutia-Sakha, Altai, Krasnoyarsk, Chita, Irkutsk, Kemerovo, Novosibirsk, Omsk, Tomsk, Tyumen, Karelia, Murmansk, Belarus , Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, European parts of Russia, Ukraine , Romania, Bulgaria, Serbia, Slovakia, Hungary, Poland , Czech Republic, Austria, Germany , Belgium, Switzerland , Italy, France , Denmark , Sweden, Norway , Finland , Ireland and United Kingdom .
Gentianella amarella subsp. lingulata (C.Agardh) Holub (syn.: Gentiana lingulata C.Agardh It is found in the Czech Republic and Eastern Europe.
Gentianella amarella subsp.reussii (Tocl) Holub It occurs in Slovakia
Gentianella amarella.jpg Gentianella amarella subsp.septentrionalis (Druce) N.M.Pritch. It occurs in United Kingdom and Iceland.

Ecology

Its habitat is in grass, often on lime-rich soil (in England typically on chalk).[4] It grows on dry, sandy or calcareous soils, but also on wet peat or marl soils and thus thrives in bog meadows. It is growing in the molinion association.

References

External links

Wikidata ☰ Q159257 entry