Biology:Petasites albus

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Short description: Species of flowering plant in the daisy family Asteraceae

Petasites albus
Petasites albus a1.jpg
Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Petasites
Species:
P. albus
Binomial name
Petasites albus
(L.) Gaertn.

Petasites albus, the white butterbur,[1] is a flowering plant species in the family Asteraceae. It is native to central Europe and the Caucasus.

Description

Petasites albus is a perennial rhizomatous herb, with large suborbicular (almost round) leaves covered with lax cottony hairs. The flower heads are compact racemes of composite flowers or capitula with white ligules. They are dioecious, the male plants often more common than the females, as in the British range. [2]:771

Distribution

The native range of Petasites albus is the mountains of central Europe and the Caucasus. It was first recorded in Sweden in Skåne in 1737 (Nordstedt 1920). [3] In the British Isles it is a neophyte, introduced by the 17th century and naturalized in Yorkshire by 1843, but now predominantly distributed in North-east Scotland.[4]

Habitat

It prefers damp soils in deciduous forests, mountain pastures, springs and streamsides, roadside verges and other areas of rough ground.[3][2]

White butterbur (Petasites albus)

References

  1. (xls) BSBI List 2007, Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland, https://bsbi.org/download/3542/, retrieved 2014-10-17 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Stace, C. A. (2010). New Flora of the British Isles (Third ed.). Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521707725. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Anderberg, Arne. "Den Virtuella Floran: Petasites albus (L.) Gaertn.". Naturhistoriska riksmuseet, Stockholm. http://linnaeus.nrm.se/flora/di/astera/petas/petaalbv.jpg. 
  4. "Online Atlas of the British Flora. Petasites albus (White Butterbur)". Wallingford, Oxfordshire, U.K.: Biological Records Centre. https://www.brc.ac.uk/plantatlas/index.php?q=plant/petasites-albus. 


Wikidata ☰ Q997242 entry