Biology:Prangos ferulacea

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Short description: Species of plant

Prangos ferulacea
Cachrys ferulacea 05.jpg
Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Apiales
Family: Apiaceae
Genus: Prangos
Species:
P. ferulacea
Binomial name
Prangos ferulacea
(L.) Lindl.
Synonyms
  • Laserpitium ferulaceum Cachrys alata
  • Caruel Boiss., Diagn. ser. l(10):53 (1849)
  • L., Sp. Pl. ed. 2:358 (1762) Prangos carinata
  • Cachrys prangoides Gris. ex Degcn in Term.-Tud. Közl. 28:44 (1896).
  • Cachrys goniocarpa Boiss. in Ann. Sci. Nat. ser. 3, 2:76 (1844)
  • (L.) Calest. Cachrys ferulacea

Prangos ferulacea, known in Italy as common basilisk (basilisco comune) is a perennial herbaceous plant present in the Mediterranean Basin, Bulgarian Black Sea Coast, and the Caucasus.

Description

Herbaceous plant 60–150 cm tall, stem has a diameter of 1-2 cm at the base. Its leaves are glabrous and light green, broadly ovate to ovate-triangular or oblong-elliptic and repeatedly pinnate. Its basal leaves have up to 50-80 cm long petioles, at the base they are divided into 3 lobes, each 4-5 times pinnate. Its terminal lobes are linear, lanceolate or almost filiform, with 1 vein, at the apex they are shortly pointed. The lower stem leaves are shorter-stalked and the uppermost are sessile, much smaller and less dissected, with sheaths enclosing the stem. The complex umbels are about 15 cm in diameter, with 6-18 main rays, at the base with a sheath of linear-lanceolate and membranous leaves. Awns are about 1 cm wide. Its petals are about 1 mm long, obovate or elliptic. The fruits are 10-25 mm long, about 10 mm wide, ovoid to elliptical, slightly laterally flattened. Blooms in May-June and bears fruit in June - August. It is pollinated by insects and propagated by seeds.[1]

Distribution

The species is distributed in Italy and the island of Sicily, Romania, Bulgaria, the Caucasus, Turkey, Armenia and Iran. In Bulgaria, it is found along the Black Sea coast - Medni Rid and Maslen nos, as well as on Bakadzhitsite (bg), up to about 300 m above sea level.[1] It is an endangered species in Bulgaria, included in the Red Book of the Republic of Bulgaria (bg) and in the Bulgarian Law on Biological Diversity (bg).[1] In northern Sicily it grows on limestone in association with endangered fungus Pleurotus nebrodensis.[2]

References


Wikidata ☰ {{{from}}} entry