dcsimg

Associations

provided by BioImages, the virtual fieldguide, UK
In Great Britain and/or Ireland:
Plant / epiphyte
fruitbody of Aleurodiscus botryosus grows on dead stem (woody) of Lonicera

Foodplant / gall
larva of Alucita hexadactyla causes gall of inflorescence of Lonicera

Foodplant / saprobe
immersed, clypeate perithecium of Amphisphaerella xylostei is saprobic on dead branch of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 8-5

Foodplant / spot causer
pycnidium of Ascochyta coelomycetous anamorph of Ascochyta vulgaris var. vulgaris causes spots on live leaf of Lonicera

Foodplant / saprobe
effuse colony of Camposporium dematiaceous anamorph of Camposporium cambrense is saprobic on rotten wood of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 1-12

Foodplant / saprobe
immersed pycnidium of Coleophoma coelomycetous anamorph of Coleophoma empetri is saprobic on dead leaf of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 10-4

Foodplant / spot causer
pycnidium of Colletotrichella coelomycetous anamorph of Colletotrichella periclymeni causes spots on live leaf of Lonicera

Foodplant / pathogen
Cucumber Mosaic virus infects and damages live leaf of Lonicera

Foodplant / saprobe
somewhat scattered, minute, totally immersed, pore finally emerging stroma of Cytospora coelomycetous anamorph of Cytospora lonicerae is saprobic on dead, locally brownish red twig of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 5

Foodplant / gall
larva of Dasineura periclymeni causes gall of leaf of Lonicera

Foodplant / saprobe
immersed, often loosely grouped perithecium of Diaporthe eres is saprobic on wood of Lonicera

Foodplant / saprobe
immersed perithecium of Diaporthe pardalota is saprobic on attached, dead twig of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 1-8
Other: major host/prey

Foodplant / saprobe
erumpent, elongately clustered pycnidium of Diplodia coelomycetous anamorph of Diplodia lonicerae is saprobic on dead branch (thin) of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 2-6

Foodplant / gall
Eriophyes xylostei causes gall of leaf of Lonicera

Foodplant / parasite
amphigenous conidial anamorph of Erysiphe lonicerae parasitises live leaf of Lonicera
Other: minor host/prey

Foodplant / saprobe
hysterothecium of Gloniopsis praelonga is saprobic on dead stem of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 1-12

Foodplant / sap sucker
Hyadaphis foeniculi sucks sap of Lonicera
Remarks: season: spring

Foodplant / sap sucker
hypophyllous Hyadaphis passrinii sucks sap of live leaf of Lonicera
Remarks: season: spring, summer
Other: major host/prey

Foodplant / saprobe
hysterothecium of Hysterographium mori is saprobic on dead branch of Lonicera

Foodplant / spot causer
epiphyllous, subcuticular conidioma of Kabatia coelomycetous anamorph of Kabatia periclymeni causes spots on fading leaf of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 7-9

Foodplant / saprobe
apothecium of Lachnum barbatum is saprobic on dead stem of Lonicera

Foodplant / saprobe
somewhat short-stalked apothecium of Lachnum corticale is saprobic on dead stem of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 3-12

Foodplant / parasite
mycelium of Lasiobotrys lonicerae parasitises live leaf of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 8-10

Foodplant / gall
larva of Macrolabis lonicerae causes gall of leaf of Lonicera

Foodplant / saprobe
pycnidium of Aposphaeria coelomycetous anamorph of Melanomma fuscidulum is saprobic on fallen, dead branch of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 3-5

Foodplant / saprobe
superficial, often in very large clusters pseudothecium of Melanomma pulvis-pyrius is saprobic on dry, hard, decorticate stem of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 9-5

Foodplant / saprobe
immersed or erumpent perithecium of Melomastia mastoidea is saprobic on dead branch of Lonicera

Foodplant / saprobe
cyphelloid basidiocarp of Merismodes bresadolae is saprobic on dead, fallen, decayed twig of Lonicera

Foodplant / spot causer
amphigenous, immersed pseudothecium of Mycosphaerella clymenia causes spots on live leaf of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 8-10

Foodplant / saprobe
apothecium of Niptera ramincola is saprobic on dead wood of Lonicera

Foodplant / sap sucker
Parthenolecanium corni sucks sap of live shoot of Lonicera

Foodplant / parasite
Phaeoramularia anamorph of Phaeoramularia antipus parasitises Lonicera

Foodplant / saprobe
pycnidium of Phoma coelomycetous anamorph of Phoma minutula is saprobic on dead branch (small) of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 2-7

Foodplant / saprobe
scattered to gregarious pycnidium of Phomopsis coelomycetous anamorph of Phomopsis lonicerae is saprobic on old, dead stem of Lonicera

Foodplant / gall
Prociphilus xylostei causes gall of inflorescence of Lonicera

Foodplant / spot causer
pycnium of Puccinia festucae causes spots on live leaf of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 6-8

Foodplant / internal feeder
larva of Rhagoletis cerasi feeds within fruit of Lonicera

Foodplant / feeds on
pycnidium of Septoria coelomycetous anamorph of Septoria lonicerae feeds on Lonicera

Foodplant / open feeder
nocturnal larva of Tenthredo livida grazes on leaf of Lonicera

Foodplant / open feeder
nocturnal larva of Tenthredo vespa grazes on leaf of Lonicera

Plant / resting place / within
larva of Thrips brevicornis may be found in live flower of Lonicera
Remarks: season: 5-7

Foodplant / saprobe
apothecium of Unguiculella robergei is saprobic on dead stem of Lonicera

Foodplant / saprobe
pycnidium of spermogone of Valsa olivacea is saprobic on dead, dry branch of Lonicera

Foodplant / open feeder
larva of Zaraea aenea grazes on leaf of Lonicera

Foodplant / open feeder
larva of Zaraea fasciata grazes on leaf of Lonicera

Foodplant / open feeder
larva of Zaraea lonicerae grazes on leaf of Lonicera
Other: major host/prey

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Comments

provided by eFloras
Closest to Lonicera griffithii in the terminal capitate flower heads, but differing in the ± erect habit, smaller leaves, glabrous branches and smaller yellow flowers.
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Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
bibliographic citation
Flora of Pakistan Vol. 0: 31 in eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden. Accessed Nov 12, 2008.
source
Flora of Pakistan @ eFloras.org
editor
S. I. Ali & M. Qaiser
project
eFloras.org
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Description

provided by eFloras
An erect shrub with glabrous branches and loose fibrous striping Leaves c. 1 x 0.5 cm, ovate or elliptic, glabrous with short petiole, acute, rounded at the base. Flowers borne in capitate clusters at tips of branches, sessile to sub-sessile. Bracts elliptic, leaf-like. Bracteoles connate, cup-like, almost enclosing fruit at maturity. Calyx lobes minute, triangular, ciliate. Corolla c. 12 mm long bibbed, pilose without, yellow. Stamens 5; filaments hairy, shorter than the corolla lobes. Style hairy below, longer than corolla; ovaries not confluent, glandular. Berries globose, c. 5 mm, with scattered glandular hairs, enclosed by cup-like bracteoles.
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
bibliographic citation
Flora of Pakistan Vol. 0: 31 in eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden. Accessed Nov 12, 2008.
source
Flora of Pakistan @ eFloras.org
editor
S. I. Ali & M. Qaiser
project
eFloras.org
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eFloras

Flower/Fruit

provided by eFloras
Fl. Per.: June-July.
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cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Missouri Botanical Garden, 4344 Shaw Boulevard, St. Louis, MO, 63110 USA
bibliographic citation
Flora of Pakistan Vol. 0: 31 in eFloras.org, Missouri Botanical Garden. Accessed Nov 12, 2008.
source
Flora of Pakistan @ eFloras.org
editor
S. I. Ali & M. Qaiser
project
eFloras.org
original
visit source
partner site
eFloras

New York State Invasive Species Information

provided by EOL authors

Origin and Introduction:

Lonicera tatarica is native to Central Asia and Southern Russia and is believed to have been introduced into North America for ornamental purposes as early as the 1750s. Lonicera japonica, – a native of China, Japan and Korea – was introduced for horticultural purposes in 1806 on Long Island; it was widely distributed as a garden plant through the early-1900s when it was finally recognized as a weed. Lonicera maackii, also native to China, Japan and Korea, was introduced as seeds to arboreta throughout the U.S. in the late-1800s to determine whether the plant would grow in North America. This species of honeysuckle was utilized as a soil stabilization and wildlife planning until the mid-1980s and is still available for sale on-line. Lonicera morrowii, a native of Japan, was imported to Massachusetts in the 1860s and was later released as an ornamental. All four species have escaped cultivation and are easily spread by birds.

Identification:

Lonicera morrowii, Lonicera tatarica, and Lonicera maackii, are perennial shrubs; Lonicera japonica is a perennial woody vine (although its leaves can remain green throughout mild winters). The shrub forms range from 6 to 15 feet in height, while vines can reach 30 feet in length. The egg-shaped leaves range from 1 to 3 inches in length and are arranged oppositely along stems. Invasive honeysuckles begin flowering from May to June and bear small (less than 1 inch long), very fragrant tubular flowers ranging from creamy white through various shades of pink to crimson. Lonicera morrowii and Lonicera tatarica produce ¼ inch red berries from mid-summer through early-fall; Loniceramaackii’s dark-red berries don’t ripen until late-fall; Lonicera japonica produces dark-purple or black berries in the fall. Stems of all four are hollow.

Impacts:

All three species can form very dense populations that can outcompete and suppress the growth of native plant species. These dense stands suppress the growth of other native species. Lonicera maackii leafs out very early in spring, giving it a competitive advantage over native plants. Lonicera japonica leaves are semi-evergreen allowing the plant to grow longer into the winter and giving it a competitive advantage over native vegetation. It shades out understory growth preventing the success of native understory plants and tree seedlings. Its vigorous vine growth covers native trees; the weight of the vine growth can bring down weak trees. By decreasing light availability to the understory, these invasive honeysuckles can alter habitats by depleting soil moisture and nutrients. The invasive honeysuckle berries do not contain the amount of fat and nutrients present in native honeysuckle berries; eating large amounts of the less nutritious invasive berries rather than native berries can have negative impacts on migrating.

Prevention and Control:

Because these plants spread rapidly via birds eating seeds, control should be started in late-summer or early-fall before seeds are ready to be dispersed. In early stages of invasion, or in cases where populations are at low levels, hand removal of honeysuckle seedlings or young plants is a viable option when repeated annually. Systemic herbicides can be utilized in cases of heavy infestation. Specific state rules should be followed and the appropriate (low environment impact, legally labeled for control of these plants) herbicides should be used. For invasive honeysuckles growing in open habitats, prescribed burning may be an effective control alternative.

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The New York Invasive Species Clearinghouse, Cornell University Cooperative Extension
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Broad-scale Impacts of Fire

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: forest, fruit, shrub, shrubs, surface fire

Barnes [7] observed the effects of fire on 2 populations of showy fly honeysuckle at the University of Wisconsin Madison Arboretum. At 1 site, all leaves and buds on 9 of 12 shrubs were "apparently" killed by a fire in early May. Some "dormant buds" did survive on 3 individuals and were actively growing by late May, although location of these buds was not discussed. No further information was provided on fire effects or burn characteristics. At another site, a late-summer surface fire burned through a showy fly honeysuckle thicket, leaving scorched bark on basal stems and killing but not consuming leaves. Basal and aerial sprouts began to appear within 3 weeks postfire, and some plants produced new leaves that summer. Although it appears that some plants were top-killed, all plants survived. Only 2 of 30 sampled plants produced fruit 1 year postfire.

Kline and McClintock [87] conducted 2 consecutive annual mid-April prescribed burns in an oak (Q.× palaeolithicola) -dominated forest in southern Wisconsin, where showy fly honeysuckle was common in the shrub layer. "Most of the individuals resprouted from the base, but the resprouts were not very vigorous. Some completely dead honeysuckles were observed" in the 1st postfire year.

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cc-publicdomain
bibliographic citation
Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Broad-scale Impacts of Plant Response to Fire

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: prescribed fire, shrubs, surface fire

Kline and McClintock [87] observed showy fly honeysuckle sprouting from the base following
prescribed fire, but "resprouts were not very vigorous". Barnes [7] observed
fire effects on 2 populations of showy fly honeysuckle at the University of Wisconsin Madison
Arboretum. All 12 shrubs observed at 1 site resprouted from "the rootstock".
At the other site, a late-summer surface fire burned through a showy fly honeysuckle thicket,
leaving scorched bark on basal stems and killing but not consuming leaves. All plants subsequently
sampled had survived and had produced "basal sprouts" by early the following summer.

The Research Paper by Bowles and others 2007 provides information on postfire responses of several plant species, including Amur honeysuckle, that was not available when this review was originally written.

license
cc-publicdomain
bibliographic citation
Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Common Names

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
sweet breath of spring

Amur honeysuckle

Morrow's honeysuckle

Tatarian honeysuckle

showy fly honeysuckle

fly honeysuckle
license
cc-publicdomain
bibliographic citation
Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Description

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: fruit, shrub, shrubs

The following descriptions of bush honeysuckles provide characteristics that may be relevant to fire ecology, and are not meant for identification. Keys for identification are available (e.g. [18,36,54,59,134,160,186,189,190,191]).

Sweet breath of spring is a deciduous or semievergreen shrub, mainly 3.2 to 10 feet (1-3 m), occasionally to 15 feet (4.6 m) tall [36,37,128,134,191]. The crown is an erect but wide-spreading, irregularly rounded, tangled mass of slender recurved branches [37,128,134]. Leaves are 0.6 to 3.5 inches (1.5-9 cm) long and 0.4 to 1.8 inches (1-4.5 cm) wide [36,37,128,134,191]. Flowers are 0.4 to 0.5 inches (1-1.2 cm) long, borne in pairs on short peduncles [191]. Fruit is a berry, 0.25 to 0.4 inches (6.4-10 mm) in diameter [36,37,128,134], with seeds 0.05 to 0.08 inches (1.3-2  mm) long [134]. Sweet breath of spring. ©Univ. Connecticut Plant Database.
Amur honeysuckle is an upright, spreading, deciduous shrub, 12 to 20 feet (3.7-6.1 m) tall with hollow branches [36,37,54,132]. Leaves are 1.4 to 3.5 inches (3.5-9 cm) long and 0.5 to 1.5 inches (1.3-3.8 cm) wide [37,54,132]. Fruit is a 0.08 to 0.25 inch (2-6.4 mm) diameter berry [36,37]. Amur honeysuckle. © John M. Randall / The Nature Conservancy.
Morrow's honeysuckle is a deciduous shrub, 4.9 to 8 feet (1.5-2.4 m) tall and 6 to 10 feet (1.8-3 m) wide [37,127,160,174], "forming a broad, rounded, dense, tangled mound with foliage and branches to the ground" [37]. Leaves are 1 to 2.5 inches (2.5-6.4 cm) long and 0.5 to 1.25 inches (1.3-3.2 cm) wide [37,160]. The fruit is a 0.25 inch (6 mm) diameter berry [37]. Morrow's honeysuckle. © John M. Randall/The Nature Conservancy.
Tatarian honeysuckle is an upright deciduous shrub, 3.3 to 12 feet (1-3 m) tall and 10 feet (3 m) wide [18,37,54,59,93,155,157,160,175,191], often dense with fine branches [157]. Dirr [37] describes the Tatarian honeysuckle crown as "strongly multi-stemmed with the upper branches arching and the overall effect one of a dense, twiggy mass." Twigs are hollow [54], and 0.03 to 0.04 inches (0.8-1 mm) in diameter [157]. Bark has long, flat, thin scales and not much shredding [157], although older stems have shredding bark [59]. Leaves are 0.6 to 2.5 inches (1.5-6.4 cm) long and 0.2 to 1.5 inches (0.5-3.8 cm) wide [37,54,59,157,191]. Flowers are pedunculate and borne in sessile pairs in leaf axils [59,157,191]. Fruits are berries, 0.2 to 0.3 inch (4-8 mm) in diameter, borne singly or in pairs with the bases fused, with 3-6 seeds per fruit [37,59,157,191]. Seeds are about 0.1 inch (2.5-3 mm) long and 0.08 to 0.1 inch (2-2.5 mm) wide [59,157].   Tatarian honeysuckle. © John M. Randall/The Nature Conservancy.
Fly honeysuckle is a rounded deciduous shrub with spreading arching branches, 3.3 to 10 feet (1-3 m) tall, 10 to 12 feet (3-3.7 m) wide, with hollow twigs [18,37,54,176]. Fly honeysuckle. ©Univ. Connecticut Plant Database.

Showy fly honeysuckle is an erect shrub, 4 to 10 feet (1.2-3 m) tall and often at least as wide as it is tall [25,37,134]. It has a round growth habit with spreading, somewhat arching branches [37]. Leaves are 1 to 3 inches (2.5-7.6 cm) long [25]. Fruits are 0.25 to nearly 0.5 inch (6.5-13 mm) diameter round berries [25,37], with 2 to 6 seeds per fruit [37].

Age of showy fly honeysuckle shrubs studied in southern Wisconsin ranged from 12 to 34 years, with a mean of 20.4 years [7].

By excavating numerous showy fly honeysuckle shrubs in Wisconsin, it was determined that most roots occurred at a depth of 0.98 to 5.9 inches (2.5-15 cm), and in many cases extended well beyond crown width [7].

Physiology: Barnes and Cottam [8] found no difference in photosynthetic response of showy fly honeysuckle shrubs originating from wet and dry sites, and subjected to shaded and exposed light conditions. Similarly, they detected no difference in photosynthetic response of shrubs from either site to induced water stress.

license
cc-publicdomain
bibliographic citation
Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Distribution

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants

Sweet breath of spring was introduced to the U.S. from eastern China in 1845 [36,74,191]. It is distributed in the eastern U.S. from New York, west to Ohio and south to Alabama and Georgia. It is not reported in New Jersey and Delaware, but does occur in Louisiana, Texas, and Utah [36,83,134,160,182]. According to Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation [182] sweet breath of spring occurs in the Piedmont region of that state.

Amur honeysuckle is native to central and northeastern China, Manchuria, the Amur and Ussuri river valleys, Korea, and isolated parts of Japan [98,106]. It was first introduced into the U.S. in 1897/98 [74,106], and by 1931 was available from at least 8 commercial nurseries [106]. For a thorough review of the historical cultivation and dissemination of Amur honeysuckle, from its apparent origins in China to its cultivation in Russia, Europe, and North America, see Luken and Thieret [106].

Amur honeysuckle is distributed in the eastern U.S. from Massachusetts west to North Dakota and south to Texas. However, there are no specific reports of occurrence in Minnesota, South Dakota, or Florida [18,36,43,54,59,83,99,100,122,171,177,186,186]. Amur honeysuckle also occurs in Idaho [136] and southern Ontario [132]. Lorenz and others [95] indicate Amur honeysuckle is climatically adapted to all but the coldest areas in this range, such as northern Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont, the Adirondack area of New York, and southwestern portions of Michigan's Upper Peninsula (see Site Characteristics). According to Sharp and Belcher [151] the Amur honeysuckle cultivar 'Rem-Red' is "climatically adapted" from Massachusetts to South Carolina and west to Missouri. Based on a survey of herbaria in eastern North America, Trisel [168] described distribution of "naturalized" Amur honeysuckle from "New Hampshire south to Augusta, Georgia, west to Greenville, Mississippi and Tulsa, Oklahoma, north to Ames, Iowa and Madison, Wisconsin." Rolfsmeier and others [138] reported Amur honeysuckle growing outside cultivation in Nebraska and Kansas, but indicate it may not be spreading rapidly in this area. According to Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation [182], Amur honeysuckle occurs in the Mountain and Piedmont regions of that state.

Morrow's honeysuckle is native to Japan [54,160,186], and occurs throughout the Japanese archipelago (Talewaki 1969 as cited in [7]). According to Hidayati and others [74] it was introduced to the U.S. from Japan in 1875. Morrow's honeysuckle is distributed in the eastern U.S. from Maine west to Minnesota and south to Arkansas, Tennessee, and the Carolinas, as well as in Alabama [18,44,68,76,83,108,122,150,171,177,178,186,197]. It also occurs in Colorado and Wyoming [83,136,189,190], and in the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick, Quebec, Ontario, and Saskatchewan [83]. According to Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation [182] Morrow's honeysuckle occurs in the Mountain and Piedmont regions of that state.

Most sources indicate Tatarian honeysuckle is native to eastern Europe and adjacent Asia [18,54,59,92,150,157,186,191], although according to Strausbaugh and Core [160] it was introduced from western Asia. In the U.S., Tatarian honeysuckle is reported from Maine south to Virginia and west to Washington, Oregon and California, but not in Missouri or Nevada [13,18,20,35,38,45,59,68,69,83,83,92,93,108,122,136,150,157,160,177,186,190,191,198]. It is also reported in Georgia [111], Alaska [83] and in Canada from Nova Scotia west to Alberta [83,121]. Lorenz and others [95] indicate Tatarian honeysuckle is climatically adapted throughout the northeastern U.S., from Maine south to Virginia and west to Kentucky, Ohio, and Michigan (see Site Characteristics). According to Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation [182], Tatarian honeysuckle occurs in the Mountain and Piedmont regions of that state.

Fly honeysuckle was introduced from Eurasia [18,54,150,186]. Fly honeysuckle is distributed in the eastern U.S. from Maine west to Wisconsin, and south to Virginia, but it is not reported in West Virginia or Kentucky [18,83,122,150,177]. It is also reported in Oregon, and in the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick, Quebec, and Ontario [83].

Since it appears the native ranges of Morrow's honeysuckle and Tatarian honeysuckle do not overlap, showy fly honeysuckle probably only occurs outside cultivation in North America [68]. According to a review by Barnes [7], initial reports of showy fly honeysuckle in North America date to around the late 1800s to early 1900s, while its parent species, Tatarian honeysuckle and Morrow's honeysuckle, were introduced sometime in the mid-1700s and mid-1800s, respectively. Determining the distribution of showy fly honeysuckle is especially problematic, since it is a hybrid of two nonnative parent species and is often difficult to identify [8] (see Taxonomy). A distribution map provided by Barnes and Cottam [8] shows the U.S. distribution of showy fly honeysuckle from Maine west to northeastern Montana, most of the Dakotas, eastern Nebraska and northeastern Kansas, and south to North Carolina, Tennessee, and northern Missouri. There are also records of its occurrence in Colorado east of the continental divide [190], in South Carolina and Wyoming [83,136], and in Washington [136]. In Canada, Barnes and Cottam [8] indicate that showy fly honeysuckle occurs in far southern Quebec and adjacent eastern Ontario, and while less common, is also established in southwestern Manitoba, southern Saskatchewan, and southeastern Alberta. There is also a record of its occurrence in New Brunswick [83]. According to Barnes [7], showy fly honeysuckle is most widespread in New England and around the southern Great Lakes.

USDA Plants database provides state distribution maps of bush honeysuckles, although additional information may have led to more extensive descriptions of distribution in this review.

The following biogeographic classification systems demonstrate where bush honeysuckles could potentially be found based on floras and other literature, herbarium samples, and confirmed observations. Precise distribution information is unavailable. Therefore, these lists are speculative and may be imprecise.

license
cc-publicdomain
bibliographic citation
Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Fire Ecology

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: fire regime, forest, restoration, root crown

Information about the fire ecology of bush honeysuckles is lacking.

Fire adaptations: Although no information could be found regarding the evolutionary relationship between fire and bush honeysuckles in their native ranges, it appears that bush honeysuckles are adapted to survive fire by shielding perennating buds below the soil surface on roots and/or the root crown. Postfire sprouting has been documented [7,75,87,102,126,127] (see Fire Effects), although it is unclear if all bush honeysuckle taxa discussed possess similar abilities.

FIRE REGIMES: Information about bush honeysuckles and FIRE REGIMES is lacking. Research is needed that examines the interactions of fire and bush honeysuckles, effects these interactions may have on native communities and ecosystems, and effects on their respective FIRE REGIMES. For example, bush honeysuckles are present in oak-dominated communities in the eastern U.S. [57,87,119,163]. Historically, fire has been an important ecological influence in oak forests, woodlands, and savannas [34]. Understanding the response of bush honeysuckles (and other nonnative species) to periodic fire could be critical for management and restoration efforts in these and other areas.

The following table lists fire return intervals for communities or ecosystems throughout North America where bush honeysuckles may occur. This list is presented as a guideline to illustrate historic FIRE REGIMES and is not to be interpreted as a strict description of FIRE REGIMES for bush honeysuckles. Find further fire regime information for the plant communities in which these species may occur by entering the species' names in the FEIS home page under "Find FIRE REGIMES".

Community or Ecosystem Dominant Species Fire Return Interval Range (years) silver fir-Douglas-fir Abies amabilis-Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii > 200 grand fir Abies grandis 35-200 [1] maple-beech-birch Acer-Fagus-Betula > 1,000 silver maple-American elm Acer saccharinum-Ulmus americana < 35 to 200 sugar maple Acer saccharum > 1,000 sugar maple-basswood Acer saccharum-Tilia americana > 1,000 [187] California chaparral Adenostoma and/or Arctostaphylos spp. 130] bluestem prairie Andropogon gerardii var. gerardii-Schizachyrium scoparium 90,130] Nebraska sandhills prairie Andropogon gerardii var. paucipilus-Schizachyrium scoparium < 10 bluestem-Sacahuista prairie Andropogon littoralis-Spartina spartinae 130] silver sagebrush steppe Artemisia cana 5-45 [73,133,199] sagebrush steppe Artemisia tridentata/Pseudoroegneria spicata 20-70 [130] basin big sagebrush Artemisia tridentata var. tridentata 12-43 [141] mountain big sagebrush Artemisia tridentata var. vaseyana 15-40 [3,22,120] Wyoming big sagebrush Artemisia tridentata var. wyomingensis 10-70 (40**) [181,201] coastal sagebrush Artemisia californica < 35 to < 100 saltbush-greasewood Atriplex confertifolia-Sarcobatus vermiculatus 130] plains grasslands Bouteloua spp. 130,199] blue grama-needle-and-thread grass-western wheatgrass Bouteloua gracilis-Hesperostipa comata-Pascopyrum smithii 130,139,199] blue grama-buffalo grass Bouteloua gracilis-Buchloe dactyloides 130,199] cheatgrass Bromus tectorum 131,192] California montane chaparral Ceanothus and/or Arctostaphylos spp. 50-100 [130] sugarberry-America elm-green ash Celtis laevigata-Ulmus americana-Fraxinus pennsylvanica 187] curlleaf mountain-mahogany* Cercocarpus ledifolius 13-1,000 [5,144] mountain-mahogany-Gambel oak scrub Cercocarpus ledifolius-Quercus gambelii 130] Atlantic white-cedar Chamaecyparis thyoides 35 to > 200 [187] blackbrush Coleogyne ramosissima < 35 to < 100 northern cordgrass prairie Distichlis spicata-Spartina spp. 1-3 [130] beech-sugar maple Fagus spp.-Acer saccharum > 1,000 [187] California steppe Festuca-Danthonia spp. 130,161] black ash Fraxinus nigra 187] Ashe juniper Juniperus ashei < 35 western juniper Juniperus occidentalis 20-70 Rocky Mountain juniper Juniperus scopulorum 130] cedar glades Juniperus virginiana 3-22 [63,130] tamarack Larix laricina 35-200 [130] western larch Larix occidentalis 25-350 [2,10,31] creosotebush Larrea tridentata 130] yellow-poplar Liriodendron tulipifera 187] wheatgrass plains grasslands Pascopyrum smithii 130,133,199] Great Lakes spruce-fir Picea-Abies spp. 35 to > 200 northeastern spruce-fir Picea-Abies spp. 35-200 [40] southeastern spruce-fir Picea-Abies spp. 35 to > 200 [187] Engelmann spruce-subalpine fir Picea engelmannii-Abies lasiocarpa 35 to > 200 [1] black spruce Picea mariana 35-200 conifer bog* Picea mariana-Larix laricina 35-200 [40] blue spruce* Picea pungens 35-200 [1] red spruce* Picea rubens 35-200 [40] pine-cypress forest Pinus-Cupressus spp. 1] jack pine Pinus banksiana 40] Rocky Mountain lodgepole pine* Pinus contorta var. latifolia 25-340 [9,10,164] Sierra lodgepole pine* Pinus contorta var. murrayana 35-200 [1] shortleaf pine Pinus echinata 2-15 shortleaf pine-oak Pinus echinata-Quercus spp. 187] Colorado pinyon Pinus edulis 10-400+ [49,56,84,130] slash pine Pinus elliottii 3-8 [187] Jeffrey pine Pinus jeffreyi 5-30 western white pine* Pinus monticola 50-200 [1] longleaf-slash pine Pinus palustris-P. elliottii 1-4 [124,187] longleaf pine-scrub oak Pinus palustris-Quercus spp. 6-10 [187] Pacific ponderosa pine* Pinus ponderosa var. ponderosa 1-47 [1] interior ponderosa pine* Pinus ponderosa var. scopulorum 2-30 [1,6,94] Arizona pine Pinus ponderosa var. arizonica 2-15 [6,30,149] Table Mountain pine Pinus pungens 187] red pine (Great Lakes region) Pinus resinosa 10-200 (10**) [40,51] red-white-jack pine* Pinus resinosa-P. strobus-P. banksiana 10-300 [40,70] pitch pine Pinus rigida 6-25 [21,71] pocosin Pinus serotina 3-8 pond pine Pinus serotina 3-8 eastern white pine Pinus strobus 35-200 eastern white pine-eastern hemlock Pinus strobus-Tsuga canadensis 35-200 eastern white pine-northern red oak-red maple Pinus strobus-Quercus rubra-Acer rubrum 35-200 loblolly pine Pinus taeda 3-8 loblolly-shortleaf pine Pinus taeda-P. echinata 10 to < 35 Virginia pine Pinus virginiana 10 to < 35 Virginia pine-oak Pinus virginiana-Quercus spp. 10 to < 35 sycamore-sweetgum-American elm Platanus occidentalis-Liquidambar styraciflua-Ulmus americana 187] galleta-threeawn shrubsteppe Pleuraphis jamesii-Aristida purpurea < 35 to < 100 eastern cottonwood Populus deltoides 130] aspen-birch Populus tremuloides-Betula papyrifera 35-200 [40,187] quaking aspen (west of the Great Plains) Populus tremuloides 7-120 [1,62,113] Texas savanna Prosopis glandulosa var. glandulosa 130] black cherry-sugar maple Prunus serotina-Acer saccharum > 1,000 [187] Rocky Mountain Douglas-fir* Pseudotsuga menziesii var. glauca 25-100 [1,3,4] coastal Douglas-fir* Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii 40-240 [1,123,137] California mixed evergreen Pseudotsuga menziesii var. menziesii-Lithocarpus densiflorus-Arbutus menziesii < 35 California oakwoods Quercus spp. 1] oak-hickory Quercus-Carya spp. < 35 northeastern oak-pine Quercus-Pinus spp. 10 to 187] oak-gum-cypress Quercus-Nyssa-spp.-Taxodium distichum 35 to > 200 [124] southeastern oak-pine Quercus-Pinus spp. 187] coast live oak Quercus agrifolia 2-75 [61] white oak-black oak-northern red oak Quercus alba-Q. velutina-Q. rubra 187] canyon live oak Quercus chrysolepis <35 to 200 blue oak-foothills pine Quercus douglasii-P. sabiniana 1] northern pin oak Quercus ellipsoidalis 187] Oregon white oak Quercus garryana 1] bear oak Quercus ilicifolia 187] California black oak Quercus kelloggii 5-30 [130] bur oak Quercus macrocarpa 187] oak savanna Quercus macrocarpa/Andropogon gerardii-Schizachyrium scoparium 2-14 [130,187] shinnery Quercus mohriana 130] chestnut oak Quercus prinus 3-8 northern red oak Quercus rubra 10 to < 35 post oak-blackjack oak Quercus stellata-Q. marilandica < 10 black oak Quercus velutina 187] interior live oak Quercus wislizenii 1] blackland prairie Schizachyrium scoparium-Nassella leucotricha 187] little bluestem-grama prairie Schizachyrium scoparium-Bouteloua spp. 130] redwood Sequoia sempervirens 5-200 [1,48,162] southern cordgrass prairie Spartina alterniflora 1-3 [130] baldcypress Taxodium distichum var. distichum 100 to > 300 pondcypress Taxodium distichum var. nutans 124] western redcedar-western hemlock Thuja plicata-Tsuga heterophylla > 200 [1] eastern hemlock-yellow birch Tsuga canadensis-Betula alleghaniensis > 200 [187] western hemlock-Sitka spruce Tsuga heterophylla-Picea sitchensis > 200 [1] elm-ash-cottonwood Ulmus-Fraxinus-Populus spp. 40,187] *fire return interval varies widely; trends in variation are noted in the species review
**mean
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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Growth Form (according to Raunkiær Life-form classification)

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More info for the terms: geophyte, hemicryptophyte, phanerophyte

RAUNKIAER [135] LIFE FORM:
Phanerophyte
Hemicryptophyte
Geophyte
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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Habitat characteristics

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More info for the terms: basal area, cover, density, forest, mesic, peat, shrubs

It is likely that sites characteristics where bush honeysuckles occur in North America are generally similar for the 6 species considered in this summary. However, it is difficult to definitively ascertain which species share affinities for which site characteristics, especially when considered across the entire North American range of bush honeysuckle (see General Distribution). Information about site characteristics that favor bush honeysuckle establishment, persistence, and spread is often anecdotal. Consequently, the following information describes site characteristics where bush honeysuckles are likely to be found, but should not be considered a comprehensive assessment. More research is needed to determine relationships between various site characteristics and bush honeysuckle invasion.

In the North Carolina Piedmont and Coastal Plain, and in the South Carolina Piedmont, sweet breath of spring is found in woodlands and "waste places" [134]. In north-central Texas it escapes to "forest margins" [36].

According to Luken (personal observation cited in [104]) and Luken and others [98], in its native range Amur honeysuckle commonly grows on sites with some type of canopy cover (open forests, flood plain forests, periodically disturbed floodplains, riparian habitats and scrub communities). In North America, it is found in both open and wooded habitats [99,132]. In southern Wisconsin, Cochrane [27] described Amur honeysuckle occurrence as mostly in partially shaded fencerows, weedy thickets, and brushy groves, and less frequently in woods [27]. In north-central Texas Amur honeysuckle escapes to "forest margins" [36], in Michigan it is found in "woods (upland and swampy), thickets, banks, fencerows, and often near a landscaped source" [186], and in southwestern Ohio it is mentioned as occurring in pastures and woodlands [18]. Hutchinson and Vankat [79] examined Amur honeysuckle distribution in southwestern Ohio along northerly and westerly transects, emanating from a supposed central population source from which invasive populations have subsequently dispersed. Their results suggest Amur honeysuckle population spread is closely linked to forest cover and forest connectivity across the landscape. They propose that large expanses of agricultural land act as a barrier to dispersal, perhaps due to habitat constraints on frugivorous birds that disperse seeds. Medley [112] found that Amur honeysuckle density was significantly (p = 0.001) correlated with proximity to the edge of a 13 acre (5.2 ha) mature deciduous forest stand in southwestern Ohio. However, Amur honeysuckle stem basal area was also significantly (p<0.05) correlated with proximity to stream channels, with some of the largest individuals located near the center of the stand along streambanks.

Amur honeysuckle

John M. Randall/The Nature Conservancy Morrow's honeysuckle is found in woodlands of the Blue Ridge mountains in Tennessee and Virginia [197], in thickets, fields, and hedgerows in New England [150], and along streambanks in Wyoming [39]. In lower Michigan, it escapes to roadsides, railroads, thickets, lakeshores, riverbanks, and woods [186].

Morrow's honeysuckle

John M. Randall/The Nature Conservancy In Michigan, Tatarian honeysuckle escapes to roadsides, railroads, thickets, lakeshores, riverbanks, woods, fields, "waste places" and swamps [186], and in the northern Great Plains it escapes to open woods, stream banks, or brushy pastures [59,157]. It is found in riverbank thickets, along roadsides, and in "waste land" in New England [150], along fence rows and stream banks in Montana and Wyoming [38], and in riparian areas along the Big Sioux River in eastern South Dakota [35]. According to White [193], Tatarian honeysuckle is present, though not common, on poorly-drained shrub-dominated sites in southeastern Wisconsin [193]. Moffatt and McLachlan [121] included Tatarian honeysuckle among indicator species found in disturbed riparian forest in southern Manitoba. It was 1 of 2 nonnative plant species that was significantly (p<0.05) more likely to occur within "urban" or "suburban" sites compared with "rural" (agricultural) or "reference" (undisturbed) sites.

Tatarian honeysuckle


Gary Fewless/UW-Green Bay Herbarium Fly honeysuckle is found in thickets and woods in New England [150]. It is apparently tolerant of "difficult" growing sites [176].

Fly honeysuckle

Henriette Kress

In Michigan, showy fly honeysuckle is found in habitats similar to those of Tatarian honeysuckle and Morrow's honeysuckle [186]. It is found along roadsides and "scrub areas" bordering human habitation in the Adirondacks [25], and in thickets and "waste places" in New England and the Piedmont of North Carolina [134,150]. A review by Barnes [7] indicates a wide range of sites may support showy fly honeysuckle populations in Wisconsin, including roadsides, fencerows, pastures or fields, railroad rights-of-way, lake, river, or stream banks, and wooded areas, particularly within openings or edges of woods. Barnes [7] showed that showy fly honeysuckle distribution within the University of Wisconsin Madison Arboretum was aggregated. He reasoned that the observed patterns of distribution were strongly influenced by site characteristics favorable to seedling establishment (see above).

Soils and topography: Soil requirements and tolerances vary among bush honeysuckles, but most taxa seem to grow best on well-drained sites.

Sweet breath of spring prefers moist but well-drained, loamy soil [128].

Amur honeysuckle performs best on moist, well-drained sites, but is adaptable to "poor" soils, compacted soils, various soil pHs, restricted root zones, drought and salt spray [17]. According to Vogel [185] the lower pH limit for Amur honeysuckle is 5.0. It escapes to calcareous slopes in north-central Texas [36], and grows in thin prairie soils over dolomite in southern Wisconsin [27]. Amur honeysuckle generally occurs in mesic habitats in Virginia [182]. According to Sharp and Belcher [151] the Amur honeysuckle cultivar 'Rem-Red' is "adapted" to deep, well-drained, fertile, sandy loam to clay loam soils, and is not "adapted" to droughty or wet soils. Lorenz and others [95] indicate that 'Rem-Red' "grows in medium-fertility, acid, clayey, loamy, and sandy soils, and tolerates somewhat poorly drained soil."

Morrow's honeysuckle prefers loamy, well-drained, moist soil [174]. In Virginia, it generally occurs in mesic habitats [182]. Vogel [185] reports that the lower pH limit for Morrow's honeysuckle is 5.0.

Barnes [7] indicates Tatarian honeysuckle occurs on a wide variety of soil types in central Asia. According to Lorenz and others [95], it "grows in medium-fertility, acid, clayey, loamy, and sandy soils, and tolerates moderately well-drained soil." Tatarian honeysuckle grows on peat and muck soils [110]. White [193] reports that it is present, though not common, on poorly-drained shrub-dominated sites in southeastern Wisconsin [193]. Tatarian honeysuckle generally occurs in mesic habitats in Virginia [182]. According to Vogel [185] the lower pH limit for Tatarian honeysuckle is 5.0. Tatarian honeysuckle is considered salt sensitive [166].

Fly honeysuckle performs best on moist, well-drained sites, but is adaptable to "poor" soils, various soil pHs, restricted root zones, drought, and salt spray, but is not tolerant of wet sites or poorly drained sites [17].

Mature showy fly honeysuckle shrubs were found growing over a variety of soils at the University of Wisconsin Madison Arboretum including: a) a droughty, infertile, loamy sand, b) a well- to moderately well drained, moderately fertile, silt loam, c) an imperfectly- to poorly drained silt loam, and d) a muck soil where the water table was at or near the surface in spring [7]. In a reciprocal transplant common garden experiment in southern Wisconsin, Barnes and Cottam [8] successfully transplanted showy fly honeysuckle shrubs at 2 sites with quite different soils. The wet site had muck soils with water-retaining capacity of 260% dry weight and organic matter content 64%, while the dry site was a loamy sand soil with water-retaining capacity of 50% dry weight and 2% organic matter. Survival of transplants, 50% at the dry site and 68% at the wet site, was not significantly different. Transplant origin (wet site or dry site) also did not affect performance at either common garden, indicating no evidence of ecotypic differentiation between populations based on soil type. showy fly honeysuckle generally occurs in mesic habitats in Virginia [182].

Climate: Sweet breath of spring is adapted to USDA zones 4-8 [37,114,128,172].

Amur honeysuckle distribution appears to be limited by drought and cold. Trisel [168] observed that during summer droughts in southwestern Ohio Amur honeysuckle leaves can become severely wilted, while native trees remain unaffected. However, based on unpublished data, it was further indicated that affected shrubs can fully recover from wilting with no apparent damage or mortality following rehydration. Trisel [168] also hypothesized that susceptibility to drought may result from its shallow root system, and that drought intolerance may be more pronounced in unshaded areas. Lorenz and others [95] characterize the Amur honeysuckle cultivar 'Rem-Red' as having "fair drought tolerance."

According to Trisel [168], Amur honeysuckle range expansion to the west and north may be limited by moisture and winter temperature. Several sources indicate that it is adapted to USDA zones 2-8 [17,37], or 3-8 [115,173]. Analysis of herbaria records by Trisel [168] indicates Amur honeysuckle "escapes" become limited in USDA zones 4-5 (winter low temperatures of -20.2 to -31 ◦F (-29 to -35 ◦C)). Lorenz and others [95] provide a map of plant hardiness zones of the northeastern U.S., based on average annual minimum temperature, and refer to these as "areas of climatic adaptation" where various plant species are recommended for planting for "conservation" purposes. They indicate that while some species "may grow in zones other than the ones indicated, maximum conservation effectiveness occurs within these zones." Based on this information, Amur honeysuckle is climatically adapted throughout the northeastern U.S. where average annual minimum temperature ranges from 20 to -30 ◦F (-6.7 to -34 ◦C).

Morrow's honeysuckle is adapted to USDA zones 4-6 and warmer parts of zone 3 [37,116,174].

Several sources indicate that Tatarian honeysuckle is adapted  to USDA zones 3-8 [117,129,175], or 2-8 [37]. Lorenz and others [95] provide a map of plant hardiness zones of the northeastern U.S., based on average annual minimum temperature, and refer to these as "areas of climatic adaptation" where various plant species are recommended for planting for "conservation" purposes. They indicate that while some species "may grow in zones other than the ones indicated, maximum conservation effectiveness occurs within these zones." Based on this information, Tatarian honeysuckle is climatically adapted throughout the northeastern U.S. where average annual minimum temperature ranges from 20 to -40  ◦F (-6.7 to -40 ◦C). Tatarian honeysuckle is apparently winter hardy in valleys of western Montana [93]. Lorenz and others [95] characterize Tatarian honeysuckle as having "fair drought tolerance."

Fly honeysuckle is adapted to USDA zones 4-6 [17,37,118].

Showy fly honeysuckle is adapted to USDA zones 4-7 [37]. Average annual precipitation throughout the North American range of showy fly honeysuckle is between 9.8 and 59 inches (250-1500 mm), and average frost-free period is 80 to 240 days [8].

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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Habitat: Cover Types

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This species is known to occur in association with the following cover types (as classified by the Society of American Foresters):

More info for the terms: cover, swamp

SAF COVER TYPES [42]:





1 Jack pine

5 Balsam fir

12 Black spruce

13 Black spruce-tamarack

14 Northern pin oak

15 Red pine

16 Aspen

17 Pin cherry

18 Paper birch

19 Gray birch-red maple

20 White pine-northern red oak-red maple

21 Eastern white pine

22 White pine-hemlock

23 Eastern hemlock

24 Hemlock-yellow birch

25 Sugar maple-beech-yellow birch

26 Sugar maple-basswood

27 Sugar maple

28 Black cherry-maple

30 Red spruce-yellow birch

31 Red spruce-sugar maple-beech

32 Red spruce

33 Red spruce-balsam fir

34 Red spruce-Fraser fir

35 Paper birch-red spruce-balsam fir

37 Northern white-cedar

38 Tamarack

39 Black ash-American elm-red maple

40 Post oak-blackjack oak

42 Bur oak

43 Bear oak

44 Chestnut oak

45 Pitch pine

46 Eastern redcedar

50 Black locust

51 White pine-chestnut oak

52 White oak-black oak-northern red oak

53 White oak

55 Northern red oak

57 Yellow-poplar

58 Yellow-poplar-eastern hemlock

59 Yellow-poplar-white oak-northern red oak

60 Beech-sugar maple

61 River birch-sycamore

62 Silver maple-American elm

63 Cottonwood

64 Sassafras-persimmon

65 Pin oak-sweetgum

66 Ashe juniper-redberry (Pinchot) juniper

67 Mohrs (shin) oak

68 Mesquite

69 Sand pine

70 Longleaf pine

71 Longleaf pine-scrub oak

72 Southern scrub oak

73 Southern redcedar

74 Cabbage palmetto

75 Shortleaf pine

76 Shortleaf pine-oak

78 Virginia pine-oak

79 Virginia pine

80 Loblolly pine-shortleaf pine

81 Loblolly pine

82 Loblolly pine-hardwood

83 Longleaf pine-slash pine

84 Slash pine

85 Slash pine-hardwood

87 Sweetgum-yellow-poplar

88 Willow oak-water oak-diamondleaf (laurel) oak

89 Live oak

91 Swamp chestnut oak-cherrybark oak

92 Sweetgum-willow oak

93 Sugarberry-American elm-green ash

94 Sycamore-sweetgum-American elm

95 Black willow

96 Overcup oak-water hickory

97 Atlantic white-cedar

98 Pond pine

100 Pondcypress

101 Baldcypress

102 Baldcypress-tupelo

103 Water tupelo-swamp tupelo

104 Sweetbay-swamp tupelo-redbay

107 White spruce

108 Red maple

109 Hawthorn

110 Black oak

201 White spruce

202 White spruce-paper birch

203 Balsam poplar

204 Black spruce

206 Engelmann spruce-subalpine fir

207 Red fir

210 Interior Douglas-fir

211 White fir

212 Western larch

213 Grand fir

215 Western white pine

216 Blue spruce

217 Aspen

218 Lodgepole pine

219 Limber pine

220 Rocky Mountain juniper

221 Red alder

222 Black cottonwood-willow

223 Sitka spruce

224 Western hemlock

225 Western hemlock-Sitka spruce

226 Coastal true fir-hemlock

227 Western redcedar-western hemlock

228 Western redcedar

229 Pacific Douglas-fir

230 Douglas-fir-western hemlock

231 Port-Orford-cedar

232 Redwood

233 Oregon white oak

234 Douglas-fir-tanoak-Pacific madrone

235 Cottonwood-willow

236 Bur oak

237 Interior ponderosa pine

238 Western juniper

239 Pinyon-juniper

243 Sierra Nevada mixed conifer

244 Pacific ponderosa pine-Douglas-fir

245 Pacific ponderosa pine

246 California black oak

247 Jeffrey pine

248 Knobcone pine

249 Canyon live oak

250 Blue oak-foothills pine

251 White spruce-aspen

252 Paper birch

253 Black spruce-white spruce

254 Black spruce-paper birch

255 California coast live oak
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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Habitat: Ecosystem

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This species is known to occur in the following ecosystem types (as named by the U.S. Forest Service in their Forest and Range Ecosystem [FRES] Type classification):

More info for the term: shrub

ECOSYSTEMS [52]:





FRES10 White-red-jack pine

FRES11 Spruce-fir

FRES12 Longleaf-slash pine

FRES13 Loblolly-shortleaf pine

FRES14 Oak-pine

FRES15 Oak-hickory

FRES16 Oak-gum-cypress

FRES17 Elm-ash-cottonwood

FRES18 Maple-beech-birch

FRES19 Aspen-birch

FRES20 Douglas-fir

FRES21 Ponderosa pine

FRES22 Western white pine

FRES23 Fir-spruce

FRES24 Hemlock-Sitka spruce

FRES25 Larch

FRES26 Lodgepole pine

FRES27 Redwood

FRES28 Western hardwoods

FRES29 Sagebrush

FRES30 Desert shrub

FRES31 Shinnery

FRES32 Texas savanna

FRES33 Southwestern shrubsteppe

FRES34 Chaparral-mountain shrub

FRES35 Pinyon-juniper

FRES36 Mountain grasslands

FRES37 Mountain meadows

FRES38 Plains grasslands

FRES39 Prairie

FRES41 Wet grasslands

FRES42 Annual grasslands
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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Habitat: Plant Associations

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This species is known to occur in association with the following plant community types (as classified by Küchler 1964):

More info for the terms: bog, forest, shrub, woodland

KUCHLER [91] PLANT ASSOCIATIONS:





K001 Spruce-cedar-hemlock forest

K002 Cedar-hemlock-Douglas-fir forest

K003 Silver fir-Douglas-fir forest

K004 Fir-hemlock forest

K005 Mixed conifer forest

K006 Redwood forest

K007 Red fir forest

K008 Lodgepole pine-subalpine forest

K009 Pine-cypress forest

K010 Ponderosa shrub forest

K011 Western ponderosa forest

K012 Douglas-fir forest

K013 Cedar-hemlock-pine forest

K014 Grand fir-Douglas-fir forest

K015 Western spruce-fir forest

K016 Eastern ponderosa forest

K017 Black Hills pine forest

K018 Pine-Douglas-fir forest

K019 Arizona pine forest

K020 Spruce-fir-Douglas-fir forest

K021 Southwestern spruce-fir forest

K022 Great Basin pine forest

K023 Juniper-pinyon woodland

K024 Juniper steppe woodland

K025 Alder-ash forest

K026 Oregon oakwoods

K027 Mesquite bosques

K028 Mosaic of K002 and K026

K029 California mixed evergreen forest

K030 California oakwoods

K033 Chaparral

K034 Montane chaparral

K035 Coastal sagebrush

K036 Mosaic of K030 and K035

K037 Mountain-mahogany-oak scrub

K038 Great Basin sagebrush

K039 Blackbrush

K040 Saltbush-greasewood

K041 Creosote bush

K047 Fescue-oatgrass

K048 California steppe

K050 Fescue-wheatgrass

K051 Wheatgrass-bluegrass

K053 Grama-galleta steppe

K055 Sagebrush steppe

K056 Wheatgrass-needlegrass shrubsteppe

K057 Galleta-threeawn shrubsteppe

K063 Foothills prairie

K064 Grama-needlegrass-wheatgrass

K065 Grama-buffalo grass

K066 Wheatgrass-needlegrass

K067 Wheatgrass-bluestem-needlegrass

K068 Wheatgrass-grama-buffalo grass

K069 Bluestem-grama prairie

K070 Sandsage-bluestem prairie

K073 Northern cordgrass prairie

K074 Bluestem prairie

K075 Nebraska Sandhills prairie

K076 Blackland prairie

K077 Bluestem-sacahuista prairie

K078 Southern cordgrass prairie

K081 Oak savanna

K082 Mosaic of K074 and K100

K083 Cedar glades

K084 Cross Timbers

K085 Mesquite-buffalo grass

K086 Juniper-oak savanna

K089 Black Belt

K090 Live oak-sea oats

K093 Great Lakes spruce-fir forest

K094 Conifer bog

K095 Great Lakes pine forest

K096 Northeastern spruce-fir forest

K097 Southeastern spruce-fir forest

K098 Northern floodplain forest

K099 Maple-basswood forest

K100 Oak-hickory forest

K101 Elm-ash forest

K102 Beech-maple forest

K103 Mixed mesophytic forest

K104 Appalachian oak forest

K106 Northern hardwoods

K107 Northern hardwoods-fir forest

K108 Northern hardwoods-spruce forest

K109 Transition between K104 and K106

K110 Northeastern oak-pine forest

K111 Oak-hickory-pine

K112 Southern mixed forest

K113 Southern floodplain forest

K114 Pocosin
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bibliographic citation
Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Habitat: Rangeland Cover Types

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More info on this topic.

This species is known to occur in association with the following Rangeland Cover Types (as classified by the Society for Range Management, SRM):

More info for the terms: cover, forb, forest, fresh, grassland, marsh, mesic, shrub, shrubland, swamp, tundra, woodland

SRM (RANGELAND) COVER TYPES [152]:




101 Bluebunch wheatgrass

102 Idaho fescue

103 Green fescue

104 Antelope bitterbrush-bluebunch wheatgrass

105 Antelope bitterbrush-Idaho fescue

106 Bluegrass scabland

107 Western juniper/big sagebrush/bluebunch wheatgrass

109 Ponderosa pine shrubland

110 Ponderosa pine-grassland

201 Blue oak woodland

202 Coast live oak woodland

203 Riparian woodland

204 North coastal shrub

205 Coastal sage shrub

206 Chamise chaparral

207 Scrub oak mixed chaparral

208 Ceanothus mixed chaparral

209 Montane shrubland

210 Bitterbrush

211 Creosote bush scrub

212 Blackbush

213 Alpine grassland

214 Coastal prairie

215 Valley grassland

217 Wetlands

301 Bluebunch wheatgrass-blue grama

302 Bluebunch wheatgrass-Sandberg bluegrass

303 Bluebunch wheatgrass-western wheatgrass

304 Idaho fescue-bluebunch wheatgrass

305 Idaho fescue-Richardson needlegrass

306 Idaho fescue-slender wheatgrass

307 Idaho fescue-threadleaf sedge

308 Idaho fescue-tufted hairgrass

309 Idaho fescue-western wheatgrass

310 Needle-and-thread-blue grama

311 Rough fescue-bluebunch wheatgrass

312 Rough fescue-Idaho fescue

313 Tufted hairgrass-sedge

314 Big sagebrush-bluebunch wheatgrass

315 Big sagebrush-Idaho fescue

316 Big sagebrush-rough fescue

317 Bitterbrush-bluebunch wheatgrass

318 Bitterbrush-Idaho fescue

319 Bitterbrush-rough fescue

320 Black sagebrush-bluebunch wheatgrass

321 Black sagebrush-Idaho fescue

322 Curlleaf mountain-mahogany-bluebunch wheatgrass

323 Shrubby cinquefoil-rough fescue

324 Threetip sagebrush-Idaho fescue

401 Basin big sagebrush

402 Mountain big sagebrush

403 Wyoming big sagebrush

404 Threetip sagebrush

405 Black sagebrush

406 Low sagebrush

407 Stiff sagebrush

408 Other sagebrush types

409 Tall forb

411 Aspen woodland

412 Juniper-pinyon woodland

413 Gambel oak

414 Salt desert shrub

415 Curlleaf mountain-mahogany

416 True mountain-mahogany

417 Littleleaf mountain-mahogany

418 Bigtooth maple

419 Bittercherry

420 Snowbrush

421 Chokecherry-serviceberry-rose

422 Riparian

501 Saltbush-greasewood

601 Bluestem prairie

602 Bluestem-prairie sandreed

603 Prairie sandreed-needlegrass

604 Bluestem-grama prairie

605 Sandsage prairie

606 Wheatgrass-bluestem-needlegrass

607 Wheatgrass-needlegrass

608 Wheatgrass-grama-needlegrass

609 Wheatgrass-grama

610 Wheatgrass

611 Blue grama-buffalo grass

612 Sagebrush-grass

613 Fescue grassland

614 Crested wheatgrass

615 Wheatgrass-saltgrass-grama

704 Blue grama-western wheatgrass

709 Bluestem-grama

710 Bluestem prairie

711 Bluestem-sacahuista prairie

715 Grama-buffalo grass

717 Little bluestem-Indiangrass-Texas wintergrass

718 Mesquite-grama

722 Sand sagebrush-mixed prairie

727 Mesquite-buffalo grass

728 Mesquite-granjeno-acacia

729 Mesquite

730 Sand shinnery oak

731 Cross timbers-Oklahoma

732 Cross timbers-Texas (little bluestem-post oak)

733 Juniper-oak

734 Mesquite-oak

735 Sideoats grama-sumac-juniper

801 Savanna

802 Missouri prairie

803 Missouri glades

804 Tall fescue

805 Riparian

806 Gulf Coast salt marsh

807 Gulf Coast fresh marsh



ALASKAN RANGELANDS

901 Alder

903 Beach wildrye-mixed forb

904 Black spruce-lichen

905 Bluejoint reedgrass

906 Broadleaf forest

908 Fescue

909 Freshwater marsh

910 Hairgrass

912 Low scrub shrub birch-ericaceous

913 Low scrub swamp

914 Mesic sedge-grass-herb meadow tundra

915 Mixed herb-herbaceous

916 Sedge-shrub tundra

917 Tall shrub swamp

920 White spruce-paper birch

921 Willow
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bibliographic citation
Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Immediate Effect of Fire

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: shrubs, top-kill

Fire may top-kill bush honeysuckle plants, and is likely to kill seedlings and unhealthy plants [75,126,127]. However, perennating tissues on roots and root crowns are often protected from fire damage by soil. By excavating numerous showy fly honeysuckle shrubs in Wisconsin, it was determined that most roots occurred at a depth of 0.98 to 5.9 inches (2.5-15 cm) and in many cases extended well beyond crown width [7].

Fire may also kill seeds [23,24], although this is not confirmed.

license
cc-publicdomain
bibliographic citation
Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Impacts and Control

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More info for the terms: allelopathy, basal area, cohort, competition, cover, density, fire management, forb, forbs, forest, frequency, fruit, hardwood, herb, herbaceous, interference, invasive species, natural, nonnative species, phenology, presence, restoration, root crown, seed, severity, shrub, shrubs, species richness, tree, woodland

Impacts:: Throughout many areas of North America, bush honeysuckles are considered invasive and a threat to native habitats and plant communities. They can escape, establish, and persist outside cultivation, and may continue to spread into adjacent areas [32,108,127,157]. Barnes and Cottam [8] described showy fly honeysuckle as escaped and occupying "a significant extent of territory" in the northern U.S., where it is reproducing, increasing in some areas, and spreading to new areas. Barton and others [11] examined abundance of nonnative woody and semiwoody plants in rural western Maine along transects representing field edges, abandoned railroad right-of-way edges, roadsides, and riparian sites. Of 12 nonnative species measured, bush honeysuckles (Morrow's honeysuckle, Tatarian honeysuckle, and showy fly honeysuckle counted together) occurred along the greatest number of transects and had the 2nd greatest number of total patches and patches/km in the study. Amur honeysuckle has been the target of eradication efforts in north-central Kentucky and south-central Ohio because it "dominates nature reserves to the exclusion of endemic species" [105].

A variety of impacts has been ascribed to bush honeysuckle invasion. Most impacts are associated with their competitive dominance, potentially resulting in displacement of native species. Collier and others [29] compared native vegetation growing under Amur honeysuckle crowns with plants growing outside Amur honeysuckle influence in hardwood forest stands near Oxford, in southwestern Ohio. For all species combined, mean species richness was 53% lower, and mean cover 63% lower, in plots beneath Amur honeysuckle crowns. According to Luken and McKnight [101], dense Amur honeysuckle thickets in forest and open sites are "associated with a near complete absence of ground cover species." One study in a northern Kentucky hardwood forest described a monospecific Amur honeysuckle shrub layer with nearly 100% canopy coverage, mean maximum subcanopy light levels of 1% of full sun, and a sparse ground layer flora composed mainly of suppressed Amur honeysuckle seedlings and saplings [96]. Showy fly honeysuckle, along with common buckthorn, composed a "nearly continuous, almost impenetrable" shrub layer in an oak (Q ? palaeolithicola) -dominated forest in southern Wisconsin [87].

Competition, especially for light, is the most commonly described means by which bush honeysuckles impact native plants. For example, Barnes [7] found light levels beneath dense showy fly honeysuckle thickets in southern Wisconsin were between 0.32 and 0.8% of light in the open. He also observed (without data) a greater abundance and larger size of sun flecks under gray dogwood thickets compared with showy fly honeysuckle. It was suggested that gray dogwood, a common native shrub species in southern Wisconsin, has a more limited shading effect than does showy fly honeysuckle. Klein [86] noted interference associated with shading of Amur honeysuckle upon pride of Ohio (Dodecatheon meadia), a native forest understory herb that performs best under the open canopy of mature trees.

It is likely that interference from dense bush honeysuckle populations can suppress advance regeneration of native tree seedlings. Yost and others [200] studied vegetation of an urban woodland in New York containing abundant Amur honeysuckle. Their survey revealed a significant negative correlation (r=-0.21, p<0.05) between tree seedling density and Amur honeysuckle cover. Collier and others [29] compared native vegetation growing under Amur honeysuckle crowns with plants growing outside Amur honeysuckle influence, in hardwood forest stands near Oxford, in southwestern Ohio. For tree seedlings (≤1 m tall), mean species richness was 41% lower and mean density was 68% lower in plots beneath Amur honeysuckle crowns. Every tree species had lower seedling abundance beneath Amur honeysuckle crowns. Hutchinson and Vankat [78] investigated impacts of Amur honeysuckle invasion in southwestern Ohio hardwood forests. They found tree seedling density to be inversely related to Amur honeysuckle cover (r2 = 0.118, p < 0.001). When Amur honeysuckle cover was ≥15%, seedling densities were nearly always <0.5 m-2, but when Amur honeysuckle cover was <15%, seedling densities varied greatly. Tree seedling species richness was also inversely related to Amur honeysuckle cover (r2 = 0.152, p<0.0001). When Amur honeysuckle cover was >50%, the number of species was usually ≤8, but when Amur honeysuckle cover was <50%, richness was highly variable, ranging from 0 to 15 species. Luken [100] studied the response of woody seedlings to removal of dominant Amur honeysuckle shrubs in a northern Kentucky hardwood forest. Following 4 years of repeated clipping of established Amur honeysuckle plants, plus removal of Amur honeysuckle seedlings in the last 2 years of the study, seedling density and frequency of woody seedlings other than Amur honeysuckle were significantly (p<0.01) greater than in plots where Amur honeysuckle was not controlled. Woods [198] studied invasion of bush honeysuckles (in this study Tatarian honeysuckle and showy fly honeysuckle were not distinguished, although the text referred only to Tatarian honeysuckle (see Taxonomy)) in 3 sugar maple-dominated stands in Vermont, plus a red maple-dominated forest in northwestern Massachusetts. He found tree seedling (<1 m tall) density declined significantly (p<0.01) with increasing Tatarian honeysuckle cover. Average seedling density at all sites was >5 m-2 where Tatarian honeysuckle was not present, but was <1 m-2 when Tatarian honeysuckle cover was >90%. It was suggested that understory dominance by bush honeysuckles, as was observed, could ultimately alter successional patterns in forests typical to these. Gorchov and Trisel [55] detected effects of Amur honeysuckle interference, aboveground and belowground, that reduced survival of native tree seedlings in the understory of a southwestern Ohio deciduous forest. Seedlings of sugar maple, black cherry, northern red oak, and white ash were transplanted into treatment plots consisting of Amur honeysuckle shoot interference removal (pruning), Amur honeysuckle root interference removal (trenching), both pruning and trenching, and control plots where Amur honeysuckle interference effects were not manipulated. Amur honeysuckle basal area within treatment plots (prior to pruning) averaged 3.36 (? 0.16) m2 ha-1. Because of excessive mortality ascribed to white-tailed deer browsing, an additional cohort of sugar maple (only) seedlings was planted and protected from browsing (caged), and survival and growth data for these were subsequently analyzed according to previous procedures. Above-ground interference of Amur honeysuckle with tree seedlings appeared more important than below-ground interference, although both were detected. Pruning significantly (p≤0.05) increased survival for all species except black cherry, while trenching + pruning significantly (p≤0.05) increased survival for sugar maple (caged) and black cherry.

Even if seedlings of shade tolerant tree species can establish, interference from dense bush honeysuckle populations may still impact recruitment into mid-story or subcanopy status. Medley [112] studied distribution of Amur honeysuckle in a 13 acre (5.2 ha) sugar maple- and white ash-dominated deciduous forest in southwestern Ohio. Amur honeysuckle was the most important woody understory species, based on its mean density (3,361 individuals ha-1), frequency (95% of sample points), and basal area (1.89 m2 ha-1). There was a significant (p<0.05) negative relationship between Amur honeysuckle and sugar maple sapling densities (>1 m tall; <10 cm dbh).

There is also evidence that invasive bush honeysuckles can negatively impact native herbs. Collier and others [29] compared native vegetation growing under Amur honeysuckle crowns with plants growing outside Amur honeysuckle influence, in hardwood forest stands near Oxford, in southwestern Ohio. Eighty-six percent of herb species had lower abundance beneath Amur honeysuckle crowns. Hutchinson and Vankat [78] found herbaceous cover was inversely related to Amur honeysuckle cover (r2=0.494, p<0.0001) in southwestern Ohio hardwood forests. Woods [198] studied invasion of bush honeysuckles (in this study Tatarian honeysuckle and showy fly honeysuckle were not distinguished, although the text referred only to Tatarian honeysuckle (see Taxonomy) in 3 sugar maple-dominated stands in Vermont. He found herb species richness and herbaceous cover both declined significantly (p<0.05) with increasing Tatarian honeysuckle cover.

Gould and Gorchov [57] examined the effect of Amur honeysuckle presence on survival to reproductive age, and fecundity, of 3 native forest understory annual forbs. These were stickywilly (Galium aparine), an early-season shade-intolerant , pale touch-me-not (Impatiens pallida), a mid-season semishade-tolerant, and Canadian clearweed (Pilea pumila), a late-season shade-tolerant. Forbs were outplanted into treatment plots where Amur honeysuckle was either a) present, b) removed, or c) previously absent. Resident herb and seedling competitors were removed from all treatment plots at 6-10 day intervals throughout the experiment, and large mammalian herbivores were excluded. Survival of stickywilly and pale touch-me-not was significantly greater (p<0.05) in removal plots than in present plots at 1 of 2 sites. Fecundity of all 3 species (# seeds per surviving individual) was significantly greater (p<0.05) in removal plots than in present plots at both sites. Fecundity of pale touch-me-not and Canadian clearweed was also significantly greater (p<0.05) in absent plots than in present plots (absent plots were only feasible at 1 site). Survival of the shade-tolerant species Canadian clearweed was not affected by Amur honeysuckle presence, but fecundity was reduced. While speculative, this may be interpreted as a relatively less severe impact of Amur honeysuckle invasion on shade tolerant herb-layer species, compared with more shade intolerant species.

Miller and Gorchov [119] studied the effects of Amur honeysuckle presence on growth, reproduction and survival of 3 native forest understory perennial forbs over 5 growing seasons. Species studied included narrowleaf wild leek (Allium burdickii), a spring ephemeral, and the full-season species rue anemone (Thalictrum thalictroides) and downy yellow violet (Viola pubescens var. pubescens). They found Amur honeysuckle presence generally reduced growth and reproduction of target species, but not their survival. These effects appeared cumulative, often manifesting only after several years of treatment. They surmised the lack of treatment effect on forb survival may indicate perennial herbs are less impacted by Amur honeysuckle presence than are some annual forest understory forbs [57] and tree seedlings [55], although exclusion of browsing mammals may also have contributed to sustained survival in this experiment. They also caution that despite no demonstrable impact on survival in this study, reductions in growth and reproduction of individual perennial herbs by invasive shrubs, such as was demonstrated here with Amur honeysuckle, will likely reduce population sizes over time.

These results could be viewed within the context that Amur honeysuckle is simply filling a functional niche often filled by native shrubs, and is not really impacting native plant diversity in any novel way. Miller and Gorchov [119] and Gould and Gorchov [57] considered the possibility that native shrubs may also suppress herb-layer vegetation, although native shrubs were described as "very sparse" at these sites. In contrast, Amur honeysuckle density at one site was 0.7 shrubs m-2. Collier and others [29] asserted that native shrubs are generally uncommon in southwestern Ohio forests, citing Braun (1916, 1950) and Vankat (personal observation). Assuming their assertion is correct, observed negative impacts of Amur honeysuckle on native flora in otherwise shrub depauperate forests may be altering species composition and understory structure in ways that diverge from historic conditions. More research is needed that examines the comparative effects of bush honeysuckles vs. native shrubs in suppressing herbs and woody seedlings within various eastern North American forest types.

Some evidence indicates that where native shrubs and invasive bush honeysuckles co-occur, bush honeysuckles may be stronger competitors. Medley [112] studied distribution of Amur honeysuckle in a 13 acre (5.2 ha) sugar maple- and white ash-dominated deciduous forest in southwestern Ohio. Amur honeysuckle was the most important woody understory species, based on its mean density (3361 individuals ha-1), frequency (95% of sample points), and basal area (1.89 m2 ha-1). Instances of high species richness (>10 spp. per plot) of native woody plants and high basal areas (>1 m2 ha-1) of the most common native shrubs northern spicebush and blackhaw corresponded with Amur honeysuckle basal areas <4 m2 ha-1. When Amur honeysuckle basal areas were >5 m2 ha-1, woody plant species diversity and basal areas of common native shrubs were generally lower (≤ 10 spp. per plot, and <1 m2 ha-1, respectively). Barnes [7] determined that showy fly honeysuckle is generally a stronger competitor than the native shrub gray dogwood where they co-occur in southern Wisconsin. Although no mechanisms for this apparent competitive advantage were directly determined, emphasis was placed on differences in leaf phenology.

Extended leaf longevity may be important for light competition among understory plants of deciduous forests. Whether competition is between bush honeysuckles and native shrubs, forbs, or tree seedlings, early leaf emergence and/or late senescence in bush honeysuckles may permit exploitation of unutilized light resources prior to canopy leaf emergence and following canopy leaf fall [65] (see Seasonal Development). Miller and Gorchov [119] have proposed that summer herbs (i.e. those that grow primarily after canopy leaf emergence) are less impacted by early-leafing invasive shrubs, such as Amur honeysuckle, than those that fix most of their carbon before canopy leaf emergence. Barnes [7] observed that dense showy fly honeysuckle thickets had a very sparse herbaceous component compared with native shrub thickets in southern Wisconsin. He asserted that the effects of showy fly honeysuckle on herbs was similar to that of woody evergreens, in that they can suppress herb-layer development by casting shade throughout the effective seasonal range of most herbaceous species. In comparison, leaf development in most native shrubs occurs later in spring, generally allowing sufficient light for growth and reproduction of spring ephemeral herbs.

Other potential impacts of bush honeysuckle invasion include changes in herbivory pressure on native plants, allelopathy, and altered ecosystem processes. Trisel [168] found herbivory on Amur honeysuckle leaves was substantially less than for many native trees and shrubs in southwestern Ohio. This indicates that, as bush honeysuckles become increasingly dominant within a habitat, native species may encounter a corresponding increase in herbivory, which may contribute to their displacement. Laboratory and greenhouse experiments also indicate Amur honeysuckle may have allelopathic effects on herbs and woody seedlings, but more research is needed to distinguish between resource competition and allelopathy in the field [125,168]. There are also suggestions that bush honeysuckle invasion could have ecosystem level effects. According to Luken and Thieret [97], net primary production of dense open-grown Amur honeysuckle thickets (up to 1350 g m-2 yr-1 in northern Kentucky) may have large impacts on carbon and nutrient budgets of invaded sites.

Research has also provided some insight into why certain habitats may be more or less susceptible to bush honeysuckle invasion and its impacts. Hutchinson and Vankat [78] assert that late-successional forests dominated by shade tolerant tree species such as sugar maple and American beech are more resistant to Amur honeysuckle invasion, probably due to low light levels near the forest floor. They investigated impacts of Amur honeysuckle invasion in the interior of hardwood forest stands in southwestern Ohio. They found that Amur honeysuckle cover was inversely related to tree basal area (r2=0.151, p< 0.0001) and tree canopy cover (r2=0.292, p<0.0001). Amur honeysuckle cover commonly exceeded 50% only in stands with basal area <30 m2/ha, and was rarely <50% when tree canopy cover was <85%.

Evidence from southwestern Ohio indicates that the severity of bush honeysuckle invasion may be related to proximity to established source populations and time since invasion. Hutchinson and Vankat [78] investigated impacts of Amur honeysuckle invasion in hardwood forest stands near Oxford, in southwestern Ohio. Amur honeysuckle cover was positively related to estimated time since invasion (r2=0.172, p<0.0001) and was >50% only in stands invaded ≥12 years. Collier and others [29] compared native vegetation growing under Amur honeysuckle crowns with plants growing outside Amur honeysuckle influence, also in hardwood forest stands near Oxford, Ohio. Species richness for all taxa, as well as species richness and density of tree seedlings, was significantly (p<0.0001) lower in forests where Amur honeysuckle had been present for ≥16 years, compared with forests where Amur honeysuckle was present ≤ 10 years. Hutchinson and Vankat [78] also found that Amur honeysuckle cover was also inversely related to distance from Oxford (r2=0.133, p<0.0006). Stands with >50% cover were mostly ≤3.1 miles (5 km) from Oxford. Amur honeysuckle was planted in Oxford in the 1960s and these populations were considered the primary source for invasion in the study area.

Control: Because bush honeysuckles are capable of sprouting and suckering (see Sexual regeneration), control efforts may require sustained effort for several years [75,108]. Deering and Vankat [33] recommend prioritizing control efforts toward newly established populations, before rapid population growth begins.

Control methods that create soil disturbance may provide opportunities for seedling establishment of bush honeysuckles or other invasive species [154]. Luken and McKnight [101] suggest that where dense Amur honeysuckle thickets substantially reduce herb-layer coverage, removal of this shrub layer may result in erosion and/or colonization by other invasive species. If target plants have reached reproductive age, it may be necessary to subsequently remove numerous seedlings from the area [43,44,45,46] (see Regeneration Processes). Control methods that increase light levels at ground level may result in increases in bush honeysuckle seedling establishment [100]. Luken and Mattimiro [105] suggested that Amur honeysuckle seeds are not long-lived, and elimination of adult populations should be followed by control of the subsequent, if short-lived, flush of seedlings.

Eradicating established bush honeysuckle plants may be more effective in forested than open environments. An experiment in northern Kentucky examined the relative response of forest-grown vs. open-grown Amur honeysuckle plants to repeated clipping. Plants in both populations were clipped at their bases in July, and resprouts were subsequently clipped each July for the next 3 years. One year after the initial clipping there were no significant (p≥0.05) differences between populations in stem (ramet) density or shrub (genet) density as a percentage of the pretreatment populations, due to vigorous sprouting from cut stems. However, following 2 additional years of clipping, percent stem density and percent shrub density of open-grown Amur honeysuckle were significantly (p<0.05) greater than for the forest-grown populations. During the 3 year treatment period, 70% of forest-grown adult plants were killed by repeated clipping, while only 10% of adult plants from pasture plots were killed. In fact, stem density of open-grown plants continued to increase throughout the treatment period, with annual clipping resulting in stem densities approaching 3 times the original level. Percent of pretreatment net primary production (NPP) was significantly (p<0.05) different between forest- and open-grown populations for all 3 years. Open-grown populations maintained NPP at between 15 and 25% of pretreatment levels throughout the experiment, while NPP of forest-grown populations fell to <5% of pretreatment levels during this time [100,105]. Although speculative, it is logical that bush honeysuckle sprouting in response to other control methods (e.g. chemical, fire) might follow a similar pattern. Open-grown plants, being comparatively more productive than forest-grown plants [99], are likely able to obtain and store greater carbohydrate levels, both prior and subsequent to repeated clipping, and therefore may be more resilient under various control treatments [105].

While it is possible that different bush honeysuckle species may respond differently to various control methods, there is no evidence that effectiveness of control methods varies by species.

Prevention: As Brooks and others [19] have reasoned, the effort required for exclusion of invasive nonnative plants is often much lower than for control and eradication of established populations, especially when impacts from invasions require restoration efforts. Further, potential for successful management is greatest when invasions are controlled early.

A review by Nyboer [126] indicates bush honeysuckle introduction is usually facilitated by habitat disturbance. Consequently, avoiding or minimizing disturbance is likely to reduce the chance for bush honeysuckles to become established. Where disturbance is unavoidable, careful monitoring and rapid eradication of new seedlings is easier, less costly and more likely to be successful compared with managing a full-blown invasion.

Planting bush honeysuckles for any reason is probably ill-advised. Since seeds are dispersed by birds, seemingly innocuous plantings such as in residential landscaping can easily provide a seed source for invasion of nearby natural areas.

Integrated management: No information is available on this topic.

Physical/mechanical: Cutting bush honeysuckle stems may eliminate existing plants [23,24,105,108,168] and is effective in temporarily reducing seed production [108]. However, cutting established plants usually results in sprouting [43,44,45,46,75,100,108] (see Asexual regeneration). According to Luken and Mattimiro [105], single cuttings that are subsequently abandoned can produce populations from sprouts that are denser and more productive than pretreatment populations. Repeated cutting as the primary control method may be effective, especially in forested habitats, but is probably not feasible for open-grown plants (see Control above) [100,105].

The frequency, duration, and seasonality of repeated cutting treatments required for effective control are unclear. Luken [100] indicates 3+ years of treatments may be necessary in forested habitats. Luken and Mattimiro [105] suggest cutting at least annually, or more frequently if possible. According to the Maine Natural Areas Program [108], cutting should be done in early spring and in late summer or early fall. Trisel [168] compared treatments for eradication of Amur honeysuckle in a southwestern Ohio second-growth hardwood forest. Amur honeysuckle stems were cut (3.9 inches (10 cm) above ground)) in early October. New shoots were subsequently surveyed and clipped every 2 weeks until mid-November, and again from early June to early November the following year. No immediate posttreatment sprouting was apparent in fall, but all treated shrubs exhibited regrowth by early June the following season. Sprouting continued following commencement of clipping treatments in June but diminished substantially over the course of the growing season. The percentage of shrubs with live sprouts began to decline from 100% in late July and by early November only 10% showed signs of continued regrowth. Average numbers of live stems per shrub was 3.15 before treatment, 3.1 in early June, reached a maximum of 13.8 in early July, then declined to 2.0 by early November. In a separate experiment Amur honeysuckle stems were cut (3.9 inches (10 cm) above ground) in mid-April. New shoots were subsequently surveyed and clipped every month from June until October. Final mortality in this experiment was only 7% [168].

Bush honeysuckles may be controlled by pulling and/or digging to remove entire plants [17,23,24,75,126,127]. Seedlings are often easily pulled, especially when soils are moist [17,75,108,126,127,154]. Since bush honeysuckle roots are typically shallow (see Botanical and Ecological Characteristics), small- to medium-sized plants can often be dug or pulled [17,75]. Todd [167] reported no regrowth of bush honeysuckle shrubs in northern Illinois following control by either hand pulling small individuals when soils were wet, or by cutting near ground level and "pulling" the following year. Trisel [168] achieved complete control of established Amur honeysuckle by severing all shrubs below the root crown. However, all of the root crown and as much of the root system as possible should be removed to minimize sprouting and suckering (see Asexual regeneration) [43,44,45,46,126,127,168].

Sprouts and suckers may be further controlled with herbicides [43,44,45,46,75,105,126,127]. Applying herbicide to cut stumps can increase mortality [23,24,67,126,127,168] (see Chemical control methods below).

According to Trisel [168], severed shrubs can take root if they are discarded with roots contacting the ground.

Fire: See Fire Management Considerations.

Biological: Although not purposely introduced for the purposes of biological control, Hyadaphis tataricae is a nonnative aphid that feeds on a variety of bush honeysuckles in North America (for an analysis of taxa-specific susceptibility see Herman and Chaput [72]) [183,184]. H. tataricae feeding results in dwarfing and folding of terminal leaves, stunted terminal growth, and development of "witches brooms" [23,24,107,183]. This lowers plant vigor and may prevent flowering and fruit development [23,24,184]. Voegtlin and Stoetzel [184] indicate that it is not expected to provide widespread, effective control of bush honeysuckles. However, according to U.S. Geological Survey Northern Prairie Wildlife Research Center [23,24], H. tataricae is still expanding its North American range and "may eventually reach levels that will provide control."

Grazing/browsing: As of this writing (2004), very little information is available concerning browsing as a bush honeysuckle control method. Qualitative observations indicate Tatarian honeysuckle is tolerant of browsing, although subject to reduced fruit production in response [41]. Another observation indicates Tatarian honeysuckle was locally eliminated following 3 years of heavy browsing [81].

Regardless of browse tolerance, heavy livestock traffic in areas where bush honeysuckle seeds are present may encourage bush honeysuckle invasion by disturbing soil and reducing herbaceous competition, thereby providing suitable sites for seedling establishment [153].

Chemical: Herbicides may be effective for controlling invasive bush honeysuckles. However, control with herbicides is temporary, as it does not change conditions that allow infestations to occur [201].Glyphosate is the most commonly mentioned chemical for use against bush honeysuckles, applied either as a foliar spray [75,154,168] or to cut stumps [43,44,45,46,67,88,154,168]. Triclopyr has also shown effectiveness [75]. Most references discuss chemical control of Amur honeysuckle, but it is likely that these methods are also effective against other bush honeysuckle species. See the Weed control methods handbook for considerations on the use of herbicides in natural areas and detailed information on specific chemicals.

Application of herbicide to cut stumps can provide effective control while minimizing risk of damage to associated native species [43,44,45,46,88]. Herbicide should be applied immediately after cutting, for best results [75,126]. Mechanical injection into intact stems is also effective [67]. Hoffman and Kearns [75] recommend 2 cuts/applications per year, 1 in early spring followed by another in early autumn. Others have found single early spring treatments effective [67,168].

Spraying herbicide on foliage may also be effective. While some sources indicate spraying just after flowering is most effective [75,154], early spring application has also been effective [168]. Spraying herbicide in early spring, when bush honeysuckles are actively growing but most native plants are still dormant, can minimize risk to nearby natives [75,168].

Cultural: If desired vegetation is scarce or absent, bush honeysuckle control may be of little value. Planting native species following bush honeysuckle removal can provide a desirable composition of groundcover, shrubs, and understory trees, and may also mitigate reinvasion by bush honeysuckles and other nonnative invasive plant species [23,24,67,127].

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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Importance to Livestock and Wildlife

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More info for the terms: competition, cover, forest, fruit, presence, seed, selection, shrubs, tree

Although it appears bush honeysuckles are typically planted for other purposes, they may provide some value for wildlife and are occasionally planted for this use. According to Sharp and Belcher [151], Tatarian honeysuckle has been planted for summer wildlife food in the eastern U.S., and Luken and Thieret [106] state Amur honeysuckle has been planted in the eastern U.S. for wildlife habitat "improvement."

White-tailed deer browse bush honeysuckle twigs and foliage [151]. Vellend [180] confirmed the presence of Tatarian honeysuckle, Morrow's honeysuckle, showy fly honeysuckle, and Amur honeysuckle seeds in white-tailed deer scat in central New York, but it is unclear if fruits were eaten purposely or inadvertently. Bush honeysuckle fruits are borne in leaf axils, so white-tailed deer that are browsing on leaves and twigs are also likely to ingest fruits in season. While Velland [180] did not specify which plant parts are selected by deer, he inferred that leaves and twigs are purposely browsed, and it is obvious that fruits are at least not avoided.

Tatarian honeysuckle is browsed by eastern cottontail [64,151]. Small mammals eat fallen bush honeysuckle fruit in late winter and early spring [151]. Deer mice extract and consume Amur honeysuckle seeds from intact fruits. However, it is speculated that relative presence or absence of Amur honeysuckle has little effect on small mammal forage habitat quality, and conversely, small mammal seed predation probably has little influence on Amur honeysuckle fecundity [195].

Bush honeysuckle fruits are eaten at least occasionally by songbirds, and avian frugivory is thought to be an important bush honeysuckle seed dispersal mechanism. Amur honeysuckle fruits are eaten at least occasionally by songbirds, especially in winter, and Tatarian honeysuckle fruits are eaten by songbirds in summer, soon after maturity (see Seasonal Development) [64,95,151]. Bartuszevige and Gorchov [12] studied avian Amur honeysuckle seed dispersal in southwestern Ohio. Out of 17 bird species captured near fruiting Amur honeysuckle shrubs, 12 were found to have consumed fruit. American robin, cedar waxwing, European starling, hermit thrush, and northern mockingbird defecated viable Amur honeysuckle seed. American tree sparrow, Carolina chickadee, dark-eyed junco, northern cardinal, song sparrow, tufted titmouse, and white-throated sparrow displayed evidence of consuming fruit, but without evidence of passing viable seed. Species that showed no evidence of Amur honeysuckle frugivory included brown creeper, Carolina wren, downy woodpecker, golden-crowned kinglet, and white-breasted nuthatch. Eastern bluebirds were also observed eating Amur honeysuckle fruit, but were not captured in the study [12]. Wild turkey, ruffed grouse, northern bobwhite, and ring-necked pheasant use Amur honeysuckle for food [151].

Palatability/nutritional value: As of this writing (2005) very little information is available concerning palatability/nutritional value of bush honeysuckles. Analysis of Amur honeysuckle and fly honeysuckle fruit in southwestern Ohio showed C:N ratios ranging from 29:1 to 56:1 (mean = 41.1, SD = 9.17) and percent lipid ranging from 4.53% to 5.01% (mean = 4.78%, SD = 0.20) [80].

Although avian frugivory is thought to be an important seed dispersal mechanism, preference for bush honeysuckle fruit as a food source is unclear. McRae [111] noted Tatarian honeysuckle as a major dietary component of northern bobwhite, especially after mid-February, at 2 northwestern Georgia piedmont upland forest sites. Apparently the raisin-like fruit of Tatarian honeysuckle is not necessarily a preferred late-season food, but provides available forage for songbirds when preferred foods are scarce [151]. According to Dirr [37], birds will consume Amur honeysuckle fruit if other food is unavailable.

Ingold and Raycraft [80] examined 115 individuals of 26 bird species for evidence of Amur honeysuckle and fly honeysuckle frugivory in southwestern Ohio between mid-September and mid-November. Nine species (American robin, gray-cheeked thrush, Swainson's thrush, gray catbird, cedar waxwing, northern cardinal, purple finch, American goldfinch, and white-throated sparrow), and 21 of 82 individuals representing these species, showed evidence of feeding on fruits. Sixteen species (35 total individuals) exhibited no evidence of Amur honeysuckle/fly honeysuckle fruit consumption (Carolina chickadee, tufted titmouse, brown creeper, white-eyed vireo, red-eyed vireo, Tennessee warbler, magnolia warbler, bay-breasted warbler, ovenbird, common yellowthroat, yellow-breasted chat, indigo bunting, American tree sparrow, field sparrow, fox sparrow, and song sparrow). The low proportion of species (and individuals within these species) found to be feeding on Amur honeysuckle and fly honeysuckle fruit led to questions concerning forage quality, especially since these fruits were abundant and conspicuous in the study area.

Although information is sparse, in some cases bush honeysuckle frugivory may be harmful to birds. Casual observations indicate that Tatarian honeysuckle fruit can be toxic to birds [15], but this is not confirmed. There is some evidence to indicate birds that eat bush honeysuckle fruit may experience changes in feather coloration. Apparently Morrow's honeysuckle fruit contains the carotenoid rhodoxanthin, which causes normally yellow tail feather bands in cedar waxwings to appear orange. Similar yellow-to-orange changes in feather color have been described in Kentucky warblers and white-throated sparrows, perhaps also as a result of bush honeysuckle fruit consumption. While no definitive impact has yet been established as a result of this phenomenon, subtle differences in coloration within species may affect behavior such as mate selection [196].

Cover value: Bush honeysuckles probably provide some cover for wildlife. Amur honeysuckle provides nesting sites and protection for songbirds from late spring to late fall, and cover for rabbits [151]. Tatarian honeysuckle provides year-round cover for birds and small mammals [95].

However, indirect effects of bush honeysuckle invasion on wildlife may be difficult to predict. Schmidt and Whelan [142] examined the effect of Amur honeysuckle invasion on nest predation of American robins in northern Illinois deciduous woodlands. Nests built in Amur honeysuckle had significantly (p<0.001) higher daily nest mortality rate compared with nests built in native species. Reasons offered for increased nest predation in Amur honeysuckle included lower nest height (compared with many native shrubs and trees), absence of sharp thorns (compared with native hawthorns (Crataegus spp.)), and branch architecture that may facilitate predator (e.g. raccoon) movement. Unfortunately, Amur honeysuckle may provide more attractive nest sites due to its early leaf flush (see Seasonal Development) and sturdy branches. In fact, American robins significantly (r2=0.912, p<0.01) increased their use of Amur honeysuckle over the 6-year study period. Wood thrush also nested in Amur honeysuckle, although use was apparently limited by competition from American robins.

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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Life Form

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Shrub
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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Other uses and values

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Sweet breath of spring has been cultivated as an early-flowering ornamental with very fragrant flowers [114,191]. It has also been recommended as a hedge or screen plant [37].

Amur honeysuckle has been cultivated as an ornamental in North America [106,132,151], and as of 1996, was still commercially available [106]. Beginning in the 1960s, USDA Soil Conservation Service developed and distributed the Amur honeysuckle cultivar 'Rem-Red' for use as an ornamental shrub, promoted as valuable for wildlife and as useful for soil conservation and as a windbreak, border, hedge, or screen [95,151]. Amur honeysuckle, along with Tatarian honeysuckle and Morrow's honeysuckle, is among species recommended for use in strip mine site reclamation [77,185]. Amur honeysuckle makes a very productive honey plant [26]. However, due to its invasive propensity in natural and seminatural woodlands, Clark [26] recommends against its use outside urban areas where it is already an established part of the flora.

Tatarian honeysuckle has been cultivated as an ornamental [18,151,191], and Dirr [37] provides a list of 14 available cultivars. It has been recommended as a windbreak, shelterbelt, or hedge species [28,53,95,110,157,169], especially in areas with extreme seasonal temperatures [143]. Tatarian honeysuckle has been characterized as useful for range restoration and soil stabilization [109], and has been used for streambank reclamation [188].

Showy fly honeysuckle has been used for landscape and ornamental purposes in the northern U.S. [8].

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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Plant Response to Fire

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Although information about asexual regeneration is relatively sparse, it is apparent that sprouting is a common response to mechanical stem damage in bush honeysuckles (see Physical/mechanical control). Similarly, bush honeysuckles can also produce sprouts in response to damage from fire [7,75,87,102,126,127].

Bush honeysuckles may establish from bird-dispersed seed after fire. Since snags, surviving trees, or tall shrubs are often present in postfire environments where bush honeysuckles are likely to be found (see Habitat Types And Plant Communities) and provide perches for frugivorous birds, bush honeysuckle postfire seedling establishment and growth may occur in this environment.

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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Post-fire Regeneration

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More info for the terms: adventitious, crown residual colonizer, geophyte, ground residual colonizer, initial off-site colonizer, secondary colonizer, seed, shrub

POSTFIRE REGENERATION STRATEGY [159]:
Tall shrub, adventitious bud/root crown
Small shrub, adventitious bud/root crown
Geophyte, growing points deep in soil
Ground residual colonizer (on-site, initial community)
Crown residual colonizer (on-site, initial community)
Initial off-site colonizer (off-site, initial community)
Secondary colonizer (on-site or off-site seed sources)
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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Regeneration Processes

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Bush honeysuckles regenerate from seeds, as well as vegetatively following disturbance.

Breeding system: As of this writing (2005) there is very little available information about bush honeysuckle breeding systems. According to Stephens [157] Tatarian honeysuckle flowers are perfect.

Pollination: According to Hauser [68] Morrow's honeysuckle, Tatarian honeysuckle, and showy fly honeysuckle are pollinated by bumblebees. Graenicher states [58] Showy fly honeysuckle is pollinated by a variety of bees and perhaps by hummingbirds.

Seed production: Information about seed production is sparse, but it is apparent that some bush honeysuckles are capable of producing substantial numbers of seeds. Barnes [7] indicates showy fly honeysuckle produces consistent annual seed crops. A single "typical" showy fly honeysuckle shrub, about 6.6 feet (2 m) tall, growing in southern Wisconsin, produced 3,554 berries in 1 year. Numbers of seeds/fruit, sampled from several shrubs at this site, averaged 5 to 7, indicating that a "typical" plant may produce >20,000 seeds annually [7].

Estimates of annual fruit production for Amur honeysuckle and Fly honeysuckle in southwestern Ohio ranged from 0 to 1.2 million berries per plant, and approximately 400 million berries ha-1 [80]. According to Welsh and others [191], sweet breath of spring fruits are "seldom formed", although no further explanation was provided.

There is some evidence for shrub age and size as determinants of reproductive ability. According to Sharp and Belcher [151], Amur honeysuckle plants begin flowering in the 3rd or 4th year, after which flowers appear on stems 2 years old and older. Deering and Vankat [33] compared reproductive state with shrub age and height within an Amur honeysuckle population in southwestern Ohio. Established shrubs took 3-8 years to reach reproductive age. At age 3 only 5.7% of individuals were reproductive, while >50% were reproductive by age 5. All shrubs ≥8.2 feet (2.5 m) tall were reproductive, while none <3.3 feet (1 m) tall were reproductive. Showy fly honeysuckle shrubs may also produce fruit at as young as 3 years of age [7].

Site characteristics may also affect seed production. Amur honeysuckle flowering and fruiting were significantly (p=0.001 and p=0.03, respectively) correlated with light availability in southern Vermont [140].

Seed dispersal: Several sources indicate bush honeysuckle seeds are dispersed primarily by frugivorous birds [7,80,93,126,186]. Bartuszevige and Gorchov [12] showed that a wide variety of bird species consumed Amur honeysuckle fruit in southwestern Ohio. They also confirmed that American robins dispersed viable Amur honeysuckle seed, usually into woodlot edge and fencerow habitats. White-tailed deer may also consume and disperse viable seeds of Tatarian honeysuckle, Morrow's honeysuckle, showy fly honeysuckle, and Amur honeysuckle [180]. Barnes [7] suggests that "many, if not most" fruits fall near the parent plant. For more information see Importance to Livestock and Wildlife.

Seed banking: It appears the potential for bush honeysuckles to form seed banks is low, but more research is needed to confirm this assertion and to determine interspecific differences. According to Luken and Mattimiro [105], seeds of Amur honeysuckle are "not long-lived in the soil." Hidayati and others [74] concluded that neither sweet breath of spring, Amur honeysuckle, or Morrow's honeysuckle have the potential to form persistent seed banks. However, Stevens and Jorgensen [158] found 12-year-old Tatarian honeysuckle seed to be still viable. They compared germination in seed stored for 12 years with fresh seed. Stored seeds were kept in a dry, open warehouse where temperatures over a 25-year study period ranged from -21.8 to 100.9 ?F (-29.9 to 38.3 ?C). Seeds from both lots were germinated over a 16-month period in a refrigerator (34 to 38 ?F (1.1-3.3?C)). Germination rates were 57% for fresh seed and 31% for 12-year-old seed.

Germination: Bush honeysuckle germination requirements are variable between species.

Sweet breath of spring seeds require warm plus cold stratification prior to breaking dormancy. Although seeds mature in late spring/early summer, they generally will not germinate until late winter/early spring of the following year. A greenhouse study by Hidayati and others [74] indicated that sweet breath of spring seeds germinated while buried under 2 inches (5 cm) of leaf litter or 2.8 inches (7 cm) of soil.

Stratification requirements for Amur honeysuckle seed germination are unclear. According to Luken and Goessling [103], seeds are released in a nondormant condition, and germinate easily in warm, moist conditions. According to Hidayati and others [74], Amur honeysuckle seeds require a period of either warm- or cold stratification. Nevertheless, they are dispersed in fall and may germinate in fall or spring [74,103]. According to Hidayati and others [74], if seeds mature early enough and are subjected to a sufficiently long warm stratification period prior to onset of cold winter temperatures, they may germinate in fall. Late-maturing seeds are cold-stratified over winter, and will germinate in early spring when warm temperatures induce embryo growth.

Light seems to enhance Amur honeysuckle seed germination, but it is not obligatory. In a laboratory experiment, Amur honeysuckle germination was significantly (p<0.01) higher in light (35 ?mol m-2 s-1, 14/10 hour light/dark photoperiod) than in dark (light excluded). Nevertheless, after 88 days, mean cumulative germination ranged from 53.7% to 81.3% in light, and from 31.3% to 55.0% in dark [103]. Hidayati and others [74] found that Amur honeysuckle seeds were not inhibited by burial under 2 inches (5 cm) of leaf litter or 2.8 inches (7 cm) of soil in a greenhouse.

Germination may be enhanced when seeds are separated from the fruit pulp. Bartuszevige and Gorchov [12] found that seeds within intact fruit were significantly less viable (44% germination) than either seeds that were separated from pulp by hand (76% germination) or seeds that had passed through the guts of American robins (86% germination), after 12 weeks of favorable laboratory germination conditions.

Morrow's honeysuckle seeds, which are dispersed in summer, require warm stratification only and typically germinate prior to winter [74]. Germination will occur in light or dark. Hidayati and others [74] found that, while Morrow's honeysuckle seeds germinated more readily under light than in dark under laboratory conditions, they were not inhibited by burial under 2 inches (5 cm) of leaf litter or 2.8 inches (7 cm) of soil in a greenhouse. A greenhouse study by Ruesink [140] demonstrated no effect of shading (25% vs. full light) on germination.

Tatarian honeysuckle seed germination is affected by scarification and cold stratification. Krefting and Roe [89] tested the effects of cold stratification, and ingestion and passage by American robins, on Tatarian honeysuckle seed germination. Unstratified seeds recovered from bird droppings germinated more readily (46%) than unstratified controls (24.5%). Stratification (90 days at 41 to 50 ?F (5-10 ?C) prior to feeding to birds) resulted in substantial improvement in germination, regardless of whether seeds had passed through bird guts (95% for bird ingested seeds, 92% for stratified controls). Although unstratified seed germinated more rapidly if passed through bird guts, this effect was not detected with stratified seed. Apparently avian frugivory has some positive effect on Tatarian honeysuckle seeds with seedcoat dormancy, while simultaneously, cold stratification is effective for breaking internal dormancy.

According to Barnes [7] showy fly honeysuckle germination is epigeal.

Seeds of Tatarian honeysuckle, Morrow's honeysuckle, showy fly honeysuckle, and Amur honeysuckle remain germinable following passage through the guts of white-tailed deer. Vellend [180] measured 76% germination for seeds collected from deer feces, compared with 81% for fresh-collected seeds.

Seedling establishment/growth: Bush honeysuckle seedling establishment appears most successful where litter cover and herbaceous competition are sparse [126,185]. Luken [100] found that after clipping established Amur honeysuckle plants in forested and pasture habitats, Amur honeysuckle seedlings established in forested plots at approximately twice the rate of those in pastures. In pasture plots, grasses and forbs were relatively undisturbed, and probably continued suppression of Amur honeysuckle seedlings. Barnes [7] sampled showy fly honeysuckle seedling density and frequency at 4 sites in southern Wisconsin. The site with the highest seedling frequency (39%) was characterized as a red pine (Pinus resinosa)- and eastern white pine (P. strobus)-dominated overstory and a sparse understory. This site had a primarily pine straw litter layer of variable depth over sandy loam and loamy sand soils. Within this site, showy fly honeysuckle seedlings were found within microsites having little to no litter cover. The site with the greatest seedling density (5,280 seedlings acre-1 ) contained a "very dense" population of mature showy fly honeysuckle shrubs, with near-continuous cover in some places. Observations indicate that at this site, seedlings occurred mainly under mature showy fly honeysuckle, where litter accumulation and herbaceous competition were sparse. Two other sites each had only 1 and 2 showy fly honeysuckle seedlings total. Among reasons provided for the paucity of seedlings at these sites were lack of soil disturbance, a thick layer of leaf litter from the oak overstory, and strong herbaceous and vine competition. A subsample was obtained from another section within 1 of these seedling-poor sites, where a dense population of mature showy fly honeysuckle shrubs had been eradicated during the previous year. Because of eradication treatments, plant litter and herbaceous competition were sparse. Consistent with other observations, substantial numbers of seedlings (26% occurrence, 2,560 seedlings acre-1) were found where litter cover and herbaceous competition were sparse and a seed source had been present [7].

However, the relationship between canopy cover and bush honeysuckle seedling establishment and growth is not straightforward. According to a review by Nyboer [126], bush honeysuckles commonly establish under tall shrubs or trees that serve as perch areas for seed-dispersing birds. As discussed above, canopy shading may also suppress strong herbaceous competition and permit greater bush honeysuckle seedling establishment. However, too much shading may result in reduced seedling establishment and growth [98]. Luken and Goessling [103] studied Amur honeysuckle seedling establishment in forest patches dominated by sugar maple, white ash, and American elm in northern Kentucky. Seedling densities were greatest near the edges of forest patches and declined steadily toward their interior. While they were unable to establish a firm causal link between light levels and seedling densities, light levels and seedling densities were significantly positively correlated (p<0.05; r = 0.88) along transects from forest edge to interior. Ruesink [140] compared Morrow's honeysuckle greenhouse-grown seedlings under full-sun conditions with identical seedlings grown under 25% of full sun. After 50 days, full-sun seedlings were twice as tall and produced 6 times more aboveground biomass. It is likely that in most habitats where seeds are present, such as under the canopy of preexisting bush honeysuckle shrubs or where frugivorous birds find perch sites proximate to fruiting bush honeysuckles, any disturbance that increases light at ground level is likely to release bush honeysuckle seedlings [100].

Deering and Vankat [33] described the age structure and allometric development of a relatively isolated Amur honeysuckle population of recent origin (colonized ~ 1979) in southwestern Ohio. First-year shrubs averaged 1.3 feet (0.4 m) tall and 2 basal stems per shrub. Most individuals were >3.3 feet (1 m) tall by their 3rd year. For the first 4 years of development, numbers of 1-year-old stems averaged 2.2 to 2.6 per shrub. Individual plants averaged 4.3 total stems per plant by age 3. As shrubs reached reproductive age (beginning at 3-8 years), height growth continued, but recruitment of new stems ceased. With time, resource allocation shifted from new basal stem production and height growth in young shrubs to a balance of height growth, radial growth of existing stems, and reproduction in older shrubs [33].

Asexual regeneration: Information on asexual regeneration in bush honeysuckles is generally sparse. Studies cited below are specific to Amur honeysuckle and showy fly honeysuckle. Although it seems likely that these traits are shared by other bush honeysuckles, applicability to other taxa is not confirmed. Since showy fly honeysuckle is a hybrid of Morrow's honeysuckle and Tatarian honeysuckle (see Taxonomy), it is likely that either or both of the parent species share the traits discussed for showy fly honeysuckle below. More information is needed to determine similarities and differences in the biology of asexual regeneration in bush honeysuckles.

Amur honeysuckle will sprout from adventitious buds on the root crown in response to stem damage [105,168]. Repeated cutting throughout the growing season results in continued but diminished sprouting (see Physical/mechanical contol) [168]. The sprouting response of Amur honeysuckle to any particular stem damage event does not appear to diminish with stem age [105].

Showy fly honeysuckle reproduces asexually by root suckering and layering [7]. Barnes [7] studied root suckering and layering in 4 populations of showy fly honeysuckle in Wisconsin. Between 4 and 7% of shrubs sampled exhibited suckers. Suckers were encountered primarily on small shrubs, and those found on large, mature plants were usually within 2 to 3 feet (60-90 cm) of the root crown. Frequency of layering was estimated by examining all branches of sampled shrubs in contact with the soil surface for evidence of root development. Layering frequency varied between sites, with 1 site having 3% of shrubs showing evidence of layering, 2 sites having 9%, and a 4th site 19%. Layering frequency appeared to be positively related to soil moisture and duration of contact between branch and soil, although there were no supporting data. Barnes [7] also indicated that suckering and layering occurred most frequently on sites where showy fly honeysuckle seedling establishment was poorest.

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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Regional Distribution in the Western United States

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This species can be found in the following regions of the western United States (according to the Bureau of Land Management classification of Physiographic Regions of the western United States):

BLM PHYSIOGRAPHIC REGIONS [16]:





1 Northern Pacific Border

2 Cascade Mountains

3 Southern Pacific Border

4 Sierra Mountains

5 Columbia Plateau

6 Upper Basin and Range

7 Lower Basin and Range

8 Northern Rocky Mountains

9 Middle Rocky Mountains

10 Wyoming Basin

11 Southern Rocky Mountains

12 Colorado Plateau

13 Rocky Mountain Piedmont

14 Great Plains

15 Black Hills Uplift

16 Upper Missouri Basin and Broken Lands
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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

States or Provinces

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(key to state/province abbreviations)
sweet breath of spring:
UNITED STATES AL GA KY LA NY NC OH PA SC TN TX UT VA
Amur honeysuckle:
UNITED STATES AL AR CT DE GA ID IL IN IA KS KY LA MD MA MI MS MO NE NJ NY NC ND OH OK PA RI SC TN TX VA WV WI
CANADA ON
Morrow's honeysuckle:
UNITED STATES AL AR CO CT DE IL IN IA KY ME MD MA MI MN MO NH NJ NY NC OH PA RI SC TN VT VA WV WI WY
CANADA NB ON PQ SK
Tatarian honeysuckle:
UNITED STATES AK CA CO CT DE GA ID IL IN IA KS KY ME MD MA MI MN MT NE NH NJ NY ND OH OR PA RI SD UT VT VA WA WV WI WY
CANADA AB MB NB NS ON PQ SK
Fly honeysuckle:
UNITED STATES CT DE IL IN ME MD MA MI MO NH NJ NY OH OR PA RI VT VA WI
CANADA NB ON PQ
Showy fly honeysuckle:
UNITED STATES CO CT DE HI IL IN IA KS KY ME MD MA MI MN MO MT NE NH NJ NY NC ND OH PA RI SC SD TN VT VA WA WV WI WY
CANADA AB MB NB ON PQ SK
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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Successional Status

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More info for the terms: codominant, cover, density, forest, formation, hardwood, herbaceous, presence, shrub, shrubs, succession, tree, vines

Bush honeysuckles are likely to occur across a variety of successional habitats within their North American range [127]. Luken and McKnight [101] suggest that Amur honeysuckle can dominate habitats ranging from recently disturbed areas to mature forest.

Several studies document the influence of bush honeysuckles in old-field succession. Foster and Gross [50] examined woody plant establishment following abandonment of cultivation in a southwestern Michigan old-field habitat. Tatarian honeysuckle established in the 3rd season following abandonment. Average density increased steadily from 6.7 stems/acre in the year of establishment, to 91.1 stems/acre 4 years later (7 years following abandonment of agriculture). Fike and Niering [47] documented nearly 40 years of vegetation change in an old-field habitat in southeastern Connecticut. This site was cultivated until about 1945 and grazed until 1951. The initial survey in 1954 indicated a continuous perennial herbaceous cover with scattered woody plants <3.3 feet (1 m) tall. By 1960 the herbaceous community had decreased slightly and tree species were becoming more established. Presence of Morrow's honeysuckle (<1% cover) was first recorded in 1973, in conjunction with development of a thicket community of small trees, shrubs, and woody vines. This woody stratum was 13 to 20 feet (4-6 m) in height and had >40% cover. By 1983 Morrow's honeysuckle cover increased to 10% in a community characterized as "a young hardwood forest", with tree cover of 90%, shrub/vine cover of 85%, and herbaceous cover decreasing to about 40%. By the end of this study in 1993, there was a relatively continuous tree canopy 40 to 59 feet (12-18 m) in height, a 3.3 to 6.6 feet (1-2 m) high shrub stratum contributing about 50% cover, and 10% herbaceous cover. Morrow's honeysuckle was the dominant shrub species at 24% cover. Vankat and Snyder [179] examined floristics of a chronosequence of nearby stands corresponding to old-field/deciduous-forest succession in southwestern Ohio. Amur honeysuckle was present, but not common, in a 10-year-old goldenrod (Solidago spp.)- and fescue (Festuca spp.)-dominated old field, and in an approximately 50-year-old goldenrod-dominated old field with a sparse white ash-black cherry tree stratum. Amur honeysuckle was codominant in the understory (3.3 to 9.8 feet (1-3 m) tall) with sugar maple, and codominant in the ground layer (<3.3 feet (1 m)) with jewelweed (Impatiens capensis), in an approximately 90-year-old sugar maple-slippery elm forest. Vankat and Snyder [179] concede that conclusions about successional status of Amur honeysuckle, based on the above data, are limited by the study design. Nevertheless, Amur honeysuckle was common in a young closed-canopy forest stand, sparse in 2 old fields with some woody plant composition but no closed canopy, and absent from a 2-year-old abandoned agricultural field and an old-growth American beech-sugar maple forest.

It appears that bush honeysuckle establishment is often facilitated by some form of habitat disturbance [127]. In forested habitats, Amur honeysuckle performs best near edges and in canopy gaps, where light levels are favorable [98].

Once established, the ability of bush honeysuckles to persist and spread within various successional habitats is less clear. Hutchinson and Vankat [78] assert that late successional forests dominated by shade-tolerant tree species such as sugar maple and American beech are more resistant to Amur honeysuckle invasion, probably due to low light levels near the forest floor. Luken [101] suggested forest patches having complete canopy closure can resist Amur honeysuckle invasion, but if canopy gaps are created, Amur honeysuckle can establish and persist. Bush honeysuckle populations, once established, can persist for many years. Age of showy fly honeysuckle shrubs studied in southern Wisconsin ranged from 12 to 34 years, with a mean of 20.4 years [7].

There are suggestions that bush honeysuckles could alter successional trajectories in ways that favor their persistence. Collier and others [29] hypothesized that Amur honeysuckle invasion may alter patterns of forest succession in southwestern Ohio. If development of a dense Amur honeysuckle shrub layer suppresses establishment of shade-tolerant tree seedlings, recruitment of mid- and late successional tree species may be inhibited. Hypothetically then, as older canopy trees die, closed-canopy forests could change to open-canopy woodlands or even Amur honeysuckle-dominated shrublands. Luken [100] demonstrated that Amur honeysuckle dominance in the shrub layer of northern Kentucky hardwood forests can suppress advance regeneration of overstory species. Woods [198] came to a similar conclusion after finding a significant (p<0.01) negative correlation between Tatarian honeysuckle cover and tree seedling (<3.3 feet (1 m tall)) density (in this study Tatarian honeysuckle and showy fly honeysuckle were not distinguished, although the text referred only to Tatarian honeysuckle (see Taxonomy)). In contrast, tree seedlings 3.3 to 6.6 feet (1-2 m) tall were not significantly (p<0.05) related to Tatarian honeysuckle cover. Woody seedlings in this larger size class frequently overtopped Tatarian honeysuckle. Examination of growth rings revealed that establishment of these larger seedlings predated Tatarian honeysuckle invasion. It was speculated that persistent Tatarian honeysuckle cover could suppress advance regeneration of overstory species, possibly leading to changes in canopy composition or even conversion of forests to more open canopies or shrublands. Gorchov and Trisel [55] provide direct evidence that Amur honeysuckle invasion can inhibit tree seedling establishment in southwestern Ohio. For further discussion, see Impacts.

Shade tolerance: Most sources characterize bush honeysuckles as intermediate in shade tolerance, adapted to grow in full sun to partial shade conditions [17,95,128,172,173,174,176,185]. Descriptions of Amur honeysuckle shade tolerance range from shade intolerant [98] to intermediate [185] to tolerant [173] to "amazing" shade tolerance [37]".

Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation [182] indicates the following light regimes for bush honeysuckles occurring in Virginia:

Full Sun Part Sun Shade Sweet breath of spring X X Amur honeysuckle X Morrow's honeysuckle X X X Tatarian honeysuckle X X Showy fly honeysuckle X X

One reason often cited for an apparent competitive advantage of bush honeysuckles over native shrubs (see Impacts) is the ability of bush honeysuckles to respond rapidly to changes in light availability. While bush honeysuckles have some ability to establish and persist in relatively low light environments, growth is typically greatest under high light availability. For example, Harrington and others [66] found showy fly honeysuckle aboveground growth rates were significantly (p=0.0008) higher in open habitat than under a mature closed-canopy hardwood forest. Amur honeysuckle can respond to gap formation in otherwise shaded habitats via phenotypic plasticity in photosynthetic capability of shade-grown leaves, as well as by rapid stem elongation and production of new leaves with even greater photosynthetic capacity [98]. Luken and others [104] compared performance of Amur honeysuckle shrubs with the indigenous shade-tolerant northern spicebush (Lindera benzoin), under shade and full sun. They transplanted forest-grown plants into pots and grew them in a greenhouse under full sun, 25% full sun, or 1% full sun treatments. Relative stem growth rates (integrated over an 11-week period) under the 1% full sun treatment were similar for both species. Amur honeysuckle stem growth was greatest under full sun, while maximum stem growth for northern spicebush occurred under the 25% full sun treatment. Amur honeysuckle stem growth was substantially greater than spicebush under both the 25% and 100% full sun treatments. Observed differences in leaf-level morphology and physiology, and biomass allocation indicate that Amur honeysuckle has a much greater ability than spicebush to acclimate and respond to enhanced light levels that might occur following forest canopy disturbance. This trait, coupled with an ability to tolerate heavy shade comparable to native shade-tolerant shrubs such as spicebush, indicates Amur honeysuckle may be highly competitive under a range of conditions, and may persist under a variety of successional stages and pathways in eastern deciduous forests.

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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Taxonomy

provided by Fire Effects Information System Plants
More info for the terms: nonnative species, shrubs

The currently accepted genus name for honeysuckle is Lonicera L.
(Caprifoliaceae) [18,36,54,59,82,83,93,134,160,189,190,191,197]. This report
summarizes information on 4 nonnative species and 2 nonnative hybrids of Lonicera:


Lonicera fragrantissima Lindl. & Paxt. [36,82,83,134,191], sweet breath of spring

Lonicera maackii Maxim. [18,27,36,54,59,82,83,132,138,186], Amur honeysuckle

Lonicera morrowii A. Gray [18,39,54,60,83,160,186,189,190,197], Morrow's honeysuckle

Lonicera tatarica L. [18,38,39,54,59,60,82,83,92,93,157,160,186,190,191], Tatarian honeysuckle

Lonicera × bella Zabel [54,60,83,134,178,186,190], showy fly honeysuckle

Lonicera × xylosteum L. [18,54,60,83,178,186], fly honeysuckle


Showy fly honeysuckle is a cross between L. tatarica and L. morrowii
that has arisen in cultivation and probably spontaneously in the wild [7,54,68,134,186].
According to Barnes [7], it honeysuckle is intermediate to its parent species in most
characteristics, but "many of these characteristics vary between extremes so that often
detection of the hybrid nature of an individual can only be accomplished by looking at a large
number of characters." Field observations in Ohio and Michigan suggest that Tatarian
honeysuckle is the pollen parent of showy fly honeysuckle [68]. Bush honeysuckle shrubs in
southern Vermont were described as a "hybrid complex", with most individuals
resembling the Morrow's honeysuckle type, but some apparently more influenced by Tatarian
honeysuckle [140]. Barnes [7] illustrates the difficulty often encountered in distinguishing
between showy fly honeysuckle and its parent species, and asserts that in many instances
showy fly honeysuckle is misidentified in the literature as Tatarian honeysuckle or Morrow's
honeysuckle. Chapman and Bessette [25] describe showy fly honeysuckle as the dominant
"species" in Adirondack Park, New York, with pure specimens of either Tatarian
honeysuckle or Morrow's honeysuckle becoming difficult to find.

Fly honeysucky is a cross between Tatarian honeysuckle and dwarf honeysuckle (L. xylosteum) [178].



When discussing characteristics typical (or likely to be typical) of all 6 of the above
taxa, this report refers to them collectively as bush honeysuckle(s). When referring
to individual taxa, the common names listed above are used.



Although apparently not widely escaped, additional hybrids may be formed among the
abovementioned and other Lonicera taxa [60,72]:




Lonicera × minutiflora Zabel (bunchberry honeysuckle), a cross between L. morrowii
and L.× xylosteoides.

Lonicera × muendeniensis Rehd. (Muenden honeysuckle), a cross between L. × bella
and L. ruprechtiana (Manchurian honeysuckle).

Lonicera × muscaviensis Rehd. (Muscovy honeysuckle), a cross between L. morrowii and L. ruprechtiana.

Lonicera × notha Zabel (Rutarian honeysuckle),
a cross between L. ruprechtiana and L. tatarica.

Lonicera × salicifolia Dieck ex Zabel (willowleaf honeysuckle), a cross between
L. ruprechtiana and L. × xylosteoides.

Lonicera × xylosteoides Tausch (Vienna honeysuckle),
a cross between L. tatarica and L. xylosteum.

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Munger, Gregory T. 2005. Lonicera spp. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online]. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Available: https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/lonspp/all.html

Description

provided by Flora of Zimbabwe
Shrub with twining stems (in ours). Leaves simple. Flowers zygomorphic, in axillary pedunculate pairs. Corolla 2-lipped. Fruit a berry.
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Hyde, M.A., Wursten, B.T. and Ballings, P. (2002-2014). Lonicera Flora of Zimbabwe website. Accessed 28 August 2014 at http://www.zimbabweflora.co.zw/speciesdata/genus.php?genus_id=1428
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Mark Hyde
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Bart Wursten
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Petra Ballings
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Doqquzdon ( Azerbaijani )

provided by wikipedia AZ

Doqquzdon (lat. Lonicera) – doqquzdonkimilər fəsiləsinə aid bitki cinsi.

Yarpaqları sadə, qısa saplaqlı, qarşı-qarşıya düzülür. Çiçəkləri ağ, sarı, çəhrayı, yaxud qırmızı, ikicinsiyyətlidir. Meyvəsi şirəli giləmeyvədir. Şimal yarımkürəsində 200-dən çox növünə təsadüf edilir.

Doqquzdonun əksəriyyəti balverən bitkilərdir.

Növləri

Azərbaycanın dərman bitkiləri

Digər növləri

Mənbə

Inula britannica.jpeg İkiləpəlilər ilə əlaqədar bu məqalə qaralama halındadır. Məqaləni redaktə edərək Vikipediyanı zənginləşdirin.
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Doqquzdon: Brief Summary ( Azerbaijani )

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Doqquzdon (lat. Lonicera) – doqquzdonkimilər fəsiləsinə aid bitki cinsi.

Yarpaqları sadə, qısa saplaqlı, qarşı-qarşıya düzülür. Çiçəkləri ağ, sarı, çəhrayı, yaxud qırmızı, ikicinsiyyətlidir. Meyvəsi şirəli giləmeyvədir. Şimal yarımkürəsində 200-dən çox növünə təsadüf edilir.

Doqquzdonun əksəriyyəti balverən bitkilərdir.

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Gwezvoud ( Breton )

provided by wikipedia BR
>
Lonicera sempervirens.

Ar gwezvoud pe gavrvoued (genad Lonicera) a zo ur seurt plant frondus a gresk ouzh ar mogerioù hag ar gwez. Boud 'zo un 200 spesad bennak er genad-se. Kreskiñ a reont e lec'hioù fresk ha druz evel ar c'hoadoù, lez ar c'hoadoù ar girzhier hag lanneier.

Anvioù all

kemmañ ar vammenn

Graet e vez gwildro, sun-gad, boued-gavr pe iliavrez eus ar genad plant-se ivez.

Bronnoù-koukoug pe laezh-gavr a vez graet eus ar bleunioù a blij d'ar vugale chutal.[1]

Notennoù ha daveoù

kemmañ ar vammenn
  1. Jo Tangi, Plant ar vro, Embannadurioù al Lanv, 2020, p. 90.
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Gwezvoud: Brief Summary ( Breton )

provided by wikipedia BR
>Lonicera sempervirens.

Ar gwezvoud pe gavrvoued (genad Lonicera) a zo ur seurt plant frondus a gresk ouzh ar mogerioù hag ar gwez. Boud 'zo un 200 spesad bennak er genad-se. Kreskiñ a reont e lec'hioù fresk ha druz evel ar c'hoadoù, lez ar c'hoadoù ar girzhier hag lanneier.

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Xuclamel ( Catalan; Valencian )

provided by wikipedia CA

Xuclamel o lligabosc (designant principalment Lonicera implexa, Lonicera periclymenum i Lonicera caprifolium), didalets de la Mare de Déu pl., dolçamel (Lonicera implexa i Lonicera caprifolium), gallarets pl. (Lonicera etrusca), gallinassa, mare-selva, mare de bosc, mata-selva, rotaboc o santjoanera (Lonicera implexa a la Terra Alta), (Lonicera) és un gènere de plantes amb flor.

A la Catalunya del Nord es diu patimaneta o manetes al Conflent i banya de cabra (Lonicera implexa a Tivissa).

El nom del gènere Lonicera prové del botànic del Renaixement Adam Lonicer. El gènere Lonicera és originari de l'hemisferi nord. Bàsicament està implantat en l'Àsia central i oriental i la conca del Mediterrani. El gènere conté prop de 180 espècies amb el centre de diversificació a la Xina on n'hi ha vora 100.

Són lianes o arbusts caducifolis o de fulles persistents. Les fulles tenen una disposició oposada, són simples i ovals amb els contorns dentats o llisos i de color verd molt fosc. Les flors tenen forma de campana, de colors variats i en moltes espècies són altament flairoses. El fruit és una baia d'un vermell molt viu amb diverses llavors.

Jardineria

Algunes espècies (particularment el lligabosc japonès) tenen ús en jardineria.

  • Floració:

Es pot produir tant a la primavera, l'estiu, la tardor i fins i tot l'hivern, depenent de l'espècie.

  • Utilització:

Hi ha espècies arbustives que s'utilitzen com a elements aïllats o en grups. Les trepadores són molt adequades per adornar façanes i pèrgoles. Es poden cultivar en testos de grans dimensions, d'uns 70 cm de profunditat i un diàmetre de 50 cm, com a mínim). La seva alçada pot arribar a fer 7 metres.

  • Exposició:

A la penombra o en ombra absoluta. En aquest últim cas la floració serà menys vistosa.

  • Terreny:

Ha de ser força ric i tou. En plantes en test o contenidor es fa servir habitualment una barreja d'13 de torba i un 16 de sorra, adobat i ben drenat. Tanmateix, s'ha demostrat que pot arribar a créixer en quasi qualsevol terreny.

  • Plantació:

Es fa a la tardor o al final de l'hivern. La seva multiplicació es realitza per estaca o per suport durant el juny; per esqueix en abril o agost, implantant-lo en terra sorrenca amb una protecció de plàstic. En la primavera es fa per llavors.

Algunes espècies

 src=
Lonicera periclymenum el lligabosc atlàntic.
 src=
L. caprifolium, Chèvrefeuille

Referències

En altres projectes de Wikimedia:
Commons
Commons (Galeria)
Commons
Commons (Categoria) Modifica l'enllaç a Wikidata
Viquiespècies
Viquiespècies
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Xuclamel: Brief Summary ( Catalan; Valencian )

provided by wikipedia CA

Xuclamel o lligabosc (designant principalment Lonicera implexa, Lonicera periclymenum i Lonicera caprifolium), didalets de la Mare de Déu pl., dolçamel (Lonicera implexa i Lonicera caprifolium), gallarets pl. (Lonicera etrusca), gallinassa, mare-selva, mare de bosc, mata-selva, rotaboc o santjoanera (Lonicera implexa a la Terra Alta), (Lonicera) és un gènere de plantes amb flor.

A la Catalunya del Nord es diu patimaneta o manetes al Conflent i banya de cabra (Lonicera implexa a Tivissa).

El nom del gènere Lonicera prové del botànic del Renaixement Adam Lonicer. El gènere Lonicera és originari de l'hemisferi nord. Bàsicament està implantat en l'Àsia central i oriental i la conca del Mediterrani. El gènere conté prop de 180 espècies amb el centre de diversificació a la Xina on n'hi ha vora 100.

Són lianes o arbusts caducifolis o de fulles persistents. Les fulles tenen una disposició oposada, són simples i ovals amb els contorns dentats o llisos i de color verd molt fosc. Les flors tenen forma de campana, de colors variats i en moltes espècies són altament flairoses. El fruit és una baia d'un vermell molt viu amb diverses llavors.

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Gwyddfid ( Welsh )

provided by wikipedia CY

Prysgwydden gordeddog yn nheulu'r Caprifoliaceae yw'r gwyddfid neu laeth y gaseg (enw unigol ac enw lluosog) sy'n gynhenid i hemisffêr y gogledd. Mae'n blanhigyn dringol ac ymnyddol o deulu’r Caprifoliaceæ ac mae'n tyfu mewn llwyni a gwrychoedd.[1] Melyn-pinc ydy lliw'r blodau sy'n eitha persawrus ac ar ffurf utgyrn; mae'r aeron a dyf yn yr hydref o liw coch. Mae tua 180 o rywogaethau gwahanol ac mae 20 ohonynt yn gynhenid i Ewrop. Adwaenir y gwyddfid hefyd fel llaeth y gaseg, ymysg nifer o enwau gwahanol. Y math mwyaf cyffredin yw'r Lonicera periclymenum.

 src=
Blodau'r gwyddfid ger Heolgerrig, Merthyr Tudful; Medi 2017 (llun gan Morgan Owen).

Mae'r dail mewn parau, yn syml ac yn hirgrwn. Yn ôl y naturiaethwraig Bethan Wyn Jones: Mae arogl y gwyddfid yn drymach ar awel yr hwyr am mai gwyfynod yn bennaf sy'n peillio'r gwyddfid, ac er mwyn denu'r gwyfynod hynny i beillio'r blodau mae'r gwyddfid yn rhyddhau perarogl.[2]

Cyfeirir at "laeth-y-gaseg" gan Dafydd Rowlands yn ei gerdd Dangosaf iti Lendid.[3]

Gerddi

Mae'r gwyddfid yn blanhigyn cyffredin mewn gerddi - yn bennaf gan eu bod yn gorchuddio hen waliau ac oherwydd lliw ac arogl y blodau. Mae'r mathau sy'n dringo'n hoffi gwreiddio yn y cysgod. Gallant ordyfu, gan dyfu'n wyllt, os nad ydynt yn cael eu tocio.[4]

 src=
Blodau

Enwau

Yn ddiweddar defnyddiwyd yr enw fel enw ar ferch.

Cyfeiriadau

  1. Ngeiriadur Prifysgol Cymru
  2. Teitl: Arogleuon I Ddenu'r Cler; Gwefan y Daily Post; adalwyd 30 Mehefin 2014.
  3. Gwefan Bitsesixe; BBC; adalwyd 30 Mehefin 2014.
  4. RHS A-Z encyclopedia of garden plants. United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. 2008. p. 1136. ISBN 1405332964.
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Gwyddfid: Brief Summary ( Welsh )

provided by wikipedia CY

Prysgwydden gordeddog yn nheulu'r Caprifoliaceae yw'r gwyddfid neu laeth y gaseg (enw unigol ac enw lluosog) sy'n gynhenid i hemisffêr y gogledd. Mae'n blanhigyn dringol ac ymnyddol o deulu’r Caprifoliaceæ ac mae'n tyfu mewn llwyni a gwrychoedd. Melyn-pinc ydy lliw'r blodau sy'n eitha persawrus ac ar ffurf utgyrn; mae'r aeron a dyf yn yr hydref o liw coch. Mae tua 180 o rywogaethau gwahanol ac mae 20 ohonynt yn gynhenid i Ewrop. Adwaenir y gwyddfid hefyd fel llaeth y gaseg, ymysg nifer o enwau gwahanol. Y math mwyaf cyffredin yw'r Lonicera periclymenum.

 src= Blodau'r gwyddfid ger Heolgerrig, Merthyr Tudful; Medi 2017 (llun gan Morgan Owen).

Mae'r dail mewn parau, yn syml ac yn hirgrwn. Yn ôl y naturiaethwraig Bethan Wyn Jones: Mae arogl y gwyddfid yn drymach ar awel yr hwyr am mai gwyfynod yn bennaf sy'n peillio'r gwyddfid, ac er mwyn denu'r gwyfynod hynny i beillio'r blodau mae'r gwyddfid yn rhyddhau perarogl.

Cyfeirir at "laeth-y-gaseg" gan Dafydd Rowlands yn ei gerdd Dangosaf iti Lendid.

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Zimolez ( Czech )

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Zimolez (Lonicera) je rod rostlin patřící do čeledi zimolezovité (Caprifoliaceae). Jsou to keře, liány nebo nízké stromy se vstřícnými jednoduchými listy a bílými, žlutými, růžovými nebo červenými, často nápadnými a vonnými květy. Zimolezy jsou rozšířeny v počtu asi 180 druhů v Evropě, Asii, severní Africe a Severní Americe. V České republice jsou domácí 2 druhy, zimolez obecný a zimolez černý, některé další se zde vyskytují zplaněle. Zimolezy mají význam zejména jako okrasné keře a popínavé rostliny. Některé druhy mají využití v medicíně a výjimečně jako drobné ovoce, většina druhů je však více či méně jedovatá.

 src=
Dlouhé květy zimolezu Lonicera hildebrandiana

Popis

Zimolezy jsou stálezelené nebo opadavé keře, řidčeji liány nebo nízké stromy. Větévky jsou duté nebo vyplněné bělavou či hnědou dření. Zimní pupeny jsou okrouhlé až ostře čtyřhranné, kryté jedním nebo několika páry šupin. Listy jsou vstřícné nebo výjimečně přeslenité. Čepel listů je celokrajná, pouze výjimečně zubatá nebo laločnatá. Palisty většinou chybějí, řidčeji jsou vyvinuty interpetiolární palisty nebo jsou řapíky protistojných listů spojené vystouplou linií. U některých druhů jsou horní 1 nebo 2 páry listů pod květenstvím srostlé (např. zimolez kozí list, L. caprifolia) a tvoří zákrovní listeny.

Květenství je vrcholové nebo postranní, obvykle thyrsus složený z vrcholíků tvořených jediným párem květů, řidčeji jsou květy jednotlivé nebo po třech. Vrcholíky mohou být stopkaté a podepřené párem listenů a 2 páry listenců nebo přisedlé. U některých druhů tvoří přisedlé vrcholíky hlávku. Květy ve dvojicích mohou být volné nebo částečně až zcela srostlé svými semeníky. Květy jsou drobné a nenápadné až velké a velmi nápadné. Kalich je pětičetný nebo výjimečně čtyřčetný, srostlý, zakončený laloky nebo na vrcholu uťatý. Koruna je bílá, žlutá, růžová nebo červená a často mění v průběhu vývoje květu barvu. Koruna je srostlá, zvonkovitá nebo nálevkovitá, s krátkou až dlouhou korunní trubkou, pravidelně nebo nepravidelně pětilaločnatá nebo dvoupyská s horním pyskem čtyřlaločným. Na vnitřní stěně korunní trubky jsou na spodní straně nektária. Tyčinek je 5 a jsou přirostlé ke korunní trubce. Semeník má 2, 3 nebo řidčeji až 5 komůrek, na vrcholu nese tenkou čnělku zakončenou hlavatou bliznou. Plodem je bobule obsahující 1 až mnoho semen. Plody jsou nejčastěji červené, modročerné, černé nebo zelené, řidčeji bílé. U druhů se srostlými semeníky tvoří souplodí. U některých druhů (např. zimolez zákrovnatý, L. involucrata) jsou dvojice plodů uzavřené ve vytrvalých listenech.[1]

Rozšíření

Rod zimolez zahrnuje asi 180 druhů. Je rozšířen v Evropě, Asii, severní Africe a Severní Americe.[1]

V České republice jsou původní 2 druhy zimolezů. Zimolez obecný (Lonicera xylosteum) je rozšířen zejména v nižších a středních polohách, zimolez černý (L. nigra) roste roztroušeně v horských lesích. Některé z pěstovaných druhů zimolezů zplaňují ve volné přírodě. Z keřovitých druhů je to zejména zimolez tatarský (L. tatarica), z popínavých druhů zimolez ovíjivý (L. periclymenum) a zimolez kozí list (L. caprifolium).[2]

 src=
Zimolez pyrenejský (L. pyrenaica)

Z celé Evropy je udáváno celkem 17 druhů zimolezů. Nejrozsáhlejší oblast rozšíření zaujímá zimolez obecný (L. xylosteum), zimolez modrý (L. caerulea), zimolez ovíjivý (L. periclymenum) a zimolez černý (L. nigra). Ve větších evropských pohořích roste zimolez horský (L. alpigena), který má jednu lokalitu i na Slovensku na Muráňské planine. Zimolez kozí list pochází ze střední a jihozápadní Evropy, dnes je však již široce rozšířen po většině kontinentu. Zimolez tatarský (L. tatarica) je v Evropě domácí pouze v Rusku, je však pěstován po celé Evropě a nezřídka zplaňuje. Z dalších druhů je po celém Středomoří rozšířen zimolez etruský (L. etrusca) a Lonicera implexa, v jihozápadní Evropě zimolez pyrenejský (L. pyrenaica), ve Španělsku Lonicera arborea, Lonicera biflora a endemický Lonicera splendida, v Itálii Lonicera stabiana, v Řecku Lonicera nummulariifolia a endemický Lonicera hellenica, na Balkáně endemický Lonicera glutinosa. Mimo to roste ve Středomoří zdomácnělý zimolez japonský (L. japonica), pocházející z Asie.[3]

Obsahové látky a jedovatost

Květy zimolezu japonského (L. japonica) obsahují monoterpenické silice (linalool, geraniol), pineny, kyselinu chlorogenovou, flavonoidy (lonicerin, loniceraflavon), iridoidní glykosidy (loganin, sekologanin) a triterpenoidní saponiny. Svíravá chuť je způsobena tříslovinami.[4]

Plody většiny druhů zimolezu jsou více či méně jedovaté. Otrava bobulemi zimolezu obecného (L. xylosteum) se projevuje zrudnutím obličeje, zvracením a průjmem, bolestmi břicha, nepravidelným pulsem, světloplachostí a hlubokým dechem. Bobule způsobují dávení i u ovcí a koz, naproti tomu nať spásají tato zvířata bez potíží. Plody zimolezu černého (L. nigra) jsou jedovaté méně. Byly také zaznamenány případy lehké otravy dětí po požití bobulí zimolezu tatarského (L. tatarica). Účinek je připisován obsaženým saponinům. Ve větším množství jsou jedovaté i bobule zimolezu japonského (L. japonica). Otrava se projevuje zvracením, průjmem, studeným potem, tlukotem srdce, rozšířenými zornicemi, dýchacími potížemi, křečemi a kómatem.[5][6][7] Naproti tomu bobule zimolezu kamčatského (L. caerulea var. kamtschatica) jsou jedlé a řadí se mezi drobné ovoce.[8]

Zástupci

Význam

 src=
Zimolez Heckrottův (L. x heckrottii)

Zimolezy náležejí mezi oblíbené okrasné dřeviny. Z keřovitých druhů je zejména v městské výsadbě nejčastěji vysazován zimolez tatarský (L. tatarica), který se pěstuje v řadě kultivarů. Dosti často se pěstují také stálezelené druhy s drobnými listy, zimolez lesklý (L. nitida) a zimolez fialový (L. pileata). Celkem zřídka se pěstuje zimolez zákrovnatý (L. involucrata), vyznačující se sytě červenými listeny podepírajícími květy a plody. Keřovitých zimolezů se pěstuje celá řada včetně kříženců a jejich určování je někdy nesnadné.[9] Množství druhů a kultivarů zimolezů je uváděno z českých botanických zahrad a arboret.[10]

Listy, květy a stonky zimolezu japonského se využívají v tradiční čínské medicíně zejména při léčení nemocí trávicího traktu. Má protizánětlivý a močopudný účinek, čistí krev a snižuje horečku.[4]

Zimolez kamčatský (L. caerulea var. kamtschatica) je pěstován pro jedlé plody, které mají velký obsah vitamínů C a B a karotenoidů. Ovoce, nazývané kamčatská borůvka, dozrává u raných odrůd již koncem května, u pozdnějších v červnu nebo červenci.[8] Pro naše podmínky se doporučují odrůdy Altaj a Amur vyšlechtěné na Slovensku.

Pěstování

Většina zimolezů jsou poměrně nenáročné dřeviny. Daří se jim na slunci i v mírném zástinu. Vysazují se nejčastěji ve skupinách. K rozmnožování opadavých druhů se používají dřevité řízky, stálezelené druhy se množí i zelenými a letními řízky, ovíjivé hřížením. Výsev semen se používá pouze u botanických druhů z přirozených stanovišť.[9]

Reference

  1. a b YANG, Qiner et al. Flora of China: Lonicera [online]. Dostupné online. (anglicky)
  2. KUBÁT, K. et al. Klíč ke květeně České republiky. Praha: Academia, 2002. ISBN 80-200-0836-5.
  3. Flora Europaea [online]. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh. Dostupné online.
  4. a b VALÍČEK, Pavel et al. Léčivé rostliny tradiční čínské medicíny. Hradec Králové: Svítání, 1998. ISBN 80-86198-01-4.
  5. JIRÁSEK, Václav et al. Naše jedovaté rostliny. Praha: Československá Akademie věd, 1957.
  6. Canadian poisonous plants [online]. Government of Canada, 2009. Dostupné online.
  7. Poisonous plants [online]. North Carolina State University. Dostupné online. (anglicky)
  8. a b NEČAS, T. a kol. Zimolez kamčatský - Lonicera kamtschatica [online]. Brno: Mendelova univerzita, 2004. Dostupné online. (česky)
  9. a b KOBLÍŽEK, J. Jehličnaté a listnaté dřeviny našich zahrad a parků. 2. vyd. Tišnov: Sursum, 2006. ISBN 80-7323-117-4.
  10. Florius - katalog botanických zahrad [online]. Dostupné online.

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Zimolez: Brief Summary ( Czech )

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Zimolez (Lonicera) je rod rostlin patřící do čeledi zimolezovité (Caprifoliaceae). Jsou to keře, liány nebo nízké stromy se vstřícnými jednoduchými listy a bílými, žlutými, růžovými nebo červenými, často nápadnými a vonnými květy. Zimolezy jsou rozšířeny v počtu asi 180 druhů v Evropě, Asii, severní Africe a Severní Americe. V České republice jsou domácí 2 druhy, zimolez obecný a zimolez černý, některé další se zde vyskytují zplaněle. Zimolezy mají význam zejména jako okrasné keře a popínavé rostliny. Některé druhy mají využití v medicíně a výjimečně jako drobné ovoce, většina druhů je však více či méně jedovatá.

 src= Dlouhé květy zimolezu Lonicera hildebrandiana
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Gedeblad ( Danish )

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Gedeblad (Lonicera), også kaldet kaprifolie eller kaprifolium (af latin caper 'buk' og folium 'blad'[1]) er en planteslægt som er udbredt i Nordamerika, Europa og Østasien med hen ved 200 arter af stedsegrønne eller løvfældende buske og lianer. De har modsatte, helrandede blade. Blomsterne er 5-tallige og sidder enten parvist ved bladhjørnerne eller i endestillede stande, der er støttet af højblade. Bægerbladene er rør- eller bægerformet sammenvoksede, og det samme er sket med kronbladene, der danner et langt eller meget langt kronrør, der har to eller fem lapper ved mundingen. Ved blomstens åbning spaltes kronbladene, sådan at de fire øverste tilsammen danner én læbe, mens den enlige, nederste danner en anden. Frugterne er bær, der sidder enkeltvis eller to sammen.

Beskrevne arter


Beskrevne hybrider


Andre arter
  • Lonicera acuminata
  • Lonicera affinis
  • Lonicera albiflora
  • Lonicera alpigena
  • Lonicera alseuosmoides
  • Lonicera altmannii
  • Lonicera arborea
  • Lonicera arizonica
  • Lonicera asperifolia
  • Lonicera bracteolaris
  • Lonicera canadensis
  • Lonicera caucasica
  • Lonicera chaetocarpa
  • Lonicera chamissoi
  • Lonicera chrysantha
  • Lonicera ciliosa
  • Lonicera confusa
  • Lonicera dasystyla
  • Lonicera demissa
  • Lonicera dioica
  • Lonicera discolor
  • Lonicera etrusca
  • Lonicera ferdinandi
  • Lonicera flava
  • Lonicera floribunda
  • Lonicera fragrantissima
  • Lonicera fuchsioides
  • Lonicera glabrata
  • Lonicera gracilipes
  • Lonicera gynochlamydea
  • Lonicera heteroloba
  • Lonicera heterophylla
  • Lonicera hispida
  • Lonicera hispidula
  • Lonicera hypoglauca
  • Lonicera hypoleuca
  • Lonicera iberica
  • Lonicera implexa
  • Lonicera interrupta
  • Lonicera involucrata
  • Lonicera japonica
  • Lonicera javanica
  • Lonicera koehneana
  • Lonicera korolkowii
  • Lonicera lanceolata
  • Lonicera longa
  • Lonicera maackii
  • Lonicera macrantha
  • Lonicera maximowiczii
  • Lonicera microphylla
  • Lonicera morrowii
  • Lonicera myrtillus
  • Lonicera nervosa
  • Lonicera nigra
  • Lonicera nummulariifolia
  • Lonicera oblongifolia
  • Lonicera obovata
  • Lonicera oresbia
  • Lonicera orientalis
  • Lonicera praeflorens
  • Lonicera prostrata
  • Lonicera pyrenaica
  • Lonicera quinquelocularis
  • Lonicera ramosissima
  • Lonicera reticulata
  • Lonicera rupicola
  • Lonicera ruprechtiana
  • Lonicera saccata
  • Lonicera sempervirens
  • Lonicera similis
  • Lonicera spinosa
  • Lonicera standishii
  • Lonicera stephanocarpa
  • Lonicera subsessilis
  • Lonicera subspicata
  • Lonicera tatarinovii
  • Lonicera tatsienensis
  • Lonicera tenuipes
  • Lonicera tomentella
  • Lonicera tragophylla
  • Lonicera trichopoda
  • Lonicera trichosantha
  • Lonicera utahensis
  • Lonicera webbiana

Note


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Heckenkirschen ( German )

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Die Heckenkirschen und Geißblätter (Lonicera) sind eine Pflanzengattung in der Familie der Geißblattgewächse (Caprifoliaceae). Die etwa 180 Arten sind auf der Nordhalbkugel weitverbreitet.

Als „Heckenkirschen“ werden vor allem die strauchig wachsenden Arten bezeichnet, bei denen die Blüten paarweise stehen. Die aus einem Blütenpaar hervorgehenden Beeren sind bei manchen Arten zu einer Doppelbeere verwachsen (diese Arten heißen auch Doppelbeere). Die Lianen (mit mehrblütigen Blütenständen) werden dagegen meist als „Geißblatt“, umgangssprachlich auch als Jelängerjelieber, bezeichnet.

Beschreibung

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Illustration von Lonicera macrantha
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Illustration von Lonicera trichosantha var. deflexicalyx
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Schwarze Heckenkirsche (Lonicera nigra) mit Früchten

Erscheinungsbild, Knospen und Blätter

Lonicera-Arten sind immergrüne oder laubabwerfende, verholzende Pflanzen, die meist als Sträucher oder rechtswindende Lianen, selten als Bäume wachsen. Die Sprossachsen sind bei manchen Arten hohl. Die Winterknospen besitzen ein bis einige Paare gerundete oder spitz vierkantige Knospenschuppen, wobei die inneren manchmal weiterwachsend oder zurückgebogen sind. Manchmal ist die Endknospe reduziert und von zwei Seitenknospen ersetzt.

Die meist gegenständig oder selten wirtelig angeordneten Laubblätter sind gestielt oder ungestielt. Die Blattspreiten sind meist einfach mit ganzen oder selten gezähnten Blatträndern. Nebenblätter fehlen meist.

Blütenstände und Blüten

Oft stehen unter den Blütenständen ein oder zwei Paare kleiner oder laubblattartiger Hochblätter. Die seiten- oder endständigen, manchmal auf Blütenstandsschäften stehenden, schirmtraubigen Gesamtblütenstände bestehen aus gegenständigen, sitzenden, zymösen Teilblütenständen, die ein bis mehrere Blüten enthalten; manchmal ist der Blütenstand kopfförmig. Bei einigen Arten ist der Blütenstand auf ein Blütenpaar, selten auch eine oder drei Blüten reduziert. paarweise in den Blattachseln oder in endständigen kopfigen Blütenständen zusammen. Die Blüten stehen über einem Paar von äußeren und oft auch inneren Deckblättern, die, wenn vorhanden, meist frei, manchmal mehr oder weniger stark verwachsen sind und gelegentlich die Fruchtknoten umhüllen können.

Die zwittrigen Blüten sind zygomorph und meist fünf-, selten vierzählig mit doppelter Blütenhülle. Die meist fünf, selten vier Kelchblätter sind röhrig oder becherförmig verwachsen, manchmal gestutzt; manchmal befindet sich an ihrer Basis eine kragenähnliche Emergenz. Die Farben der Kronblätter reichen von weiß über weißlich bis gelb und von rötlich bis purpurrot, oft ändert sich die Farbe beim Verblühten. Die meist fünf, selten vier Kronblätter sind zu einer mehr oder weniger langen bis sehr langen, glockenförmigen bis trichterförmigen Kronröhre verwachsen. Die Krone endet mit mehr oder weniger regelmäßigen vier oder fünf Kronzipfeln oder zweilippig. Wenn die Krone zweilippig ist, dann ist die Oberlippe vierlappig. Nach der Entfaltung der Knospe ist die Kronröhre noch geschlossen und sieht dann keulenförmig aus. Der verdickte Teil spaltet sich dann in einen einzelnen, nach unten zeigenden Zipfel, welcher eine Unterlippe darstellt, und vier (bei vielen Arten weitgehend miteinander verwachsene) Zipfel, die nach oben zeigen. Die Kronröhre ist leicht bis stark gewölbt an der Unterseite zur Basis hin, selten ist ein Sporn vorhanden; dort befinden sich kompakte, sitzende Nektardrüsen, manchmal in fünf gleichmäßigen Linien; selten sind sie angeschwollen an der Basis des Griffels.

Es ist ein Kreis mit fünf Staubblättern vorhanden. Meist zwei bis drei, selten bis zu fünf Fruchtblätter sind zu einem unterständigen, zwei- bis drei-, selten bis zu fünfkammerigen Fruchtknoten verwachsen. Wenn die Blüten paarweise zusammen stehen, dann können die Fruchtknoten teilweise oder vollständig verwachsen sein (Syngynium). Der lange und dünne, behaarte oder kahle Griffel endet in einer kopfigen Narbe.

Früchte und Samen

Die Beeren stehen einzeln oder als Doppelbeere in Paaren. Die bei Reife sich weiß, rot, blau-schwarz bis schwarz färbenden oder grünen, manchmal bereiften Beeren enthalten ein bis viele Samen. Manchmal wachsen die Deckblätter bis zur Fruchtreife und umhüllen dann die Doppelbeere. Die glatten, narbigen oder granulösen Samen besitzen viel Endosperm und einen kleinen, geraden, gerundeten Embryo.

Ökologie

Die verschiedenen Arten sind an Nachtfalter (speziell Schwärmer), Hummeln, Bienen, Wespen oder Schwebfliegen als Bestäuber angepasst (Entomophilie).

Systematik und Verbreitung

Die Gattung Lonicera wurde durch L. 1753 in Species Plantarum aufgestellt.[1] Als Lektotypus wurde Lonicera caprifolium L. 1913 durch N. L. Britton und A. Brown festgelegt.[2] Homonyme sind Lonicera Boehm. in Definitiones Generum Plantarum ed. 3 Boehmer, 1760. 139, Lonicera Gaertn. in De Fructibus et Seminibus Plantarum ..., 1, 1788, S. 132, Lonicera Adans. in Familles des Plantes, 2, 1763, S. 157. Weitere Synonym für Lonicera L. sind: Xylosteon Mill., Caprifolium Miller, Euchylia Dulac.[3] Der Gattungsname Lonicera ehrt den deutschen Mathematiker, Arzt und Botaniker Adam Lonitzer (1528–1586) (latinisiert als Lonicerus).[4]

Die Gattung Lonicera gehört zur Tribus Caprifolieae innerhalb der Familie der Caprifoliaceae.

Die Gattung Lonicera ist auf der Nordhalbkugel weitverbreitet. Lonicera-Arten gedeihen hauptsächlich in den Gemäßigten Gebieten. Sie kommt in Nordafrika, Eurasien und Nordamerika vor. In China kommen etwa 57 Arten vor, davon 23 nur dort.[5]

In Mitteleuropa sind die Sträucher Alpen-Heckenkirsche (Lonicera alpigena), Blaue Heckenkirsche (Lonicera caerulea), Schwarze Heckenkirsche (Lonicera nigra), Rote Heckenkirsche (Lonicera xylosteum) und die Lianen Gartengeißblatt (Lonicera caprifolium) sowie Waldgeißblatt (Lonicera periclymenum) beheimatet. Der Strauch Tataren-Heckenkirsche (Lonicera tatarica) ist in vielen Gebieten der Gemäßigten Zonen ein Neophyt.

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Alpen-Heckenkirsche (Lonicera alpigena)
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Gartengeißblatt (Lonicera caprifolium)
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Blütenpaare der Doppelbeeren-tragenden Blauen Heckenkirsche (Lonicera caerulea)
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Doppelbeeren der Blauen Heckenkirsche (Lonicera caerulea)
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Blütenstand von Lonicera hildebrandiana
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Windendes Geißblatt (Lonicera implexa)
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Doppelbeeren von Lonicera involucrata
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Zygomorphe Blüten von Lonicera japonica
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Immergrüne Kriech-Heckenkirsche (Lonicera ligustrina var. pileata)
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Blühender Lonicera maackii
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Schwarze Heckenkirsche (Lonicera nigra)
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Waldgeißblatt (Lonicera periclymenum)
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Blütenstand und verwachsenes Hochblattpaar von Lonicera sempervirens
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Tataren-Heckenkirsche (Lonicera tatarica)
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Rote Heckenkirsche (Lonicera xylosteum)

Es gibt weltweit etwa 180 Arten[5]; hier eine Auswahl:

  • Immergrünes Geißblatt (Lonicera acuminata Wall., Syn.: Caprifolium fuchsioides (Hemsl.) Kuntze, Caprifolium henryi (Hemsl.) Kuntze, Lonicera acuminata var. depilata P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang, Lonicera affinis Hook. & Arnott var. angustifolia Hayata, Lonicera alseuosmoides Graebner, Lonicera apodantha Ohwi, Lonicera buddleioides P.S.Hsu & S.C.Cheng, Lonicera fuchsioides Hemsl., Lonicera giraldii Rehder, Lonicera henryi Hemsl., Lonicera henryi var. angustifolia (Hayata) Ohwi, Lonicera henryi var. fulvovillosa Ohwi, Lonicera henryi var. setuligera W.W.Smith, Lonicera henryi var. subcoriacea Rehder, Lonicera henryi var. transarisanensis (Hayata) Yamamoto, Lonicera henryi var. trichosepala Rehder, Lonicera pampaninii H.Lév., Lonicera transarisanensis Hayata, Lonicera trichosepala (Rehder) P.S.Hsu): Diese immergrüne Liane ist in Indien, Bhutan, Nepal, Myanmar, China und auf den Philippinen weitverbreitet.[5]
  • Lonicera albiflora Torr. & A.Gray: Sie ist von den südlichen USA bis ins nördliche Mexiko weit verbreitet und kommt in den Bundesstaaten Oklahoma, New Mexico, Texas, Arizona, Chihuahua, Coahuila und Nuevo León vor.
  • Alpen-Heckenkirsche (Lonicera alpigena L.): Sie kommt in vielen Gebieten mit gemäßigten Klima in Eurasien vor: in Deutschland, Österreich, der Schweiz, Italien, Frankreich, Spanien, dem früheren Jugoslawien und der früheren Tschechoslowakei, Albanien, Rumänien sowie Griechenland, außerdem auf den Kurilen und Sachalin sowie auf den japanischen Inseln Hokkaidō und südlichen Honshū.
  • Lonicera altmannii Regel & Schmalh.: Sie kommt im südöstlichen Kasachstan, Kirgistan und westlichen Xinjiang vor.[5]
  • Lonicera angustifolia Wall. ex DC. (Syn.: Lonicera minutifolia Kitam., Lonicera myrtillus Hook. f. & Thomson): Dieser laubabwerfende Strauch kommt mit zwei Varietäten in Afghanistan, Indien, Pakistan, Bhutan, nördlichen Myanmar, Nepal, Tibet und in den chinesischen Provinzen südwestliches Sichuan sowie Yunnan vor.[5]
  • Lonicera arborea Boiss.: Dieser Strauch oder bis 9 Meter hohe Baum kommt in Spanien und Nordwestafrika vor.
  • Lonicera biflora Desf.: Sie kommt in Marokko, Algerien und Spanien vor.[6]
  • Lonicera bournei Hemsl. (Syn.: Caprifolium bournei (Hemsl.) Kuntze, Lonicera obscura Collett & Hemsl.): Sie kommt in Myanmar und in den chinesischen Provinzen Guangxi sowie Yunnan vor.[5]
  • Lonicera buschiorum Pojark.: Sie kommt im Kaukasusraum und in Georgien vor.[6]
  • Blaue Heckenkirsche (Lonicera caerulea L., Syn.: Lonicera caerulea var. altaica Pallas, Lonicera caerulea var. edulis Turczaninow ex Herder, Lonicera caerulea var. tangutica Maxim., Xylosteon caeruleum (L.) Dumont de Courset): Dieser laubabwerfende Strauch ist auf der Nordhalbkugel weitverbreitet: China, Japan, Korea, Mongolei, Russland, Europa und Nordamerika.[5]
  • Lonicera calcarata Hemsl.: Diese Liane gedeiht in Höhenlagen von 1200 bis 2500 Metern in Tibet und in den chinesischen Provinzen Guangxi, südwestlichen Guizhou, südwestlichen Sichuan sowie Yunnan.[5]
  • Gartengeißblatt (Lonicera caprifolium L.): Diese Liane ist in Europa weit verbreitet: Norwegen, Schweden, Österreich, Ungarn, Polen, ehemalige Tschechoslowakei, ehemaliges Jugoslawien, Albanien, Rumänien, Italien und Spanien.
  • Lonicera chrysantha Turcz. ex Ledeb.: Dieser laubabwerfende Strauch kommt in China, Japan, Nordkorea, Mongolei, Russland und Europa vor.[5]
  • Lonicera ciliosa (Pursh) Poir. ex DC.: Diese Liane ist im westlichen Nordamerika im südwestlichen British Columbia, nördlichen Idaho, westlichen Montana, Oregon, Washington und westlichen Kalifornien beheimatet.
  • Lonicera cinerea Pojark.: Sie kommt nur in Kasachstan vor.
  • Lonicera confusa (Sweet) DC.: Sie ist in Nepal, im nördlichen Vietnam und in den chinesischen Provinzen Guangdong, Guangxi sowie Hainan verbreitet.[5]
  • Lonicera crassifolia Batalin: Sie gedeiht in Höhenlagen von meist 900 bis 1700, selten bis zu 2300 Metern in den chinesischen Provinzen Guizhou, südwestliches Hubei, nordwestliches Hunan, Sichuan sowie Yunnan.[5]
  • Lonicera cyanocarpa Franch.: Sie kommt in Sikkim, Nepal, Tibet und in den chinesischen Provinzen Sichuan sowie Yunnan vor.[5]
  • Lonicera dasystyla Rehder: Sie kommt in Vietnam und in den chinesischen Provinzen Guangdong sowie Guangxi vor.[5]
  • Lonicera elisae Franch., (Syn.: Caprifolium elisae (Franchet) Kuntze, Caprifolium praecox Kuntze, Lonicera infundibulum Franchet, Lonicera infundibulum var. rockii Rehder, Lonicera pekinensis Rehder, Lonicera praecox (Kuntze) Rehder (1911) non K.Koch 1872): Dieser laubabwerfende Strauch gedeiht in Wäldern und Gebüschen in Höhenlagen von 500 bis 1600 (bis zu 2300) Metern in den chinesischen Provinzen südwestliches Anhui, südöstliches Gansu, Hebei, Henan, westliches Hubei, südliches Shaanxi, südliches Shanxi, Sichuan sowie nordwestliches Zhejiang.[5]
  • Lonicera etrusca G.Santi: Sie ist im Mittelmeerraum weitverbreitet.[7][8]
  • Lonicera fargesii Franch.: Sie gedeiht mit zwei Varietäten in Höhenlagen von 1600 bis 2900 Metern in den chinesischen Provinzen Chongqing, südliches Gansu, westliches Henan, südliches Shaanxi, Shanxi sowie Sichuan.[5]
  • Lonicera ferdinandi Franch.: Sie kommt Nordkorea vor und gedeiht in weiten Gebieten Chinas in Höhenlagen von 200 bis 2700 Metern.[5]
  • Lonicera ferruginea Rehder: Sie ist in Indien, im nördlichen Thailand und in China verbreitet.[5]
  • Lonicera flava Sims: Sie ist in den USA verbreitet.
  • Wohlriechende Heckenkirsche (Lonicera fragrantissima Lindl. & Paxton): Sie gedeiht mit zwei Varietäten in Höhenlagen von 100 bis 2700 Metern in den chinesischen Provinzen Anhui, Gansu, Guizhou, Hebei, Henan, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Shaanxi, Shandong, Shanxi, Sichuan sowie Zhejiang.[5]
  • Lonicera glutinosa Vis. (Syn.: Lonicera alpigena subsp. glutinosa (Vis.) Kit Tan & Ziel.): Sie kommt in Kroatien und in Montenegro vor.[6]
  • Lonicera gracilipes Miq.: Sie kommt in Japan auf Honshu, Kyushu und Shikoku vor.[7]
  • Lonicera gynochlamydea Hemsl.: Sie gedeiht in Höhenlagen von meist 1200 bis 1900, selten bis zu 3000 Metern in den chinesischen Provinzen Anhui, Chongqing, Gansu, Guizhou, Hubei, Hunan, Shaanxi, Sichuan sowie Yunnan.[5]
  • Lonicera hellenica Boiss. (Syn.: Lonicera alpigena subsp. hellenica (Boiss.) Kit Tan & Ziel.): Sie kommt in Griechenland und in der Türkei vor.[6]
  • Lonicera hildebrandiana Collett & Hemsl.: Sie ist in Myanmar, Thailand und in den chinesischen Provinzen Guangxi sowie Yunnan verbreitet.[5]
  • Lonicera hispida Pall. ex Roem. & Schult. (Syn.: Caprifolium hispidum (Pallas ex Roemer & Schultes) Kuntze, Lonicera anisocalyx Rehder, Lonicera chaetocarpa (Batalin ex Rehder) Rehder, Lonicera finitima W.W.Smith, Lonicera hispida var. anisocalyx (Rehder) P.K.Chou, Lonicera hispida var. chaetocarpa Batalin ex Rehder, Lonicera hispida var. glabrata Batalin, Lonicera hispida var. hirsutior Regel, Lonicera hispida var. setosa J.D.Hooker & Thomson, Lonicera montigena Rehder): Sie ist vom Iran über Kasachstan, Kirgisistan, Tadschikistan bis Russland und von Pakistan (Kaschmir) bis Sikkim, Bhutan sowie Nepal und von der Mongolei über Tibet bis zu den chinesischen Provinzen Gansu, westliches Hebei, südliches Ningxia, östliches Qinghai, südliches Shaanxi, Shanxi, westliches Sichuan, nordwestliches Yunnan sowie nördliches Xinjiang weitverbreitet.[7][5]
  • Lonicera humilis Kar. & Kir.: Sie ist in Afghanistan, Tadschikistan, Kirgisistan, Kasachstan und Xinjiang verbreitet.[5]
  • Lonicera hypoglauca Miq. (Syn.: Lonicera affinis var. hypoglauca (Miq.) Rehder, Lonicera affinis var. mollissima Blume ex Maxim., Lonicera affinis var. pubescens Maxim., Lonicera hypoglauca subsp. nudiflora P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang, Lonicera rubropunctata Hayata): Sie ist Japan, Taiwan und China verbreitet.[7][5]
  • Lonicera hypoleuca Decne.: Sie ist im Iran, in Pakistan, Nepal und Indien verbreitet.[7]
  • Windendes Geißblatt (Lonicera implexa Aiton): Sie ist im Mittelmeerraum weitverbreitet.[8]
  • Lonicera involucrata (Richardson) Banks ex Spreng.: Sie ist in Nordamerika von Alaska bis ins nördliche Chihuahua weitverbreitet.
  • Japanisches Geißblatt[9] (Lonicera japonica Thunb.): Die ursprüngliche Heimat ist Japan, Korea und China.[7]
  • Lonicera kabylica (Batt.) Rehder: Sie kommt in Algerien vor.[6]
  • Lonicera kansuensis (Batalin ex Rehder) Pojark.: Sie gedeiht in Höhenlagen von 1800 bis 2400 Metern in den chinesischen Provinzen Gansu, Ningxia, Shaanxi sowie Sichuan.[5]
  • Lonicera kawakamii (Hayata) Masam.: Sie gedeiht im Gebirge in Höhenlagen von 3000 bis 3900 Metern nur in Taiwan.[5]
  • Lonicera ligustrina Wall.: Mehrere Varietäten sind in Indien, Nepal, Bhutan und China verbreitet:[5]
    • Lonicera ligustrina Wall. var. ligustrina: Sie ist im östlichen Indien, Bhutan, Nepal und China verbreitet.[5]
    • Immergrüne Kriech-Heckenkirsche[9] (Lonicera ligustrina var. pileata (Oliver) Franchet, Syn.: Lonicera pileata Oliv.): Dieser immergrüne Strauch ist in den chinesischen Provinzen Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, westliches Hubei, Hunan, südliches Shaanxi, Sichuan sowie Yunnan verbreitet.[5]
    • Lonicera ligustrina var. yunnanensis Franchet (Syn.: Lonicera nitida E.H. Wilson): Sie ist in den chinesischen Provinzen südliches Gansu, südwestliches Shaanxi, Sichuan sowie Yunnan verbreitet.[5]
  • Lonicera litangensis Batalin (Syn.: Lonicera farreri W.W.Smith, Lonicera oresbia W.W.Smith, Lonicera rockii Rehder): Sie ist in Bhutan, Sikkim, Nepal, Tibet und in den chinesischen Provinzen Sichuan sowie Yunnan verbreitet.
  • Lonicera longiflora (Lindl.) DC. (Syn.: Lonicera longituba H.T.Chang ex P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang): Sie gedeiht in Höhenlagen von 1200 bis 1700 Metern in den chinesischen Provinzen Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan sowie Yunnan.[5]
  • Lonicera maackii (Rupr.) Maxim.: Sie ist in mehreren Varietäten in China, in der Mongolei, Korea, Japan und Russlands Fernen Osten weitverbreitet.[7][5]
  • Lonicera macrantha (D.Don) Spreng. (Syn.: Caprifolium macranthum D.Don, Lonicera esquirolii H.Lév., Lonicera fulvotomentosa P.S.Hsu & S.C.Cheng, Lonicera guillonii H.Lév. & Vaniot, Lonicera hirtiflora Champion ex Bentham, Lonicera inodora W.W.Sm., Lonicera macrantha var. calvescens Chun & F.C.How, Lonicera calvescens (Chun & F.C.How) P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang, Lonicera macranthoides Hand.-Mazz., Lonicera strigosiflora C.Y.Wu ex X.W.Li): Sie ist in Indien, Bhutan, Nepal, Myanmar, Vietnam, Taiwan und China verbreitet.[7][5]
  • Lonicera maximowiczii (Rupr.) Regel: Sie ist in Russlands Fernen Osten, in Korea und in den chinesischen Provinzen Heilongjiang sowie Jilin verbreitet.[5]
  • Lonicera mexicana (Kunth) Rehder: Die Heimat ist Mexiko.
  • Lonicera microphylla Willd. ex Schult. (Syn.: Lonicera oiwakensis Hayata): Sie ist in Russland, im Iran, in Kasachstan, Kirgisistan, Tadschikistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, im nordwestlichen Indien, in der Mongolei, in der Inneren Mongolei, in Tibet, Taiwan und in den chinesischen Provinzen Gansu, westlichen Hebei, Ningxia, Qinghai, Shanxi sowie Xinjiang und vielleicht Henan weitverbreitet.[7][5]
  • Lonicera minutifolia Kitam.: Die Heimat ist Nepal.
  • Lonicera modesta Rehder: Sie gedeiht in Höhenlagen von 500 bis 1700 Metern in den chinesischen Provinzen Anhui, südöstlichen Gansu, westlichen Henan, Hubei, Hunan, Jiangxi, südlichen Shaanxi, Zhejiang und vielleicht in Fujian.[5]
  • Lonicera mucronata Rehder: Sie gedeiht in Höhenlagen von 800 bis 1500 Metern nur in den chinesischen Provinzen Hubei sowie Sichuan.[5]
  • Lonicera nervosa Maxim.: Sie gedeiht in Höhenlagen von 2100 bis 4000 Metern in den nordwestlichen chinesischen Provinzen Gansu, westliches Henan, Ningxia, Qinghai, Shaanxi, südliches Shanxi sowie Sichuan.[5]
  • Schwarze Heckenkirsche (Lonicera nigra L., Syn.: Lonicera acrophila H.Lév., Lonicera barbinervis Kom., Lonicera decipiens Hook. f. & Thomson, Lonicera lanceolata Wall.): Sie ist in Europa, Indien, Bhutan, Nepal, Korea, in Tibet und in den chinesischen Provinzen westliches Anhui, nordöstliches Guizhou, westliches Hubei, Jilin, Sichuan sowie Yunnan weitverbreitet.[5]
  • Lonicera nummulariifolia Jaub. & Spach: Sie kommt in Griechenland, in Kreta, in der Türkei, in Syrien, im Libanon und in Libyen vor.[6]
  • Lonicera oblata K.S.Hao ex P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang: Dieser Endemit gedeiht an steinigen Hängen in Höhenlagen von etwa 1200 Metern nur in Neiqiu in der chinesischen Provinz Hebei.[5]
  • Lonicera oreodoxa Harry Sm. ex Rehder: Sie gedeiht nur in größeren Höhenlagen zwischen 4700 und 4800 Metern nur im nördlichen Sichuan.[5]
  • Lonicera pallasii Ledeb. (Syn.: Lonicera caerulea var. pallasii (Ledeb.) Cinovskis): Sie ist vom südöstlichen Schweden, Estland sowie Lettland und in Russland bis Sibirien verbreitet.[7]
  • Waldgeißblatt (Lonicera periclymenum L.): Sie ist in Südwest-, West- und Mitteleuropa sowie in Marokko verbreitet.[10]
  • Lonicera pilosa Willd. ex Kunth: Sie wurde aus Mexiko erstbeschrieben.
  • Lonicera praeflorens Batalin: Sie ist China, Korea, Japan und in Russlands Fernen Osten verbreitet.[7]
  • Lonicera prolifera (Kirchner) Booth ex Rehder: Sie wurde aus Nordamerika beschrieben.
  • Lonicera pyrenaica L.: Es gibt zwei Unterarten:
    • Lonicera pyrenaica subsp. majoricensis (Gand.) Browicz: Dieser Endemit kommt nur auf Mallorca vor.[6]
    • Lonicera pyrenaica L. subsp. pyrenaica: Sie kommt in Spanien, Andorra, Frankreich und in Marokko vor.[6]
  • Lonicera retusa Franch. (Syn.: Lonicera kachkarovii (Batalin) Rehder, Lonicera limprichtii Pax & K.Hoffmann, Lonicera orientalis var. kachkarovii Batalin): Sie gedeiht in Höhenlagen von 2000 bis 3300 Metern in den chinesischen Provinzen südliches Gansu, südliches Shaanxi, südwestliches Shanxi sowie westliches Sichuan.[5]
  • Lonicera rupicola Hook. f. & Thomson (Syn.: Lonicera thibetica Bureau & Franchet, Lonicera syringantha Maxim., Lonicera codonantha Rehder, Lonicera syringantha var. minor Maxim., Lonicera wolfii (Rehder) K.S.Hao, Lonicera minuta Batalin): Dieser meist laubabwerfende Strauch kommt in China, Bhutan, Nepal und Indien vor.
  • Lonicera ruprechtiana Regel (Syn.: Caprifolium ruprechtianum (Regel) Kuntze, Lonicera brevisepala P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang, Lonicera chrysantha var. subtomentosa (Ruprecht) Maxim., Lonicera ruprechtiana var. lanceolata Skvortsov, Lonicera ruprechtiana var. xanthocarpa Zabel, Xylosteon gibbiflorum Ruprecht & Maxim. var. subtomentosum Ruprecht): Dieser laubabwerfende Strauch kommt in Heilongjiang, Jilin, Liaoning und im nördlichen Korea sowie Russland vor.[5]
  • Lonicera semenovii Regel: Sie kommt in Afghanistan, Iran, Kasachstan, Kirgisistan, Kaschmir, Tibet und Xinjiang vor.
  • Lonicera sempervirens L.: Die Heimat ist Kanada und die USA.[7]
  • Lonicera setifera Franch.: Sie kommt in Indien, Tibet und in den chinesischen Provinzen Sichuan sowie Yunnan vor.[5]
  • Lonicera similis Hemsl. (Syn.: Caprifolium simile (Hemsl.) Kuntze, Lonicera buchananii Lace, Lonicera delavayi Franchet, Lonicera macrantha var. biflora Collett & Hemsl., Lonicera macrantha var. heterotricha P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang, Lonicera macranthoides Handel-Mazzetti var. heterotricha (P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang) B.K.Zhou, Lonicera omeiensis (P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang) B.K.Zhou, Lonicera similis var. delavayi (Franchet) Rehder, Lonicera similis var. omeiensis P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang): Sie kommt in China und Myanmar vor.
  • Lonicera spinosa Jacq. ex Walp. (Syn.: Lonicera albertii Regel): Dieser laubabwerfende Strauch ist in Xinjiang, Tibet, Afghanistan, Indien, Kaschmir, Kasachstan, Kirgisistan und Tadschikistan verbreitet.
  • Lonicera splendida Boiss.: Sie kommt in Spanien vor.[6]
  • Lonicera stabiana Pasq.: Sie kommt in Italien vor.[6]
  • Lonicera stephanocarpa Franch.: Sie ist in den chinesischen Provinzen Gansu, Ningxia, Shaanxi und Sichuan verbreitet.[7]
  • Lonicera subaequalis Rehder (Syn.: Lonicera carnosifolia C.Y.Wu ex P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang): Diese Liane gedeiht an schattigen in Bergwäldern in Höhenlagen von 1500 bis 2500 Metern in den chinesischen Provinzen Guizhou und Sichuan.
  • Lonicera subhispida Nakai: Sie ist in Korea, Russland und China verbreitet.
  • Lonicera subspicata Hook. & Arn.: Die Heimat ist Kalifornien.[7]
  • Fliederblütige Heckenkirsche (Lonicera syringantha Maxim., Syn.: Lonicera rupicola subsp. syringantha (Maxim.) Zabel): Die Heimat ist Bhutan und China.[7]
  • Lonicera tangutica Maxim.: Die Heimat ist Bhutan, Nepal, Sikkim und China.
  • Tataren-Heckenkirsche (Lonicera tatarica L.): Das Verbreitungsgebiet reicht vom osteuropäischen Russland bis Mittelasien, Sibirien und China.[7]
  • Lonicera tatarinowii Maxim. (Syn.: Lonicera leptantha Rehder, Lonicera tatarinowii var. leptantha (Rehder) Nakai.): Sie gedeiht in Höhenlagen von 400 bis 1800 Metern in den chinesischen Provinzen nordwestlichen Hebei, Liaoning, östliches Shandong und vielleicht Henan sowie in der Inneren Mongolei.[5]
  • Lonicera tomentella Hook. f. & Thomson: Die Heimat ist Bhutan, Nepal, Sikkim und China (Xizang, Yunnan).[7]
  • Lonicera tragophylla Hemsl. (Syn.: Lonicera harmsii Graebner): Sie gedeiht in Höhenlagen von meist 1000 bis 2000 (700 bis 3000 Metern in den chinesischen Provinzen Anhui, südliches Gansu, nördliches Guizhou, südwestliches Hebei, nordwestliches Henan, Hubei, südliches Ningxia, Shaanxi, südliches Shanxi, Sichuan sowie Zhejiang).[5]
  • Lonicera trichosantha Bureau & Franch.: Die Heimat ist China.[7]
  • Lonicera tubuliflora Rehder: Sie gedeiht in Höhenlagen von 2100 bis 3100 Metern nur in Sichuan.[5]
  • Lonicera virgultorum W.W.Sm.: Sie kommt in nur in Yunnan vor.[5]
  • Lonicera webbiana Wall. ex DC. (Syn.: Lonicera adenophora Franch., Lonicera alpigena var. phaeantha Rehder, Lonicera hemsleyana (Kuntze) Rehder, Lonicera heteroloba Batalin, Lonicera heterophylla Decaisne, Lonicera heterophylla var. karelinii (Bunge ex Kirilov) Rehder, Lonicera jilongensis P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang, Lonicera karelinii Bunge ex Kirilov, Lonicera mupinensis Rehder, Lonicera perulata Rehder, Lonicera tatsienensis Franch., Lonicera webbiana var. lanpingensis Y.C.Tang, Lonicera webbiana var. mupinensis (Rehder) P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wan): Sie ist Afghanistan, Pakistan, Indien, Kaschmir, Nepal, Bhutan, Myanmar, Tibet und in den chinesischen Provinzen, südliches Gansu, westliches Hubei, Jiangxi, südliches Ningxia, östliches Qinghai, südliches Shaanxi, Shanxi, Sichuan sowie nordwestliches Yunnan weitverbreitet.[7][5]
  • Rote Heckenkirsche (Lonicera xylosteum L.): Sie ist in Eurasien weitverbreitet.
  • Lonicera yunnanensis Franch. (Syn.: Lonicera ciliosissima C.Y.Wu ex P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang, Lonicera mairei H.Lév., Lonicera yunnanensis var. linearifolia C.Y.Wu ex X.W.Li, Lonicera yunnanensis var. tenuis Rehder): Sie gedeiht in Höhenlagen von 1700 bis 3000 Metern nur in den chinesischen Provinzen südwestliches Sichuan sowie nordwestliches Yunnan.[5]

Nutzung

Einige Arten und Sorten werden als Zierpflanzen in Parks und Gärten verwendet.

Häufig angepflanzte Arten und Hybriden sind:

  • Immergrünes Geißblatt (Lonicera acuminata Wall.)
  • Lonicera ciliosa (Pursh) Poir. ex DC. (orangeblühende Liane)
  • Maibeere (Lonicera caerulea var. kamtschatica Sevast., Syn.: Lonicera kamtschatica (Sevast.) Pojark.)
  • Winter-Heckenkirsche (Lonicera fragrantissima Lindl. & Paxton): Sie ist in China beheimatet. (weißblühender, sommergrüner Strauch)
  • Lonicera ×heckrottii Osborn (kompakt wachsende Liane)
  • Immergrüne Kriech-Heckenkirsche (Lonicera ligustrina var. pileata (Oliv.) Franchet, Syn.: Lonicera pileata Oliv.) (niedriger immergrüner Strauch)
  • Heckenmyrte (Lonicera ligustrina var. yunnanensis (Franch.) P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang, Syn.: Lonicera nitida E.H.Wilson)
  • Goldgeißblatt (Lonicera ×tellmanniana Magyar ex H.L.Späth) (üppig gelborangeblühend, kompakt wachsende Kletterpflanze)

Quellen

Literatur

  • Qiner Yang, Sven Landrein, Joanna Osborne, Renata Borosova: Caprifoliaceae. In: Wu Zheng-yi, Peter H. Raven, Deyuan Hong (Hrsg.): Flora of China. Volume 23: Acoraceae through Cyperaceae. Science Press/Missouri Botanical Garden Press, Beijing/St. Louis 2010, ISBN 978-1-930723-99-3, Lonicera, S. 620–640 (englisch, online). (Abschnitte Beschreibung, Systematik und Verbreitung)
  • Rubina Akhtar Rafiq: Flora of Pakistan 174: Caprifoliaceae. Department of Botany, University of Karachi, Karachi 1986, S. 11–32 (http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=5&taxon_id=118877 online).
  • Harry Garms: Pflanzen und Tiere Europas. Taschenbuchausgabe. dtv, München 1969, ISBN 3-423-03013-5.
  • Hermann Meusel, Rudolf Schubert (Hrsg.): Exkursionsflora für die Gebiete der DDR und der BRD. Begründet von Werner Rothmaler. 7. („1.“) stark bearbeitete und ergänzte Auflage. Band 2: Gefäßpflanzen, Volk und Wissen, Berlin 1972.
  • Kazimierz Browicz: Lonicera L. In: T. G. Tutin, V. H. Heywood, N. A. Burges, D. M. Moore, D. H. Valentine, S. M. Walters, D. A. Webb (Hrsg.): Flora Europaea. Volume 4: Plantaginaceae to Compositae (and Rubiaceae). Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1976, ISBN 0-521-08717-1, S. 46–48 (englisch).

Einzelnachweise

  1. Carl von Linné: Species Plantarum. Band 1, Lars Salvius, Stockholm 1753, S. 173 (http://vorlage_digitalisat.test/1%3Dhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.biodiversitylibrary.org%2Fopenurl%3Fpid%3Dtitle%3A669%26volume%3D1%26issue%3D%26spage%3D173%26date%3D1753~GB%3D~IA%3D~MDZ%3D%0A~SZ%3D~doppelseitig%3D~LT%3D~PUR%3D).
  2. Nathaniel Lord Britton, Addison Brown: An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions: from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia, and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102d meridian. 2. Auflage, Band 3, C. Scribner's sons, New York 1913, S. 277. http://vorlage_digitalisat.test/1%3Dhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.biodiversitylibrary.org%2Fopenurl%3Fpid%3Dtitle%3A940%26volume%3D3%26issue%3D%26spage%3D277%26date%3D1913~GB%3D~IA%3D~MDZ%3D%0A~SZ%3D~doppelseitig%3D~LT%3D~PUR%3D
  3. Lonicera bei Tropicos.org. Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis.
  4. Lotte Burkhardt: Verzeichnis eponymischer Pflanzennamen. Erweiterte Edition. Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin, Freie Universität Berlin Berlin 2018. [1]
  5. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw Qiner Yang, Sven Landrein, Joanna Osborne, Renata Borosova: Caprifoliaceae. In: Wu Zheng-yi, Peter H. Raven, Deyuan Hong (Hrsg.): Flora of China. Volume 23: Acoraceae through Cyperaceae. Science Press/Missouri Botanical Garden Press, Beijing/St. Louis 2010, ISBN 978-1-930723-99-3, Lonicera, S. 620–640 (englisch, online).
  6. a b c d e f g h i j E. von Raab-Straube (2017+): Caprifoliaceae. – In: Euro+Med Plantbase - the information resource for Euro-Mediterranean plant diversity. Datenblatt Caprifoliaceae
  7. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Lonicera im Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN), USDA, ARS, National Genetic Resources Program. National Germplasm Resources Laboratory, Beltsville, Maryland.
  8. a b Werner Greuter, Hervé-Maurice Burdet, Gilbert Long (Hrsg.): Med-Checklist. A critical inventory of vascular plants of the circum-mediterranean countries. Vol. 1: Pteridophyta (ed. 2), Gymnospermae, Dicotyledones (Acanthaceae – Cneoraceae). Conservatoire et Jardin Botanique, Genève 1984, ISBN 2-8277-0151-0 (online).
  9. a b Deutscher Name nach Andreas Roloff, Andreas Bärtels: Flora der Gehölze. Bestimmung, Eigenschaften und Verwendung. 3., korrigierte Auflage. Eugen Ulmer, Stuttgart (Hohenheim) 2008, ISBN 978-3-8001-5614-6, S. 376–393.
  10. T. Ruíz Téllez, Juan Antonio Devesa: Lonicera. In: Santiago Castroviejo, Juan Antonio Devesa, Raul Gonzalo, Alberto Herrero (Hrsg.): Flora Ibérica. Plantas Vasculares de la Península Ibérica e Islas Baleares. Vol. XV. Rubiaceae – Dipsacaceae. Real Jardín Botánico, CSIC, Madrid 2007, ISBN 978-84-00-08567-4, S. 168–190 (floraiberica.es [PDF]).

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Heckenkirschen: Brief Summary ( German )

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Die Heckenkirschen und Geißblätter (Lonicera) sind eine Pflanzengattung in der Familie der Geißblattgewächse (Caprifoliaceae). Die etwa 180 Arten sind auf der Nordhalbkugel weitverbreitet.

Als „Heckenkirschen“ werden vor allem die strauchig wachsenden Arten bezeichnet, bei denen die Blüten paarweise stehen. Die aus einem Blütenpaar hervorgehenden Beeren sind bei manchen Arten zu einer Doppelbeere verwachsen (diese Arten heißen auch Doppelbeere). Die Lianen (mit mehrblütigen Blütenständen) werden dagegen meist als „Geißblatt“, umgangssprachlich auch als Jelängerjelieber, bezeichnet.

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Anaraf ( Kabyle )

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Anaraf (Isem usnan: Lonicera) d tawsit n yemɣi seg twacult n caprifoliaceae Suqel. Carl Von Linné d amdan amezwaru i yuran fell-as deg useggas n 1753.

Tilmas

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Chèvrefeuille des Baléares - Anaraf[1]
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Chèvrefeuille d'Étrurie - Anaraf

Ismawen

  • Isem-is s latinit: Lonicera implexa neɣ Lonicera etrusca
  • Isem-is s tefransist: Chèvrefeuille des Baléares neɣ Chèvrefeuille d'Étrurie
  • Ismawen-is nniḍen s teqbaylit: Waraf[2], Sselṭan n lɣaba
  • Ismawen-is nniḍen s tmaziɣt:

Isseqdac

Tiwelhiwin

  1. 'Amawal n Yemɣan - Lexique de plantes ' - Chabane Mohand u Remdane - Mémoire d'études en Agronomie - Université de Tizi ouzou (non daté ~années 80)
  2. 'Plantes médicinales de Kabylie' - Mohand Aïd Youssef - Ibis Press -Paris 2006
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Anaraf: Brief Summary ( Kabyle )

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Anaraf (Isem usnan: Lonicera) d tawsit n yemɣi seg twacult n caprifoliaceae Suqel. Carl Von Linné d amdan amezwaru i yuran fell-as deg useggas n 1753.

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Cabrifuèlh ( Occitan (post 1500) )

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 src=
Es la nuèch que lo cabrifuèlh (aicí Lonicera periclymenum exala mai lo seu parfum, atrach de luènh los parpalhons que venon fecondar las flors.
 src=
lo Limenitis reducta es un dels parpalhons de jorn que la tòra manja la planta
 src=
Avelanièr desformat per l'enlaçament d'un cabrifuèlh

Los cabrifuèlhs (genre Lonicera) son d'arbrilhon o de lianas de la familha dels caprifoliacèas.

Lo cabrifuèlh a de fuèlhas dentadas buta a las aurièras de las sèlvas e talvèras.

Diversitat

Se conéis gaireben 200 espècias dins las regions temperadas de l'emisfèri nòrd e las regions subtropicalas.

L'abitat de gaireben totas las espècias de cabrifuèlhas, es l'aurièra de las sèlvas e per extension los randls e talveras.

Planta d'ornament

Los cabrifuèlhs, autoctons o exotics son frequentament utilizats per formar de randals o parets decoratius

Emplaçament

Plan solelh fins a ombre leugièra.

Multiplicacion e talha

Per empèut de fusta miègdur en estiu.
Los vièlhs plants podon èsser regeneradas le rebatent al sol.
L'espècia supòrta la talha, que permet de l'empachar de desbordar de l'espaci disponible.

Espècias del genre Lonicera

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tòra manjant una fuèlha de cabrifuèlh

Lo malhum GRIN recensa 139 espècias de Lonicera[1]. Per eFloras, i a près 180 espècas.



  • Flora de China, segon eFloras
: son presentas 57 espècias, que 23 endemicas.
    • Lonicera acuminata Wallich in Roxburgh, 1824.
    • Lonicera angustifolia Wallich ex Candolle, 1830.
    • Lonicera alpigena complexe d'espèces
    • Lonicera bournei Hemsley, 1888.
    • Lonicera caerulea Linnaeus, Chèvrefeuille bleu
    • Lonicera calcarata Hemsley, 1900.
    • Lonicera chrysantha Turczaninow ex Ledebour, 1844.
    • Lonicera crassifolia Batalin, 1892.
    • Lonicera elisae Franchet, 1883.
    • Lonicera ferdinandi Franchet, 1883.
    • Lonicera ferruginea Rehder in Sargent, 1902.
    • Lonicera fragrantissima Lindley & Paxton in Paxton, 1852, Chèvre feuille d'hiver
    • Lonicera gynochlamydea Hemsley, 1888
    • Lonicera hildebrandiana Collett & Hemsley, 1891
    • Lonicera hispida species complex
    • Lonicera humilis Karelin & Kirilov, 1842.
    • Lonicera hypoleuca Decaisne in Jacquemont, 1841.
    • Lonicera japonica Thunberg in Murray, Syst. Veg., ed. 14. 216. 1784,
    • Lonicera ligustrina Wallich in Roxburgh, 1824.
      • Lonicera ligustrina var. yunnanensis Franchet, 1896.=Lonicera nitida E. H. Wilson, Gard. Chron. ser. 3, 50:102. 1911 (d'après GRIN) =L. pileata Oliver f. yunnanensis (Franchet) Rehder
      • Lonicera ligustrina var. pileata (Oliver) Franchet, 1896=Lonicera pileata Oliver, 1887,
      • Lonicera ligustrina var. ligustrina
    • Lonicera longiflora (Lindley) Candolle, 1830.
    • Lonicera maackii (Ruprecht) Maximowicz, 1859,
    • Lonicera macrantha complèxe d'espècias
    • Lonicera maximowiczii complèxe d'espècias
    • Lonicera microphylla Willdenow ex Schultes, 1819.
    • Lonicera mucronata Rehder, 1903.
    • Lonicera modesta Rehder in Sargent, 1907.
    • Lonicera nigra complèxe d'espècias
    • Lonicera praeflorens Batalin, 1892.
    • Lonicera rupicola J. D. Hooker & Thomson, 1858
    • Lonicera ruprechtiana Regel, 1869.
    • Lonicera setifera Franchet, 1896.
    • Lonicera spinosa (Decaisne) Jacquemont ex Walpers, 1843.
    • Lonicera subaequalis Rehder, 1903.
    • Lonicera tatarica Linnaeus, 1753.
    • Lonicera tangutica complèxe d'espècias
    • Lonicera tomentella J. D. Hooker & Thomson, 1858.
    • Lonicera tragophylla Hemsley, 1888.
    • Lonicera trichosantha Bureau & Franchet, 1891.
    • Lonicera tubuliflora Rehder in Sargent, 1911
    • Lonicera yunnanensis Franchet, 1896.

  • Flora americana

Vejatz tanben

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Cabrifuèlh: Brief Summary ( Occitan (post 1500) )

provided by wikipedia emerging languages
 src= Es la nuèch que lo cabrifuèlh (aicí Lonicera periclymenum exala mai lo seu parfum, atrach de luènh los parpalhons que venon fecondar las flors.  src= lo Limenitis reducta es un dels parpalhons de jorn que la tòra manja la planta  src= Avelanièr desformat per l'enlaçament d'un cabrifuèlh

Los cabrifuèlhs (genre Lonicera) son d'arbrilhon o de lianas de la familha dels caprifoliacèas.

Lo cabrifuèlh a de fuèlhas dentadas buta a las aurièras de las sèlvas e talvèras.

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Haagekäärsen ( North Frisian )

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Amrum.pngTekst üüb Öömrang

Haagekäärsen (Lonicera) san en plaantenskööl uun det famile faan a Siigbleedplaanten (Caprifoliaceae). Diar jaft at son 180 slacher faan üüb a nuurdelk eerdheleft.

Enkelt slacher

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Haagekäärsen: Brief Summary ( North Frisian )

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Haagekäärsen (Lonicera) san en plaantenskööl uun det famile faan a Siigbleedplaanten (Caprifoliaceae). Diar jaft at son 180 slacher faan üüb a nuurdelk eerdheleft.

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Iadh-shlat ( Scottish Gaelic )

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Iadh-shlat

Iadh-shlat neo iath-shlat (lonicera): luibh le blàthan cùbhraidh air a bhios a' direadh.

Ainmean eile

Seo cuid dhen ainmean a tha air iadh-shlat:

  • caora-mheanglain
  • cas-fa-chrann
  • dealbh-a’-chrainn
  • deoghalag, deolag, deolagan neo deothlag
  • fàileantan
  • feineag
  • fèithlean
  • leum-chrann
  • lus na croise
  • lus-a'-chroinn
  • lus-na-meala
  • uillean neo uilleann
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Iadh-shlat: Brief Summary ( Scottish Gaelic )

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Iadh-shlat neo iath-shlat (lonicera): luibh le blàthan cùbhraidh air a bhios a' direadh.

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Kaprifolio ( Ido )

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Kaprifolio esas lonicera caprifolium, arboreto klimera, sarmentoza, di qua la flori odoras.

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Küz'mäine pu ( Vepsian )

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Küz'mäine pu (latin.: Lonicera) om penzhiden heim. Oiktad, kerdujad vai ujelijad kazmused. Mülütadas Küz'mäižpuižed-sugukundha. Erasiden erikoiden plodud oma södabad, no äjiden erikoiden plodud oma travijad.

Leviganduz

Heim om levitadud Pohjoižen mapoliškon äjiš rajoniš. Erikoiden tobj pala kazvab Gimalajas i Päivnouzmaižes Azijas. Venämas om 14 mecerikod, voib vastata mecanröunoiš i sarikoiš.

Ümbrikirjutand

Järedahkod änikod oleldas vauktan, ruskedvauvhan, pakuižen i sinivauvhan mujun. Änikod i sid' plodud kazdas paroil lehtesiden alusišpäi vai barban lopus. Änikon vencudes om viž pölükäd i pit'kahk petkloine. Plodud kazdas ühthe paksus, kuti ülälehtesed-ki (erasil erikoil kaik lehtesed). Venäman erikod änikoitas semendkun lopuspäi kezakun keskhesai.

Kävutand

Küz'mäižen pun äi erikod ištutadas da kazvatadas saduiš čomikš dekorativižikš penzhikš. Ned sättudas gruppiden, allejoiden i kezapavil'joniden täht. Erased erikod oma medenkandajad. Kova pumaterial kožub sädamha penid tegesid.

Sädihe severz'-se kümnikoid dekorativižid sortuid södabidenke marjoidenke sinižen (kamčatižen) i södaban (Lonicera edulis) küz'mäižiden puiden alusel.

Valitud erikod

Kaik om 180 küz'mäižen pun erikod, niiden keskes enamba sadad om dokumentiruidud.

  • Lonicera alpigena — Al'pine küz'mäine pu
  • Lonicera caeruleaSinine küz'mäine pu
  • Lonicera caprifolium — Kaprifol', Hajukaz küz'mäine pu (heimon tipine erik)
  • Lonicera caucasica — Kavkazine küz'mäine pu
  • Lonicera maximowiczii — Maksimovičun küz'mäine pu
  • Lonicera tatarica — Tatarine küz'mäine pu
  • Lonicera xylosteum — Järgeline küz'mäine pu, Küz'mäine mecpu

Homaičendad

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Küz'mäine pu: Brief Summary ( Vepsian )

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Küz'mäine pu (latin.: Lonicera) om penzhiden heim. Oiktad, kerdujad vai ujelijad kazmused. Mülütadas Küz'mäižpuižed-sugukundha. Erasiden erikoiden plodud oma södabad, no äjiden erikoiden plodud oma travijad.

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Papsûger (skaai) ( Western Frisian )

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Papsûger (Lonicera), of ek wol kamperfoelje, is in skaai fan klimplanten dat yn Jeropa, Sina, noardeastlik Aazje en yn de Feriene Steaten foarkomt. De plant heart ta de famylje fan de papsûgers (Caprifoliaceae). Hy wynt him om oare planten en beammen hinne.

De blommen hawwe benammen jûns in sterke swiete rook. Se binne der in ferskate kleuren, in soad foarkommend is de rôze-reade en giel-wite foarm. Kamperfoelje is frij maklik te fermearderjen út simmer- of winterstek. Yn it Frysk wurdt dit planteskaai behalven papsûgers ek wol de kamperfoelje, klapsûgers, stjonkblommen of tateblommen neamd. It skaai krige syn Latynske namme fan de Dútske natuerhistorikus Johann Lonitzer.

Klimmende soarten
European honeysuckle 800.jpg
Wintergriene strûken
  • Lonicera fragrantissima
  • Lonicera nitida - Sineeske kamperfoelje
  • Lonicera pileata
  • Lonicera korolkowii
  • Lonicera ledebourii
  • Lonicera maackii
  • Lonicera morrowii
  • Lonicera tatarica
  • Lonicera xylosteum - reade papsûger
  • Lonicera syringantha (var. wolfii)
  • Lonicera ×purpusii (krusing standishii mei fragrantissima

Sjoch ek

List fan planten

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Papsûger (skaai): Brief Summary ( Western Frisian )

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Papsûger (Lonicera), of ek wol kamperfoelje, is in skaai fan klimplanten dat yn Jeropa, Sina, noardeastlik Aazje en yn de Feriene Steaten foarkomt. De plant heart ta de famylje fan de papsûgers (Caprifoliaceae). Hy wynt him om oare planten en beammen hinne.

De blommen hawwe benammen jûns in sterke swiete rook. Se binne der in ferskate kleuren, in soad foarkommend is de rôze-reade en giel-wite foarm. Kamperfoelje is frij maklik te fermearderjen út simmer- of winterstek. Yn it Frysk wurdt dit planteskaai behalven papsûgers ek wol de kamperfoelje, klapsûgers, stjonkblommen of tateblommen neamd. It skaai krige syn Latynske namme fan de Dútske natuerhistorikus Johann Lonitzer.

Klimmende soarten Lonicera caprifolium - gewoane kamperfoelje Lonicera japonica Lonicera periclymenum - wylde kamperfoelje of papsûger Lonicera sempervirens Lonicera ×heckrotti (krusing americana mei sempervirens) European honeysuckle 800.jpg Wintergriene strûken Lonicera fragrantissima Lonicera nitida - Sineeske kamperfoelje Lonicera pileata Lonicera korolkowii Lonicera ledebourii Lonicera maackii Lonicera morrowii Lonicera tatarica Lonicera xylosteum - reade papsûger Lonicera syringantha (var. wolfii) Lonicera ×purpusii (krusing standishii mei fragrantissima
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Shilvi ( Uzbek )

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Shilvi, uchqat — shilvidoshlar oilasiga mansub butalar turkumi. 30 dan ortiq turi maʼlum. Oʻzbekistonda shahrining xushboʻy Sh., tangabarg Sh., tatar Sh.si, maydagul Sh., Korolkov Sh.si, nozik Sh., maydabarg Sh., olga Sh.si, altman Sh.si va boshqalar turlari uchraydi. Boʻyi 1,5 m dan 4,5 m gacha, barglari keng tuxumsimon, baʼzilariniki uzun tuxumsimon, gullari ikki jinsli, oq, sargʻish, qizil, pushti, aprel—may oylarida gullab, avg .—sent.da urugʻlaydi. Mevasi sersuv, rezavor. Xushboʻy Sh., tatar Sh.si, maydagul Sh. manzarali oʻsimlik sifatida oʻstiriladi. shahrining boshqa koʻplab turlari togʻ daralari, daryo boʻylari, togʻ yonbagʻirlarida butazorlar hosil qilib, daraxtzorlar orasida, adirlarda oʻsadi. Sovuqqa chidamsiz. Dasht zonalarida ekinzorlarni himoya qilish, koʻkalamzorlar, yashil devorlar hosil qilishda foydalaniladi. Yogʻochi qattiq va mustahkam boʻlganligi tufayli duradgorlik va mebelsozlikda ishlatiladi.

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Vikipediya mualliflari va muharrirlari

Sukerjennigjen ( Nds Nl )

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 src=
Sukerjennigjen
 src=
Oranje sukerjennigjen

Sukerjennigjen of kamperfoelie (Latien: Lonicera) is een geslach van slingerplaanteen en struken dat in Europa, China, Noordoost-Azië en in de Amerika veurkump. 't Geslach beheurt tot de kamperfoeliefemilie (Caprifoliaceae). De plaanten greuien um aandere plaanten en bomen hinne.

De bloemen hemmen veural 's avens een starke zeute geur. Ze bin der in verschillende kleuren, de roze-rooie en geel-witte koemen 't meest veur. De plaante ku-j makkelijk vermeerderen uut zoemer- of wienterstekken.

Woordbetekenisse

De naam sukerjennigjen kump werschienlijk deurdat de geur 's avens beheurlijk zeut en stark is, en deurdat de bloemen een eetbaore zeute nectar anmaken. A-j de stengel van 't sukerjennigjen breken dan ku-j de zeute geur oek goed ruken.

't Sukerjennigjen, oek wè kamperfoelie eneumd, wönnen in sommigen dialekken oek wè geitenblad of geitenklever eneumd. Dat kump overene mit 't Franse 'chèvre-feuille', 't Duutse 'Geißblatt' en 't Italiaanse 'caprifoglio'. De naam kamperfoelie is een verbastering van de Italiaanse vorm.

De botanische naam Lonicera kump van de achternaam van de Duutse plaantkundige Adam Lonitzer.

Klimmende soorten

Greunblievende struken

  • Lonicera fragrantissima
  • Lonicera nitida - 't Chinese sukerjennigjen
  • Lonicera pileata
  • Lonicera korolkowii
  • Lonicera ledebourii
  • Lonicera maackii
  • Lonicera morrowii
  • Lonicera tatarica
  • Lonicera xylosteum - 't rooie sukerjennigjen
  • Lonicera syringantha
  • Lonicera ×purpusii (krusing Lonicera standishii × Lonicera fragrantissima)

Nedersaksisch

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Sukerjennigjen: Brief Summary ( Nds Nl )

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 src= Sukerjennigjen  src= Oranje sukerjennigjen

Sukerjennigjen of kamperfoelie (Latien: Lonicera) is een geslach van slingerplaanteen en struken dat in Europa, China, Noordoost-Azië en in de Amerika veurkump. 't Geslach beheurt tot de kamperfoeliefemilie (Caprifoliaceae). De plaanten greuien um aandere plaanten en bomen hinne.

De bloemen hemmen veural 's avens een starke zeute geur. Ze bin der in verschillende kleuren, de roze-rooie en geel-witte koemen 't meest veur. De plaante ku-j makkelijk vermeerderen uut zoemer- of wienterstekken.

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Анамска рака ( Macedonian )

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Анамска рака (науч. Lonicera, syn. Caprifolium Mill.) — род грмушки или повивни ползавци од фамилијата анамски раце (Caprifoliaceae), автохтони на северната полутопка. Постојат околу 180 вида, од кои 100 во Кина и по 20 во Европа, Индија и Северна Америка. Општопознати видови се обичната (L. periclymenum), јапонската (L. japonica, наречена и „кинеска“) и зимзелената анамска рака (L. sempervirens). Некои од нив привлекуваат колибрија, особено зимзелената и портокаловата анамска рака (L. ciliosa).

Латинскиот назив Lonicera доаѓа од германскиот ренесансен ботаничар Адам Лоницер (1528-1586).

Опис

Голем дел од видовите анамски раце се мразоотпорни повивни растенија, а остатокот се грмушести. Неколку вида се мошне кревки, па можат да се одгледуваат на отворено само во суптропски подрачја. Меѓу овие кревки видови се вбројуваат џиновската бурманска анамска рака {L. hildebrandiana} од подножјето на Хималаите и етрурската анамска рака (L. etrusca) од Средоземјето. Листови се спротиставени, просто-јајцевидни, со должина од 1–10 см. Највеќето видови се листопадни, но има и зимзелени. Многу од нив имаат по чифт двострано симетрични цветови со опоен мирис и даваат сладок јадлив нектар. Стеблата се тенки, свитливи и мошне влакнести по структура, па затоа наоѓаат традиционална примена како врзиво и текстилен материјал. Плодот може да биде црвена, сина или црна, округла или издолжена бобинка со по неколку семки. Кај највеќето видови, бобинките се благо отровни, но неколку вида (особено сината анамска рака, L. caerulea) имаат јадливи бобинки што се одгледуваат за исхрана. Бобинките кај речиси сите видови се привлечни за животните, кои така ги изнесуваат вон природниот ареал, при што стануваат инвазивни растенија. Такви се . Доста видови се храна за ларвите на разни видови пеперутки.

Инвазивни видови

Неколку вида анамска рака станале инвазивни откако биле доведени на места вон матичното подрачје, што е особено случај со Нов Зеланд и САД. За инвазивни се сметаат јапонската (L. japonica) и Маковата (L. maackii), Мороовата (L. morrowii) и татарската анамска рака (L. tatarica).

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Листови и цветови на анамската рака

Одгледување

Анамските раце се ценети како градинарски растенија, бидејќи ги прекриваат и украсуваат оградите и помалку привлечните делови од градбите. Лете имат голем број трубести цветови со мошне привлечен мирис. Поиздржливите ползечки видови бараат корењата да им бидат во сенка, цветните делови на сонце. Видот и сортата треба да се одбира со внимание, бидејќи некои знаат да значајно се прошират и да станат тешки за справување.[1]

Некои висдови

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Јапонска анамска рака (L. japonica)
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Портокалова анамска рака (L. ciliosa)
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Плод на јапонската анамска рака
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Зимзелена анамска рака (L. sempervirens)
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Татарска анамска рака (L. tatarica)
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Козја анамска рака (L.caprifolium)

Lonicera acuminata
Lonicera albiflora — бела анамска рака
Lonicera alpigena — планинска анамска рака
Lonicera altmannii
Lonicera angustifolia
Lonicera anisocalyx
Lonicera arborea
Lonicera arizonica — аризонска анамска рака
Lonicera biflora
Lonicera bournei
Lonicera brevisepala
Lonicera buchananii
Lonicera buddleioides
Lonicera caerulea — сина анамска рака
Lonicera calcarata
Lonicera calvescens
Lonicera canadensis — канадска анамска рака
Lonicera caprifolium — козја анамска рака (типски вид)
Lonicera carnosifolis
Lonicera cerviculata
Lonicera chrysantha — златна анамска рака
Lonicera ciliosa — портокалова анамска рака
Lonicera ciliosissima
Lonicera cinerea
Lonicera codonantha
Lonicera confusa
Lonicera conjugialis — виолетова анамска рака
Lonicera crassifolia
Lonicera cyanocarpa
Lonicera dasystyla — тонкинска анамска рака
Lonicera dioica — свитлива анамска рака
Lonicera elisae
Lonicera etrusca — етрурска анамска рака
Lonicera fargesii
Lonicera ferdinandii
Lonicera ferruginea
Lonicera flava — жолта анамска рака
Lonicera fragilis
Lonicera fragrantissima — зимска анамска рака
Lonicera fulvotomentosa
Lonicera glutinosa
Lonicera graebneri
Lonicera gynochlamydea
Lonicera × heckrottii — златнопламена анамска рака
Lonicera hellenica — грчка анамска рака
Lonicera hemsleyana
Lonicera heterophylla
Lonicera hildebrandiana — џиновска бурманска анамска рака
Lonicera hirsuta — влакнеста анамска рака
Lonicera hispida
Lonicera hispidula — розова анамска рака
Lonicera humilis
Lonicera hypoglauca
Lonicera hypoleuca
Lonicera implexa
Lonicera inconspicua
Lonicera inodora
Lonicera interrupta — чапаралска анамска рака
Lonicera involucrata — покривална анамска рака
Lonicera japonica — јапонска или кинеска анамска рака
Lonicera jilongensis
Lonicera kansuensis
Lonicera kawakamii
Lonicera korolkowii — синолистна анамска рака
Lonicera lanceolata
Lonicera ligustrina
Lonicera litangensis
Lonicera longiflora
Lonicera longituba
Lonicera maackii — Макова или амурска анамска рака
Lonicera macrantha
Lonicera macranthoides
Lonicera maximowiczii
Lonicera microphylla
Lonicera minuta
Lonicera minutifolia
Lonicera modesta
Lonicera morrowii — Морова анамска рака
Lonicera mucronata
Lonicera myrtillus
Lonicera nervosa
Lonicera nigra — црна анамска рака
Lonicera nitida — сјајна анамска рака
Lonicera nubium
Lonicera nummulariifolia
Lonicera oblata
Lonicera oblongifolia — долголистна анамска рака
Lonicera oiwakensis
Lonicera oreodoxa
Lonicera orientalis
Lonicera pampaninii
Lonicera paradoxa
Lonicera periclymenum — обична анамска рака
Lonicera pileata — капчеста анамска рака
Lonicera pilosa — мексиканска анамска рака
Lonicera praeflorens
Lonicera prostrata
Lonicera pyrenaica
Lonicera reticulata — мрежеста анамска рака
Lonicera retusa
Lonicera rhytidophylla
Lonicera rupicola
Lonicera ruprechtiana — манџурска анамска рака
Lonicera saccata
Lonicera schneideriana
Lonicera semenovii
Lonicera sempervirens — зимзелена анамска рака
Lonicera serreana
Lonicera setifera
Lonicera similis
Lonicera spinosa
Lonicera splendida
Lonicera standishii Стендишова анамска рака
Lonicera stephanocarpa
Lonicera subaequalis
Lonicera subhispida
Lonicera sublabiata
Lonicera subspicata јужна анамска рака
Lonicera szechuanica
Lonicera taipeiensis
Lonicera tangutica
Lonicera tatarica — татарска анамска рака
Lonicera tatarinowii
Lonicera tomentella
Lonicera tragophylla
Lonicera tricalysioides
Lonicera trichogyne
Lonicera trichosantha
Lonicera trichosepala
Lonicera tubuliflora
Lonicera utahensis — јутска анамска рака
Lonicera villosa — планинска влакнеста анамска рака
Lonicera virgultorum
Lonicera webbiana
Lonicera xylosteum — вистинска анамска рака
Lonicera yunnanensis

Наводи

  1. RHS A-Z encyclopedia of garden plants. United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. 2008. стр. 1136. ISBN 1405332964.

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Анамска рака: Brief Summary ( Macedonian )

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Анамска рака (науч. Lonicera, syn. Caprifolium Mill.) — род грмушки или повивни ползавци од фамилијата анамски раце (Caprifoliaceae), автохтони на северната полутопка. Постојат околу 180 вида, од кои 100 во Кина и по 20 во Европа, Индија и Северна Америка. Општопознати видови се обичната (L. periclymenum), јапонската (L. japonica, наречена и „кинеска“) и зимзелената анамска рака (L. sempervirens). Некои од нив привлекуваат колибрија, особено зимзелената и портокаловата анамска рака (L. ciliosa).

Латинскиот назив Lonicera доаѓа од германскиот ренесансен ботаничар Адам Лоницер (1528-1586).

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Баҡса айыу баланы ( Bashkir )

provided by wikipedia emerging languages

Айыу баланы (рус. жимолость, лат. Lonícera) — тура баҫып, үрмәләп йә ергә йәйелеп үҫә торған ҡыуаҡтарҙан; айыу баланы ғаиләһенең типлы ырыуынан. Латинса атамаһы немец математигы, физигы һәм ботанигы Адам Лоницер (1528—1586) исеменән алынған, ә башта уны Карл Линней каприфоль тип атарға йыйынған булған (Caprifolium, сөнки Европала тап бына ошо төр -айыу баланы каприфоль үҫтерелә торған булған[3].

Үҫкән урындары

 src=
Баҡса айыу баланы еләге

Төньяҡ ярымшарҙа һәр ерҙә тиерлек осрай. 190 төрө билдәле, күберәк Гималайҙа һәм Шәрҡи Азияла үҫә. Рәсәйҙә ҡырағай 14 төрө бар.

Ботаник үҙенсәлектәре

Сәскәләре эре генә, аҡ, алһыу, һарғылт йә зәңгәрһыу. Япраҡ төптәрендә йә суҡтарҙың осонда икешәр булып урынлаша.

Емештәре лә парлы, ҡайһы саҡ ҡушар булып үҫә.

Ашарға яраҡлы төрө

Ҡырағай төрө республикабыҙҙа ла үҫә, ул ҡыҙыл еләкле һәм ағыулы. Айыу баланының ашарға яраҡлы төрҙәре лә күп, хәҙер уны беҙҙә баҡсаларҙа үҫтерә башланылар. Оҙонса еләктәренә, әйтерһең, көртмәле менән мышар тәме ҡушылған, тиресәһе лә көртмәле төҫөндә. Ҡыуаҡтан ғына алып ҡапҡанда әллә ни тәмле лә түгел кеүек, әсерәк. Әммә шәкәр йәки бал менән – хәтәр шәп! Етмәһә, ул июнь башында уҡ, башҡа еләктәрҙән алда, бешеп тә етә. Ҡайнатма ла, компот та әҙерләргә була унан, ә ойотҡан-ҡатыҡ, кефир менән шунда уҡ ҡына бына тигән файҙалы, тәмле ризыҡты табынға ҡуйып була.

Төрҙәре

Ырыуҙа 200 төр бар[4] Ҡайһы бер төрҙәре:

Ҡайһы бер сорттары

Аш-һыуҙа ҡулланылышы

Ойотҡан-ҡатыҡ менән баллы эсемлек

2 кешелек: 2 балғалаҡ бал йәки 4 балғалаҡ шәкәр 100 г айыу баланы 2 стакан ҡатыҡ ( ойотҡан) йә кефир

Еләктәрҙе иҙеп ҡатыҡҡа ҡушабыҙ, бал йә шәкәр өҫтәйбеҙ ҙә ныҡ итеп болғатабыҙ.

Иҫкәрмәләр

  1. 1,0 1,1 1,2 По данным сайта GRIN (см. карточку растения).
  2. 2,0 2,1 Entry for Lonicera L. (инг.). NCU-3e. Names in current use for extant plant genera. Electronic version 1.0 (Sept 24, 1997). Тәүге сығанаҡтан архивланған 3 июнь 2012. 29 ноябрь 2010 тикшерелгән.
  3. Айыу баланы (Lonicera). Айыу баланы ғаиләһенән (рус.). Энциклопедия декоративных садовых растений. Тәүге сығанаҡтан архивланған 19 февраль 2012. 12 февраль 2010 тикшерелгән.
  4. По данным книги «Флора СССР» (см. раздел Литература).
  5. В базе GRIN ранг данного вида понижен до подвида Lonicera caerulea var. edulis Turcz. ex Herder
  6. Жимолость на сайте ГНУ НИИ садоводства Сибири имени М.А. Лисавенко
  7. Савинкова Н. В., Гагаркин А. В. Жимолость на Бакчарском опорном пункте северного садоводства, этапы работы и некоторые итоги. // Материалы конференции "Состояние и перспективы развития культуры жимолости в современных условиях".

Әҙәбиәт

Һылтанмалар

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Баҡса айыу баланы: Brief Summary ( Bashkir )

provided by wikipedia emerging languages

Айыу баланы (рус. жимолость, лат. Lonícera) — тура баҫып, үрмәләп йә ергә йәйелеп үҫә торған ҡыуаҡтарҙан; айыу баланы ғаиләһенең типлы ырыуынан. Латинса атамаһы немец математигы, физигы һәм ботанигы Адам Лоницер (1528—1586) исеменән алынған, ә башта уны Карл Линней каприфоль тип атарға йыйынған булған (Caprifolium, сөнки Европала тап бына ошо төр -айыу баланы каприфоль үҫтерелә торған булған.

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Бружмель ( Belarusian )

provided by wikipedia emerging languages

Бружмельрод кветкавых расьлінаў сямейства бружмелевых.

Налічвае звыш 200 відаў. Пашыраны пераважна ва ўмераных абласьцях Паўночнага паўшар’я, у Паўднёвым паўшар’і — у Андах. Род бружмель прадстаўлены хмызьнякамі зь ліку лістападных і шматгадовазялёных прамастойных, сьцелістых, іншы раз павойных. Зрэдку сустракаюцца невялікія дрэўцы і ліяны. Лісьце простае, суцэльнае або лопасьцевае, супраціўнае, на чаранках, сядзячае або зрослае асновамі, суцэльнакрайняе. Кветкі няправільныя, рознага адценьня, разьмяшчаюцца парамі на кароткіх пазушных кветканосах. Радзей кветкі месьцяцца ў складаных паўпарасоніках, што ўтвараюць несапраўдныя кальчакі, галоўчатыя або коласападобныя суквецьці. Вяночак трубчаста-лейкападобны, часта двухгубы. Плады — сакаўныя, свабодныя або зрослыя парамі ягады (у некаторых відаў ядомыя). Паводле прызначэньня сярод відаў роду бружмель вылучаюць: дэкаратыўныя, лекавыя (ірвотныя і слабільныя), меданосныя і тэхнічныя расьліны[1].

Ягады

Сьпелыя ягады маюць уласьцівасьць ападаць з хмызьняка. Ягады бружмелю багатыя на аскарбінавую кісьлю (вітамін С) і такія мікраэлемэнты, як ёд, марганец і медзь. Цёмна-фіялетавыя ягады з шызым налётам маюць густы фарбавальны сок і прадаўгаватую форму. Смак ягадаў кісла-салодкі[2].

Вырошчваньне

Для вырошчваньня бружмеля падыходзіць лёгкая глеба без застою вады, асьветленае або трохі зацененае месца, абароненае ад ветру. Хмызьнякі бружмелю высаджваюць увосень на адлегласьці прынамсі 2 мэтраў адзін ад аднаго ў ямы дыямэтрам і глыбінёй 50 см. Перагной уносяць увосень і раньняй вясной. Разгалінаваныя хмызьнякі дасягаюць вышыні 2 мэтраў з бурай карой, што лупіцца, і апушчаным даўгаватым лісьцем. У пачатку траўня на хмызьняках бружмелю зьяўляюцца жоўтыя кветкі, якія вабяць водарам вусякоў. Квітненьне цягнецца месяц[2].

Беларусь

У Беларусі трапляецца 1 дзікарослы від — звычайны бружмель — як падлесак у хвойных і мяшаных лясах на паўднёвай мяжы арэалу. У зялёнае будаўніцтва ўвялі звыш 60 відаў, сярод якіх найбольш вядомыя 8 відаў бружмелю: альпійскі, алтайскі, гарбаты, капрыфоль, павойны, татарскі і ядомы[1].

Бружмель ёсьць найбольш раньняй ягадай, што пачынае высьпяваць у садах Беларусі. Высьпяваньне пладоў расьцягнута да ліпеня. Сярод пашыраных у Беларусі ягадаў бружмель займае 2-е месца пасьля чорных парэчак паводле насычанасьці вітамінам С (аскарбінавая кісьля)[2].

Крыніцы

  1. ^ а б Бружмель // Беларуская энцыкляпэдыя ў 18 тамах / гал.рэд. Генадзь Пашкоў. — Менск: Беларуская энцыкляпэдыя імя Петруся Броўкі, 1996. — Т. 3. — С. 264-265. — 511 с. — 10 000 ас. — ISBN 985-11-0068-4
  2. ^ а б в Ірына Тамковіч. Бружмель — раньняя ягада // Крынічка. — 12 верасьня 2013. — № 27 (485). — С. 5.
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Бружмель: Brief Summary ( Belarusian )

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Бружмель — род кветкавых расьлінаў сямейства бружмелевых.

Налічвае звыш 200 відаў. Пашыраны пераважна ва ўмераных абласьцях Паўночнага паўшар’я, у Паўднёвым паўшар’і — у Андах. Род бружмель прадстаўлены хмызьнякамі зь ліку лістападных і шматгадовазялёных прамастойных, сьцелістых, іншы раз павойных. Зрэдку сустракаюцца невялікія дрэўцы і ліяны. Лісьце простае, суцэльнае або лопасьцевае, супраціўнае, на чаранках, сядзячае або зрослае асновамі, суцэльнакрайняе. Кветкі няправільныя, рознага адценьня, разьмяшчаюцца парамі на кароткіх пазушных кветканосах. Радзей кветкі месьцяцца ў складаных паўпарасоніках, што ўтвараюць несапраўдныя кальчакі, галоўчатыя або коласападобныя суквецьці. Вяночак трубчаста-лейкападобны, часта двухгубы. Плады — сакаўныя, свабодныя або зрослыя парамі ягады (у некаторых відаў ядомыя). Паводле прызначэньня сярод відаў роду бружмель вылучаюць: дэкаратыўныя, лекавыя (ірвотныя і слабільныя), меданосныя і тэхнічныя расьліны.

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Зелпе ( Tatar )

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Зелпе (лат. Lonícera) — парлап урнашкан вак яфраклы, хуш исле алсу һәм ак чәчәк ата, кара коңгырт төстәге җимеш бирә торган үсемлек.

Атама

Зелпе сүзе гар. зөлеф — «бөдрә толым»[3] сүзеннән[4].

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Бакча зелпесе (каприфоль)
 src=
Күк зелпе җимешләре

Искәрмәләр

  1. 1,0 1,1 1,2 Integrated Taxonomic Information System — 1996.
  2. 2,0 2,1 2,2 таксономическая база данных Национального центра биотехнологической информации США / National Center for Biotechnology Information
  3. Зөлеф — 1) сөйгәннең чәче, толымы; 2) йөзнең ике ягына аерылып төшкән чәч. — Гарәпчә-татарча-русча алынмалар сүзлеге: татар әдәбиятында кулланылган гарәп һәм фарсы сүзләре / К.З. Хәмзин, М.И. Мәхмүтов, Г.Ш. Сәйфуллин. — Казан: Тат. кит. нәшр., 1965. — 792 б. — Б. 517.
  4. Татар теленең этимологик сүзлеге / Р.Г. Әхмәтьянов: Ике томда. I том (А—Л). — Казан: Мәгариф — Вакыт, 2015. — 543 б.
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Зелпе: Brief Summary ( Tatar )

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Зелпе (лат. Lonícera) — парлап урнашкан вак яфраклы, хуш исле алсу һәм ак чәчәк ата, кара коңгырт төстәге җимеш бирә торган үсемлек.

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Шилби ( Kirghiz; Kyrgyz )

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 src=
Lonicera caprifolium.

Шилби (лат. Lonicera, L. 1753) – шилбилер тукумундагы өсүмдүк уруусу. Көпчүлүгү түз сабактуу же чырмалма бадал, чанда анча чоң эмес дарак. Бийикт. 0,5-10 м. Жалбырагы жөнөкөй, сүйрү, туташ жайгашат. Гүлү ак, сары, кызгылт же кызыл түстүү, жуптан жайгашат, айрымдары төгөрөк. Мөмөсү ширелүү жемиш. Дүйнөдө 200дөн ашык, КМШда 50, Кыргызстанда 20дай түрү белгилүү. Көбүнчө токойдо же ачык тоо беттеринде өсөт. Кадимки Ш., Россиянын Европа бөлүгүндө, Чыгыш Сибирде, татар Ш-си Волгадан Енисейге чейин, көгүш Ш. Карпатта өсөт. Ш-нин жыгачы катуу, түрдүү иштерге керектелет. Дары-дармек жасоодо пайдаланылат. Кооз жана жармашып өсүүчү түрү кооздук жана жашылдандыруу үчүн өстүрүлөт.

Колдонулган адабияттар

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Шилби: Brief Summary ( Kirghiz; Kyrgyz )

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 src= Lonicera caprifolium.

Шилби (лат. Lonicera, L. 1753) – шилбилер тукумундагы өсүмдүк уруусу. Көпчүлүгү түз сабактуу же чырмалма бадал, чанда анча чоң эмес дарак. Бийикт. 0,5-10 м. Жалбырагы жөнөкөй, сүйрү, туташ жайгашат. Гүлү ак, сары, кызгылт же кызыл түстүү, жуптан жайгашат, айрымдары төгөрөк. Мөмөсү ширелүү жемиш. Дүйнөдө 200дөн ашык, КМШда 50, Кыргызстанда 20дай түрү белгилүү. Көбүнчө токойдо же ачык тоо беттеринде өсөт. Кадимки Ш., Россиянын Европа бөлүгүндө, Чыгыш Сибирде, татар Ш-си Волгадан Енисейге чейин, көгүш Ш. Карпатта өсөт. Ш-нин жыгачы катуу, түрдүү иштерге керектелет. Дары-дармек жасоодо пайдаланылат. Кооз жана жармашып өсүүчү түрү кооздук жана жашылдандыруу үчүн өстүрүлөт.

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Дая кады

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Дая кады

Дая кады (орус. жимолость) улуг эвес чадаң үнүш, кузумаар өңңүг бүрүлери чолдак сыптыг, төгериксимээр. Чечээ сарыгзымаар өңнүг, чимизи эш-эш, каттың дөзүнде чыпшынчак, кады шөйбек, ак-көк өңнүг. Тывада тайга эдээнде, арыг ишти шыктыг черлерде хөй үнүп турар. Кады ажыгзымаар амданныг, оон кисель, варенье хайындырып, шайга каап, ижип ажыглап турар.

Дая кадының тургузуунда чигир, глюкоза, фруктоза, сахароза, галактоза база лимон, яблок, щавель кислоталары болгаш аскорбинниг кислота бар.

Дая кадында хөй витаминнар, өске-даа холуксаалар бар болганда, ону ниити мага-ботту быжыглаарынга, витамин четпестээр аарыгларга ажыглап турар. Дая кадын улус хан базыышкыны кудуладырынга, ижин-шөйүнду аарыгларынга ажыглап турар.

Дөзү

  1. Доржу Көк-оолович Куулар, Тана Моңгушевна Куулар - "ЛЕКАРСТВЕННЫЕ РАСТЕНИЯ В ТУВЕ"
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Дая кады: Brief Summary

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 src= Дая кады

Дая кады (орус. жимолость) улуг эвес чадаң үнүш, кузумаар өңңүг бүрүлери чолдак сыптыг, төгериксимээр. Чечээ сарыгзымаар өңнүг, чимизи эш-эш, каттың дөзүнде чыпшынчак, кады шөйбек, ак-көк өңнүг. Тывада тайга эдээнде, арыг ишти шыктыг черлерде хөй үнүп турар. Кады ажыгзымаар амданныг, оон кисель, варенье хайындырып, шайга каап, ижип ажыглап турар.

Дая кадының тургузуунда чигир, глюкоза, фруктоза, сахароза, галактоза база лимон, яблок, щавель кислоталары болгаш аскорбинниг кислота бар.

Дая кадында хөй витаминнар, өске-даа холуксаалар бар болганда, ону ниити мага-ботту быжыглаарынга, витамин четпестээр аарыгларга ажыглап турар. Дая кадын улус хан базыышкыны кудуладырынга, ижин-шөйүнду аарыгларынга ажыглап турар.

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Honeysuckle

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Honeysuckles are arching shrubs or twining vines in the genus Lonicera (/lɒˈnɪsərə/[2]) of the family Caprifoliaceae, native to northern latitudes in North America and Eurasia.[3] Approximately 180 species of honeysuckle have been identified in both continents.[3] Widely known species include Lonicera periclymenum (common honeysuckle or woodbine), Lonicera japonica (Japanese honeysuckle, white honeysuckle, or Chinese honeysuckle) and Lonicera sempervirens (coral honeysuckle, trumpet honeysuckle, or woodbine honeysuckle). L. japonica is a highly invasive species considered a significant pest on parts of North America, Europe, South America, Australia, and Africa.[3]

Some species are highly fragrant and colorful, so are cultivated as ornamental garden plants. In North America, hummingbirds are attracted to the flowers, especially L. sempervirens and L. ciliosa (orange honeysuckle). Honeysuckle derives its name from the edible sweet nectar obtainable from its tubular flowers.[4] The name Lonicera stems from Adam Lonicer, a Renaissance botanist.[3]

Description

Honeysuckle (Lonicera japonica)

Most species of Lonicera are hardy twining climbers, with a minority of shrubby habit.[3] Some species (including Lonicera hildebrandiana from the Himalayan foothills and L. etrusca from the Mediterranean) are tender and can only be grown outside in subtropical zones. The leaves are opposite, simple oval, 1–10 cm long; most are deciduous but some are evergreen.

Many of the species have sweetly scented, bilaterally symmetrical flowers that produce a sweet, edible nectar, and most flowers are borne in clusters of two (leading to the common name of "twinberry" for certain North American species). Both shrubby and vining sorts have strongly fibrous stems which have been used for binding and textiles.

The fruit is a red, blue or black spherical or elongated berry containing several seeds; in most species the berries are mildly poisonous, but in a few (notably Lonicera caerulea) they are edible and grown for home use and commerce. Most honeysuckle berries are attractive to wildlife, which has led to species such as L. japonica and L. maackii spreading invasively outside of their home ranges. Many species of Lonicera are eaten by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species—see a list of Lepidoptera that feed on honeysuckles.

Invasive species

The spread of L. japonica in North America began in the United States in 1806, when it was widely cultivated by the 1860s.[3] It was first discovered in Canada in Ontario forests in 1976, and became invasive by 2007.[3] L. japonica was introduced in Australia between 1820 and 1840.[3]

Several species of honeysuckle have become invasive when introduced outside their native range, particularly in North America, Europe, South America, Australia, and Africa.[3] Invasive species include L. japonica, L. maackii, L. morrowii, L. tatarica, and the hybrid between the last two, L. × bella.[3]

Cultivation

Honeysuckles are valued as garden plants, for their ability to cover unsightly walls and outbuildings, their profuse tubular flowers in early summer, and the intense fragrance of many varieties. The hardy climbing types need their roots in shade, and their flowering tops in sunlight or very light shade. Varieties need to be chosen with care, as they can become substantial. Cultivars of the dense, small-leaved L. nitida are used as low, narrow hedges.[5]

The following hybrids have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit:[6]

Other cultivars are dealt with under their species names.

The honeysuckle species Lonicera japonica is grown as a commercial crop for traditional Chinese medicine use.[11]

Phytochemicals and sensory effects

Honeysuckle is renowned for its colorful, fragrant flowers[12][13] and variously colored fruit, indicating the presence of complex phytochemicals underlying these properties. Component analyses of berries from 27 different cultivars and 3 genotypes of edible honeysuckle (Lonicera caerulea var. kamtschatica) showed the presence of iridoids, anthocyanins, flavonols, flavanonols, flavones, flavan-3-ols, and phenolic acids.[14] While sugars determine the level of sweetness in the berries, organic acids and polyphenols are responsible for the sour taste and tartness.[14] Some 51 of the same compounds in berries are found in flowers, although the proportions of these compounds varied among cultivars studied.[15]

Interaction with other species

Many insects in the order Lepidoptera visit honeysuckles as a food source. An example of this is the moth Deilephila elpenor. This nocturnal species of moth is especially attracted to honeysuckles, and they visit the flowers at night to feed on their nectar.[16]

Selected species

Some 180 species of Lonicera are documented.[3][17]

Lonicera acuminata or Lonicera pampaninii – fragrant grove honeysuckle or vine honeysuckle
Lonicera albiflora – white honeysuckle
Lonicera alpigena – alpine honeysuckle
Lonicera altmannii
Lonicera × americana
Lonicera angustifolia
Lonicera anisocalyx
Lonicera arborea
Lonicera arizonica – Arizona honeysuckle
Lonicera × bella – Bell's honeysuckle or showy fly honeysuckle
Lonicera biflora
Lonicera bournei
Lonicera brevisepala
Lonicera buchananii
Lonicera buddleioides
Lonicera caerulea – blue-berried honeysuckle
Lonicera calcarata
Lonicera calvescens
Lonicera canadensis – Canada fly honeysuckle, American fly honeysuckle
Lonicera caprifolium – goat-leaf honeysuckle, perfoliate honeysuckle
Lonicera carnosifolis
Lonicera cerviculata
Lonicera chrysantha – Chrysantha honeysuckle
Lonicera ciliosa – orange honeysuckle
Lonicera ciliosissima
Lonicera cinerea
Lonicera codonantha
Lonicera confusa
Lonicera conjugialis – purpleflower honeysuckle
Lonicera crassifolia
Lonicera cyanocarpa
Lonicera dasystyla – Tonkinese honeysuckle
Lonicera dioica – limber honeysuckle
Lonicera elisae
Lonicera etrusca – Etruscan honeysuckle
Lonicera fargesii
Lonicera ferdinandii
Lonicera ferruginea
Lonicera flava – yellow honeysuckle
Lonicera fragilis
Lonicera fragrantissima – winter honeysuckle
Lonicera fulvotomentosa
Lonicera glutinosa
Lonicera graebneri
Lonicera gynochlamydea
Lonicera × heckrottii – Golden flame honeysuckle
Lonicera hellenica – Greek honeysuckle
Lonicera hemsleyana
Lonicera heterophylla
Lonicera hildebrandiana – giant Burmese honeysuckle
Lonicera hirsuta – hairy honeysuckle
Lonicera hispida
Lonicera hispidula – pink honeysuckle
Lonicera humilis
Lonicera hypoglauca
Lonicera hypoleuca
Lonicera implexa
Lonicera inconspicua
Lonicera inodora
Lonicera interrupta – Chaparral honeysuckle
Lonicera involucrata – bearberry honeysuckle
Lonicera japonica – Japanese honeysuckle
Lonicera jilongensis
Lonicera kansuensis
Lonicera kawakamii
Lonicera korolkowii – blueleaf honeysuckle
Lonicera lanceolata
Lonicera ligustrina
Lonicera litangensis
Lonicera longiflora
Lonicera longituba
Lonicera maackii – Amur honeysuckle
Lonicera macrantha
Lonicera macranthoides
Lonicera maximowiczii
Lonicera microphylla
Lonicera minuta
Lonicera minutifolia
Lonicera modesta
Lonicera morrowii – Morrow's honeysuckle
Lonicera mucronata
Lonicera myrtillus
Lonicera nervosa
Lonicera nigra – black-berried honeysuckle
Lonicera nitida – boxleaf honeysuckle
Lonicera nubium
Lonicera nummulariifolia
Lonicera oblata
Lonicera oblongifolia – swamp fly honeysuckle
Lonicera oiwakensis
Lonicera oreodoxa
Lonicera orientalis
Lonicera paradoxa
Lonicera periclymenum – (common) honeysuckle, European honeysuckle, or woodbine
Lonicera pileata – privet honeysuckle
Lonicera pilosa – Mexican honeysuckle
Lonicera praeflorens
Lonicera prostrata
Lonicera pyrenaica – Pyrenean honeysuckle
Lonicera quinquelocularis – translucent honeysuckle
Lonicera reticulata – grape honeysuckle
Lonicera retusa
Lonicera rhytidophylla
Lonicera rupicola
Lonicera ruprechtiana – Manchurian honeysuckle
Lonicera saccata
Lonicera schneideriana
Lonicera semenovii
Lonicera sempervirens – trumpet honeysuckle
Lonicera serreana
Lonicera setifera
Lonicera similis – var. delavayi – Delavay honeysuckle
Lonicera spinosa
Lonicera splendida – evergreen honeysuckle
Lonicera standishii – Standish's honeysuckle
Lonicera stephanocarpa
Lonicera subaequalis
Lonicera subhispida
Lonicera sublabiata
Lonicera subspicata – southern honeysuckle
Lonicera szechuanica
Lonicera taipeiensis
Lonicera tangutica
Lonicera tatarica – Tatarian honeysuckle
Lonicera tatarinowii
Lonicera tomentella
Lonicera tragophylla – Chinese honeysuckle
Lonicera tricalysioides
Lonicera trichogyne
Lonicera trichosantha
Lonicera tubuliflora
Lonicera utahensis – Utah honeysuckle
Lonicera villosa – mountain fly honeysuckle
Lonicera virgultorum
Lonicera webbiana
Lonicera xylosteum – fly woodbine
Lonicera yunnanensis

Several fossil species are known from the Miocene of Asia.[18]

References

  1. ^ "Lonicera L." Plants of the World Online. Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 2022. Retrieved 9 October 2022.
  2. ^ Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Lonicera japonica". CABI. 29 November 2018. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
  4. ^ "Honeysuckle". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. 2017.
  5. ^ RHS A-Z encyclopedia of garden plants. United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. 2008. p. 1136. ISBN 978-1405332965.
  6. ^ "AGM Plants - Ornamental" (PDF). Royal Horticultural Society. July 2017. p. 61. Retrieved 25 March 2018.
  7. ^ "RHS Plantfinder - Lonicera × heckrottii 'Gold Flame'". Retrieved 25 March 2018.
  8. ^ "RHS Plantfinder - Lonicera 'Mandarin'". Retrieved 25 March 2018.
  9. ^ "RHS Plant Selector - Lonicera x purpusii 'Winter Beauty'". Retrieved 29 October 2020.
  10. ^ "RHS Plant Selector - Lonicera x tellmannia". Retrieved 29 October 2020.
  11. ^ "Across China: Honeysuckle Planting in Tongwei | Ghostarchive". ghostarchive.org. Retrieved 2023-01-02.
  12. ^ Beardshaw, Chris (2 May 2009). "The honey trap". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  13. ^ Taft, Dave (24 June 2016). "Why the Sweet Scent of Japanese Honeysuckle Signals Trouble". New York Times. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
  14. ^ a b Kucharska, A. Z.; Sokół-Łętowska, A; Oszmiański, J; Piórecki, N; Fecka, I (2017). "Iridoids, Phenolic Compounds and Antioxidant Activity of Edible Honeysuckle Berries (Lonicera caerulea var. kamtschatica Sevast.)". Molecules (Basel, Switzerland). 22 (3): 405. doi:10.3390/molecules22030405. PMC 6155291. PMID 28273885.
  15. ^ Kula, M; Głód, D; Krauze-Baranowska, M (2016). "Application of on-line and off-line heart-cutting LC in determination of secondary metabolites from the flowers of Lonicera caerulea cultivar varieties". Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis. 131: 316–326. doi:10.1016/j.jpba.2016.09.010. PMID 27622313.
  16. ^ South, Richard (1907). The Moths of the British Isles. F. Warne & Company. p. 1. elephant hawk moth.
  17. ^ "GRIN Species Records of Lonicera". Germplasm Resources Information Network. United States Department of Agriculture. Archived from the original on 2012-12-13. Retrieved 2010-09-16.
  18. ^ Far East Geological Institute FEB RAS, Vladivostok 690022 Russia; Pavlyutkin, Boris I. (2015-11-15). "A New Species of Lonicera (Caprifoliaceae) from the Miocene of Primorye Region (the Russian Far East)". Botanica Pacifica. doi:10.17581/bp.2015.04218.

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Honeysuckle: Brief Summary

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Honeysuckles are arching shrubs or twining vines in the genus Lonicera (/lɒˈnɪsərə/) of the family Caprifoliaceae, native to northern latitudes in North America and Eurasia. Approximately 180 species of honeysuckle have been identified in both continents. Widely known species include Lonicera periclymenum (common honeysuckle or woodbine), Lonicera japonica (Japanese honeysuckle, white honeysuckle, or Chinese honeysuckle) and Lonicera sempervirens (coral honeysuckle, trumpet honeysuckle, or woodbine honeysuckle). L. japonica is a highly invasive species considered a significant pest on parts of North America, Europe, South America, Australia, and Africa.

Some species are highly fragrant and colorful, so are cultivated as ornamental garden plants. In North America, hummingbirds are attracted to the flowers, especially L. sempervirens and L. ciliosa (orange honeysuckle). Honeysuckle derives its name from the edible sweet nectar obtainable from its tubular flowers. The name Lonicera stems from Adam Lonicer, a Renaissance botanist.

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Lonicero ( Esperanto )

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Lonicero (Lonicera el kaprifoliacoj) estas genro de fal- kaj daŭra-foliaj arbustoj, volviĝantaj aŭ ne, kun kontraŭe duopaj folioj, kun dulipaj, longtubaj floroj kaj kun berecaj fruktoj ofte tre venenaj; ĉirkaŭ 180 specioj, precipe Nord-hemisferaj, multaj pororname kultivataj.[1]

Elektitaj specioj

http://en.wikipedia.org/upload/b/b2/Honeysuckle_w_y.jpg


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Lonicero: Brief Summary ( Esperanto )

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Lonicero (Lonicera el kaprifoliacoj) estas genro de fal- kaj daŭra-foliaj arbustoj, volviĝantaj aŭ ne, kun kontraŭe duopaj folioj, kun dulipaj, longtubaj floroj kaj kun berecaj fruktoj ofte tre venenaj; ĉirkaŭ 180 specioj, precipe Nord-hemisferaj, multaj pororname kultivataj.

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Lonicera ( Spanish; Castilian )

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Lonicera es un género de plantas con flores perteneciente a la familia Caprifoliaceae. Comprende 526 especies descritas y de estas, solo 108 aceptadas.[2]​ Las especies incluidas dentro de este género normalmente son conocidas por el nombre popular de madreselvas. Son arbustos arqueados o parras sarmentosas, la mayoría con dulces fragancias y flores con forma de campana.

Descripción

Las hojas son opuestas, ovales simples, y desde 1–10 cm de longitud; la mayoría son caducifolias y algunas son perennifolias. Estas plantas son la base de alimentación de las larvas de especies de Lepidoptera de muchas familias, por ejemplo Spilosoma virginica (Erebidae), Hyphantria cunea (Erebidae), Celastrina argiolus (Lycaenidae), Amphipyra pyramidoides (Noctuidae).

La madreselva japonesa y la madreselva del Amur (Lonicera maackii) están consideradas como plantas invasivas en los EE. UU. y en Nueva Zelanda. Las madreselvas pueden ser controladas: cortándolas, quemándolas, o quemando las raíces y repitiendo la operación a las dos semanas hasta que las reservas de las raíces se hayan agotado.

Usos

Lonicera caerulea var. edulis (Madreselva azul) y Lonicera ciliosa (Madreselva naranja) destacan por su fruto comestible (a diferencia de las otras especies de loniceras cuyos frutos son tóxicos para el ser humano).

Lonicera xylosteum, es un remedio en la medicina tradicional. Lonicera periclymenum (madreselva europea) es otro remedio de medicina tradicional, no muy corriente, usado para tratar la irritabilidad con explosiones de violencia. De igual manera, la Lonicera periclymenum y Lonicera japonica también se usan en medicina tradicional, por lo que hay diversos estudios sobre las funciones de estas plantas. [3]

La lonicera ha sido recientemente descubierta como una de las plantas capaces de absorber más polución mejorando significativamente la calidad del aire a su alrededor, y por ser una planta que crece fácilmente en cualquier parte ha sido propuesta como parte de un proyecto de Holanda [1] para limpiar el aire de las grandes ciudades. La primera ciudad en realizar un proyecto con la lonicera será Ámsterdam, donde se creará un parque en forma de G alrededor de toda la ciudad. Este corredor verde tendrá más de 25.000 hectáreas de tierra.

Además esta planta contiene una gran cantidad de biomasa que puede ser convertida en biocombustible (biodiésel). Estudios realizados por el ingeniero Ton van Oostwaard en Holanda hallaron que una hectárea de lonicera resulta en 12 toneladas de biomasa lista para convertirse en biocombustible.

Taxonomía

El género fue descrito por Carlos Linneo y publicado en Species Plantarum 1: 173. 1753.[4]​ La especie tipo es: Lonicera caprifolium

Etimología

El término "madreselva" se ha usado durante mucho tiempo para designar a las especies integrantes del género Lonicera, aunque este apelativo se aplicó primeramente para designar a la especie Lonicera caprifolium L., planta sarmentosa que se encuentra en los bosques europeos. El término "Lonicera" fue usado por primera vez por Linneo en 1753 adaptando al latín el apellido "Lonitzer", en honor del botánico Lonitzer (1528-1586), médico que ejerció en Fráncfort.[5]

Especies seleccionadas

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Lonicera
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Lonicera etrusca, detalle de la flor
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Lonicera periclymenum, detalle de la flor
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Lonicera periclymenum, detalle de la flor
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Lonicera caprifolium
 src=
Lonicera caprifolium
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Lonicera caprifolium

Híbridos naturales

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Lonicera x heckrotti (híbrida)

Referencias

  1. USDA, ARS, National Genetic Resources Program. Germplasm Resources Information Network - (GRIN) [Online Database]. National Germplasm Resources Laboratory, Beltsville, Maryland. URL: http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/genus.pl?6947 Archivado el 10 de octubre de 2012 en Wayback Machine. (22 October 2013)
  2. Lonicera en PlantList
  3. AlimentosCon.com. «Madreselva – ¿Cuáles son los beneficios para la salud de esta planta?».
  4. «Lonicera». Tropicos.org. Missouri Botanical Garden. Consultado el 22 de octubre de 2013.
  5. Lonicera en Flora de Canarias

Bibliografía

  • Harry Garms: Pflanzen und Tiere Europas, Taschenbuchausgabe, München (dtv) 1969, ISBN 3-423-03013-5
  • Rubina Akhter: Lonicera in der Flora of Pakistan: En línea.
  • Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607
  • Werner Rothmaler: Exkursionsflora für die Gebiete der DDR und der BRD, Gefäßpflanzen. 1. Aufl., Volk und Wissen Volkseigener Verlag Berlin 1972

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Lonicera: Brief Summary ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by wikipedia ES

Lonicera es un género de plantas con flores perteneciente a la familia Caprifoliaceae. Comprende 526 especies descritas y de estas, solo 108 aceptadas.​ Las especies incluidas dentro de este género normalmente son conocidas por el nombre popular de madreselvas. Son arbustos arqueados o parras sarmentosas, la mayoría con dulces fragancias y flores con forma de campana.

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Kuslapuu ( Estonian )

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Kuslapuu (Lonicera) on uniohakalaadsete seltsi kuslapuuliste sugukonda kuuluv põõsaste perekond.

Teaduslikult kirjeldas kuslapuud esimesena Carl von Linné. Ladinakeelse nime sai ta saksa botaaniku Adam Lonitzeri (15281586) järgi, kes avaldas oma teosed ladina keeles nime Adamus Lonicerus all.

Maailmas kasvab umbes 180 liiki kuslapuid, neist sadakond Hiinas. Euroopas, Indias ja Põhja-Ameerikas kasvab igaühes looduslikult umbes 20 liiki kuslapuid.

Mitut liiki kuslapuid kasvatatakse ilutaimena. Eriti mõjusad on nad rühmades, näiteks alleena.

Mõned kuslapuud on muutunud invasiivseks, kui neid on viidud kasvama väljapoole looduslikku levilat, näiteks Põhja-Ameerikasse või Uus-Meremaale. Niisugused on näiteks jaapani, Maacki, Morrow' ja tatari kuslapuu.

Kuslapuu (harilik kuslapuu ja sinine kuslapuu) on Eesti 2016. aasta puu.[1]

Välimus

Kuslapuu lehed on 1–10 cm pikad, lihtsad ja ovaalsed. Leheseis on vastak. Enamik taimi on heitlehised, aga mõned, mis kasvavad ilma talveta kliimas, on ka igihaljad. Vastakuti asuvad lehed võivad omavahel kokku kasvada.

Paljudel kuslapuudel on magusalt lõhnavad kahekülgse sümmeetriaga õied, mis sisaldavad magusat söödavat nektarit. Õied on heledad: valged, roosad, kollased või helesinised. Õielehti on viis. Enamik õisi kasvab kahekaupa ja sellepärast paiknevad ka valminud viljad oksal tavaliselt kahekaupa. Pole haruldane, et naaberviljad omavahel kokku kasvavad.

Kuslapuu vili on punane, sinine või must kerajas või pikergune mari, milles on mitu seemet. Enamik kuslapuid on mürgiste või söödamatute viljadega. Erandiks on sinine kuslapuu, mis kasvab looduslikuna ka Eestis.

Eesti liigid

Liike

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Söödava kuslapuu sort 'Goluboje Vereteno'

Viited

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Kuslapuu: Brief Summary ( Estonian )

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Kuslapuu (Lonicera) on uniohakalaadsete seltsi kuslapuuliste sugukonda kuuluv põõsaste perekond.

Teaduslikult kirjeldas kuslapuud esimesena Carl von Linné. Ladinakeelse nime sai ta saksa botaaniku Adam Lonitzeri (15281586) järgi, kes avaldas oma teosed ladina keeles nime Adamus Lonicerus all.

Maailmas kasvab umbes 180 liiki kuslapuid, neist sadakond Hiinas. Euroopas, Indias ja Põhja-Ameerikas kasvab igaühes looduslikult umbes 20 liiki kuslapuid.

Mitut liiki kuslapuid kasvatatakse ilutaimena. Eriti mõjusad on nad rühmades, näiteks alleena.

Mõned kuslapuud on muutunud invasiivseks, kui neid on viidud kasvama väljapoole looduslikku levilat, näiteks Põhja-Ameerikasse või Uus-Meremaale. Niisugused on näiteks jaapani, Maacki, Morrow' ja tatari kuslapuu.

Kuslapuu (harilik kuslapuu ja sinine kuslapuu) on Eesti 2016. aasta puu.

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Atxapar ( Basque )

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Atxaparra, sasiama, ahuntz-hostoa edo aker-aihena (Lonicera) Caprifoliaceae familiako genero baten izen arrunta da, barnean 526 espezie, horietatik 108 onarturik, dituena.[1]

Loreak bi mingain ditu eta usain eta zapore gozoa duen nektarra sortzen dute. Zabaltzen direnean zuriak dira eta denborarekin horitu egiten dira gero.

Lonicera japonica2.jpg

Espezie hautatuak

Amerikako flora
Asiako flora
Europako flora

Hibrido naturalak

Erreferentziak

  1. PlantList: Lonicera


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Atxapar: Brief Summary ( Basque )

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Atxaparra, sasiama, ahuntz-hostoa edo aker-aihena (Lonicera) Caprifoliaceae familiako genero baten izen arrunta da, barnean 526 espezie, horietatik 108 onarturik, dituena.

Loreak bi mingain ditu eta usain eta zapore gozoa duen nektarra sortzen dute. Zabaltzen direnean zuriak dira eta denborarekin horitu egiten dira gero.

Lonicera japonica2.jpg
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Kuusamat ( Finnish )

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Kuusamat (Lonicera) on kuusamakasvien (Caprifoliaceae) suku, johon kuuluu noin 180 lajia. Monet koristepensaat kuuluvat kuusamiin.[2]

Kuvaus

Kuusamat ovat yksikotisia pensaita tai köynnöksiä ja tavallisesti kesävihantia. Lehdet sijaitsevat vastakkain ja ne ovat ehyitä ja ehytlaitaisia. Kukinto on kaksikukkainen hankakukinto tai monikukkainen tiheä kärkikukinto. Kukat ovat huulimaisia, lyhytperäisiä ja pitkätorvisia. Hedelmä on monisiemeninen mehevä marja.[3][4]

Lajeja, alalajeja, muunnoksia ja lajikkeita

[5][6]

Risteymiä

[5]

Lähteet

  1. ITIS
  2. Anderberg, A & A-L: Den virtuella Floran 2004-2009. Tukholma: Naturhistoriska riksmuseet. Viitattu 7.7.2009. (ruotsiksi)
  3. a b c Mossberg B. & Stenberg L: Suuri Pohjolan kasvio. (suom. S. Vuokko & H. Väre). Tammi, 2005. ISBN 951-3129-24-1.
  4. L. Hämet-Ahti, A. Palmén, P. Alanko, P.M.A. Tigerstedt, M. Koistinen: Suomen puu- ja pensaskasvio. Helsinki: Dendrologian Seura, 1992. ISBN 951-96557-0-0.
  5. a b Ella Räty, Pentti Alanko: Viljelykasvien nimistö. Helsinki: Puutarhaliiton julkaisuja, 2004. ISBN 951-8942-57-9.
  6. Kassu – Kasvien suomenkieliset nimet (Lonicera) Kassu – Kasvien suomenkieliset nimet. Viitattu 19.10.2017.

Aiheesta muualla

Tämä kasveihin liittyvä artikkeli on tynkä. Voit auttaa Wikipediaa laajentamalla artikkelia.
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Kuusamat: Brief Summary ( Finnish )

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Kuusamat (Lonicera) on kuusamakasvien (Caprifoliaceae) suku, johon kuuluu noin 180 lajia. Monet koristepensaat kuuluvat kuusamiin.

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Chèvrefeuille ( French )

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Lonicera

Les Chèvrefeuilles (genre Lonicera) sont des arbustes ou lianes de la famille des caprifoliacées. Certaines espèces sont aussi nommées communément camérisiers. On en connaît environ 200 espèces dans les régions tempérées de l'hémisphère nord et les régions subtropicales. L'habitat de la plupart des espèces de chèvrefeuilles est la lisière des forêts et, par extension, les haies, bords de chemins creux. Les chèvrefeuilles, autochtones ou exotiques, sont fréquemment utilisés pour former des haies ou parois décoratives.

Étymologie

Le nom Lonicera a été donné en 1703, à la place du nom originel Caprifolium, par Charles Plumier (1646-1704), en hommage à Adam Lonitzer (1528-1586), botaniste et médecin allemand[1],[2]. Carl von Linné a gardé ce nom de genre tout en mentionnant, comme épithète spécifique pour l’espèce type du genre, le nom générique originel, nommant ainsi l'espèce Lonicera caprifolium[3],[note 1].

Écologie, faune associée

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La nuit le Chèvrefeuille (ici Lonicera periclymenum) exhale son parfum maximum, attirant de loin les papillons qui viendront féconder ses fleurs.
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Chenille mangeant une feuille de chèvrefeuille.
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Le Sylvain azuré (Limenitis reducta) est l'un des papillons de jour dont la chenille se nourrit du chèvrefeuille
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Noisetier déformé par l'enlacement d'un chèvrefeuille

Comme les autres lianes, ils offrent un habitat supplémentaire aux oiseaux, et facilitent le déplacement dans les arbres et buissons de certains insectes et petits mammifères. Leurs fleurs sont surtout liées à diverses espèces d'insectes de l'environnement nocturne, souvent à longue trompe, qui sont en Europe :

D'autres insectes que des papillons apprécient le chèvrefeuille :

L'OPIE (Office pour les insectes et leur environnement) signale en 2009[4] un développement récent apparent de la Sésie du chèvrefeuille (facilement confondue avec un Hyménoptère), à partir des Alpes vers le reste de la France. Sa chenille se développe très lentement (2 à 3 ans) et uniquement sur certains chèvrefeuilles.

Toxicologie

Les chèvrefeuilles seraient toxiques par leurs baies[5].

Liste d'espèces

Liste selon les divers sites

Selon The Plant List (1 mai 2020)[6] :

Selon Tropicos (1 mai 2020)[7] (Attention liste brute contenant possiblement des synonymes) :

Espèces du genre Lonicera par zones géographiques

Flore européenne

Selon la flore de France, six espèces non grimpantes (dont L. xylosteum) et 5 espèces grimpantes (dont L. caprifolium et L. periclymenum…) peuvent être observées en France, outre quelques espèces exotiques introduites.

Flore d'Afrique du Nord
Flore de Chine
  • Flore de Chine, d'après eFloras[8]. 57 espèces, dont 23 endémiques.
    • Lonicera acuminata Wallich in Roxburgh, 1824.
    • Lonicera angustifolia Wallich ex Candolle, 1830.
    • Lonicera alpigena complexe d'espèces
    • Lonicera bournei Hemsley, 1888.
    • Lonicera caerulea Linnaeus, Chèvrefeuille bleu
    • Lonicera calcarata Hemsley, 1900.
    • Lonicera chrysantha Turczaninow ex Ledebour, 1844.
    • Lonicera crassifolia Batalin, 1892.
    • Lonicera elisae Franchet, 1883.
    • Lonicera ferdinandi Franchet, 1883.
    • Lonicera ferruginea Rehder in Sargent, 1902.
    • Lonicera fragrantissima Lindley & Paxton in Paxton, 1852, Chèvrefeuille d'hiver
    • Lonicera gynochlamydea Hemsley, 1888
    • Lonicera hildebrandiana Collett & Hemsley, 1891
    • Lonicera hispida species complex
    • Lonicera humilis Karelin & Kirilov, 1842.
    • Lonicera hypoleuca Decaisne in Jacquemont, 1841.
    • Lonicera japonica Thunberg in Murray, Syst. Veg., ed. 14. 216. 1784, Chèvrefeuille du Japon
    • Lonicera ligustrina Wallich in Roxburgh, 1824.
      • Lonicera ligustrina var. yunnanensis Franchet, 1896.=Lonicera nitida E. H. Wilson, Gard. Chron. ser. 3, 50:102. 1911 (d'après GRIN) =L. pileata Oliver f. yunnanensis (Franchet) Rehder
      • Lonicera ligustrina var. pileata (Oliver) Franchet, 1896=Lonicera pileata Oliver, 1887, chèvrefeuille cupule
      • Lonicera ligustrina var. ligustrina
    • Lonicera longiflora (Lindley) Candolle, 1830.
    • Lonicera maackii (Ruprecht) Maximowicz, 1859, Chèvrefeuille de Maack
    • Lonicera macrantha complexe d'espèces
    • Lonicera maximowiczii complexe d'espèces
    • Lonicera microphylla Willdenow ex Schultes, 1819.
    • Lonicera mucronata Rehder, 1903.
    • Lonicera modesta Rehder in Sargent, 1907.
    • Lonicera nigra complexe d'espèces
    • Lonicera praeflorens Batalin, 1892.
    • Lonicera rupicola J. D. Hooker & Thomson, 1858
    • Lonicera ruprechtiana Regel, 1869.
    • Lonicera setifera Franchet, 1896.
    • Lonicera spinosa (Decaisne) Jacquemont ex Walpers, 1843.
    • Lonicera subaequalis Rehder, 1903.
    • Lonicera tatarica Linnaeus, 1753.
    • Lonicera tangutica complexe d'espèces
    • Lonicera tomentella J. D. Hooker & Thomson, 1858.
    • Lonicera tragophylla Hemsley, 1888.
    • Lonicera trichosantha Bureau & Franchet, 1891.
    • Lonicera tubuliflora Rehder in Sargent, 1911
    • Lonicera yunnanensis Franchet, 1896.

Le chèvrefeuille dans la culture

Caprifolium nom historique du Lonicera

En 1888 Legrand, déplorant le remplacement des noms de genre de Tournefort, nous dit « Si Linné est le créateur de la combinaison binaire, n'oublions pas que Tournefort est le créateur du genre » et il cite notamment, en le regrettant, le remplacement de Caprifolium par Lonicera[9].

Le mot caprifolium, désignant à l'origine le chèvrefeuille, remonte au Haut Moyen Âge. On trouve dans un manuscrit du IXe siècle, le Codex Parisinus Latinus, une liste de plantes dont Dorcadis caprolus dont on ne peut être sûr qu’il se réfère au caprifolium[10].

Dans nombre d’encyclopédies médicales médiévales, qui ont été compilées à la Renaissance, on trouve le nom de caprifolium.

  • Un écrit de Simón Januensis, encyclopédiste du XIIIe siècle, nous dit, à propos d'une plante qu'il nous est difficile d'identifier, « Periclimenos [...] certains l'appellent caprifolium »[11].
  • Le nom est mentionné aussi dans Matthaeus Silvaticus (1280-1342)[12] dans son Pandectae Medicinae[note 2],[13].
  • De même, Ruellius et Fuchsius [note 3] appellent la plante caprifolium.

Noms vernaculaires, populaires ou locaux du chèvrefeuille

Le chèvrefeuille était appelé par Dioscoride (40-90 ap. J.-C), médecin et botaniste grec, periclymenus [note 4].

Cependant, la plante désignée par le mot caprifolium a pu être confondue avec le troène (Ligustrum). En effet, dans un dictionnaire étymologique allemand, nous trouvons « caprifolium liguster », « liguster » étant le nom commun allemand pour « troène »[14].

Une multitude de noms vernaculaires, noms communs ou noms locaux ont été donnés au Caprifoilum, citons notamment « Chamécerisier » ou « Camécerisier » [15].

Les anglophones l’appellent « honeysuckle », littéralement « suceur de miel » probablement en raison de son caractère mellifère.

La Flore Populaire d’Eugène Rolland (1846-1909) de 1906 fait une compilation exhaustive des noms donnés à plusieurs espèces de chèvrefeuille, en Europe francophone et dans les régions et villages de France allant de Capra mater à « cerisier des Alpes »[16]. Parmi plus de 200 appellations, citons :

Langage des fleurs

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Fleurs de chèvrefeuille en développement. Juillet 2020.

Dans le langage des fleurs, le chèvrefeuille symbolise l'amitié et l'amour[17].

Calendrier

Dans le calendrier républicain français, le 23e jour du mois de Prairial est dénommé jour du Chèvrefeuille[18]

Cinéma

Notes et références

Notes

  1. Linné mentionne aussi le nom de Tournefort à côté de l'ancien nom de genre.
  2. Pandectae : « livre qui renferme tout en soit » ; « collection encyclopédique »
  3. Jean Ruel (1474-1537 ) et Leonhart Fuchs (1501-1566)
  4. Du grec περιχλύμενος / periklýmenos, chevrefeuille

Références

  1. P.-V. Fournier. Les quatre flores de la France, Lechevalier, Paris, 1990 (ISBN 978-2-7205-0529-4), page 886
  2. Carolo Plumier. Nova plantarum americanarum genera, Parissis, 1703, 21 pages + 40 illustr., p.17 : lire en ligne
  3. Caroli Linnnaei. Genera plantarum. Lugduni Batavorum (Leyde, Hollande), 1742, 527 pages, p. 174 : : lire en ligne
  4. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o et p Hervé Guyot & Remi Coutin, Fiche pédagogique : La faune entomologique des chèvrefeuilles, "Insectes" no 154, p. 18 à 22,- 2009 (3)
  5. Chèvrefeuille des haies sur Floranet.
  6. The Plant List (2013). Version 1.1. Published on the Internet; http://www.theplantlist.org/, consulté le 1 mai 2020
  7. Tropicos.org. Missouri Botanical Garden., consulté le 1 mai 2020
  8. (en) Référence EFloras : L. 1753 {{{3}}}
  9. M. A. Legrand. Essai de réhabilitation des genres de Tournefort, Bull. Soc. Bot. France, 35:2, 133-139, 1888 Pdf p. 5 : lire en ligne
  10. Codex Parisinus Latinus : lire en ligne
  11. Simón Januensis. Clavis sanationis sive Synonyma medicinae. Venise, 1486. lire en ligne
  12. Antoine Furetière. Dictionaire universel, contenant generalement tous les mots francois, 1690, t.1 A-E, : lire en ligne
  13. Pandectae Medicinae, opus pandectarum, Lugduni (Lyon) 1591 p. 29 : lire en ligne
  14. Franzosisches etymologisches" "caprifolium" : lire en ligne
  15. Abbé Toussaint. Étude étymologique sur les flores normande, 1906. p. 168 : lire en ligne
  16. a et b Eugène Rolland. Flore Populaire, Paris, 1906, t. 6, p. 215-219, 222-226 lire en ligne
  17. Anne Dumas, Les plantes et leurs symboles, Éditions du Chêne, coll. « Les carnets du jardin », 2000, 128 p. (ISBN 2-84277-174-5, BNF ).
  18. Ph. Fr. Na. Fabre d'Églantine, Rapport fait à la Convention nationale dans la séance du 3 du second mois de la seconde année de la République Française, p. 27.

Voir aussi

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wikipedia FR

Chèvrefeuille: Brief Summary ( French )

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Lonicera

Les Chèvrefeuilles (genre Lonicera) sont des arbustes ou lianes de la famille des caprifoliacées. Certaines espèces sont aussi nommées communément camérisiers. On en connaît environ 200 espèces dans les régions tempérées de l'hémisphère nord et les régions subtropicales. L'habitat de la plupart des espèces de chèvrefeuilles est la lisière des forêts et, par extension, les haies, bords de chemins creux. Les chèvrefeuilles, autochtones ou exotiques, sont fréquemment utilisés pour former des haies ou parois décoratives.

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Féithleann ( Irish )

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Féithleann a thugtar ar chineál planda.

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Is síol é an t-alt seo. Cuir leis, chun cuidiú leis an Vicipéid.
Má tá alt níos forbartha le fáil i dteanga eile, is féidir leat aistriúchán Gaeilge a dhéanamh.


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Lonicera ( Galician )

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Lonicera é un xénero de plantas con flores pertencente á familia Caprifoliaceae. As especies incluídas dentro deste xénero normalmente son coñecidas polo nome popular de madreselvas[1] ou chuchameles[2] (ademais dos múltiplos nomes vulgares en galego das diferentes especies).

Son arbustos arqueados ou parras sarmentosas, a maioría con doces fragrancias, flores con forma de campá. Hai unhas 180 especies de madreselvas.

Etimoloxía

Sábese que o termo madreselva se usou durante moito tempo para designar as especies integrantes do xénero Lonicera, aínda que este apelativo deberíase aplicar só para designar a especie Lonicera caprifolium L., planta sarmentosa que se encontra nos bosques europeos, e chamar todas as demais simplemente como loniceras.[Cómpre referencia]

O termo "Lonicera" foi usado por primeira vez por Linné en 1753 adaptando ao latín o apelido "Lonitzer", en honra ao botánico Adam Lonitzer (1528-1586), médico que exerceu en Frankfurt.[3]

Outros nomes vulgares

En galego existen multitude de nomes para as diferentes especies de Lonicera, ás veces uns mestúranse con outros. Entre eles: madreselva (var. madresilva), cabrifollo (var. cadrifollo), herba salgueira, bigorda, chuchamel (zugameles, sugamés, zugos), altasebes, garnicela etc.

Descrición

As follas son opostas, ovais simples, e de 1–10 cm de lonxitude. A maioría son caducifolias e algunhas son perennifolias. Moitas das especies presentan flores que presentan un olor perfumado, producindo un doce néctar comestible. A froita é unha baga de coloración roxa, azul ou negra contendo varias sementes; na maioría das especies as bagas son levemente tóxicas, porén algunhas (como a Lonicera caerulea) teñen bagas comestibles. Estas plantas son a base de alimentación das larvas dalgunhas especies de Lepidoptera.

A madreselva xaponesa e a madreselva de Amur (Lonicera maackii) están consideradas como plantas invasoras en EUA e Nova Zelandia. As madreselvas poden ser controladas: cortándoas, queimándoas, ou queimando as raíces e repetindo a operación ás dúas semanas até que as reservas das raíces se esgoten.

Usos

A Lonicera xylosteum é unha planta usada en homeopatía para tratamento de asmas, dificultades respiratorias e sífilis. A Lonicera periclymenum é usada como remedio homeopático para o tratamento da irritabilidade con explosións violentas.

A Lonicera caprifolium é moi apreciada como planta ornamental, debido ás súas bonitas e aromáticas flores.

Especies

Especies máis comúns en Galiza

Listaxe xeral de especies

Flora americana
Flora asiática
Flora europea

Híbridos naturais

Notas

Véxase tamén

Bibliografía

  • Harry Garms: Pflanzen und Tiere Europas, Taschenbuchausgabe, München (dtv) 1969, ISBN 3-423-03013-5
  • Rubina Akhter: Lonicera in der Flora of Pakistan: En linea.
  • Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607
  • Werner Rothmaler: Exkursionsflora für die Gebiete der DDR und der BRD, Gefäßpflanzen. 1. Aufl., Volk und Wissen Volkseigener Verlag Berlin 1972

Outros artigos

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Lonicera: Brief Summary ( Galician )

provided by wikipedia gl Galician

Lonicera é un xénero de plantas con flores pertencente á familia Caprifoliaceae. As especies incluídas dentro deste xénero normalmente son coñecidas polo nome popular de madreselvas ou chuchameles (ademais dos múltiplos nomes vulgares en galego das diferentes especies).

Son arbustos arqueados ou parras sarmentosas, a maioría con doces fragrancias, flores con forma de campá. Hai unhas 180 especies de madreselvas.

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Kozokrvina ( Croatian )

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Kozokrvina (kozja krv, lat. Lonicera), veliki biljni rod iz porodice kozokrvnica kojemu pripada preko 190 vrsta[1] listopadnih, rjeđe poluzimzelenih ili vazdazelenih penjačica ili uspravnih grmova. U Hrvatskoj raste nekoliko vrsta, od kojih se Borbaševa kozja krv (L. borbasiana) vodi kao hrvatski endem. Poznatije vrste su isprepletena kozja krv (Lonicera implexa), planinska kozja krv ili sitno pasje grožđe (L. alpigena), modra kozja krv (L. caerulea), crvena kozja krv (L. xylosteum) i druge

Rod je nekada nazivan Caprifolium, i po njemu je porodica dobila ime, ali se danas naziva Lonicera po njemačkom botaničaru Adamu Loniceru.

Vrste

  1. Lonicera acuminata Wall.
  2. Lonicera affinis Hook. & Arn.
  3. Lonicera alberti Regel
  4. Lonicera albiflora Torr. & A.Gray
  5. Lonicera alpigena L., sitno pasje grožđe, alpsko pasje grožđe
    1. Lonicera alpigena subsp. glutinosa (Vis.) Kit Tan & Ziel., ljepljiva kozja krv
  6. Lonicera altmannii Regel & Schmalh.
  7. Lonicera × americana (Mill.) K.Koch
  8. Lonicera angustifolia Wall. ex DC.
  9. Lonicera anisocalyx Rehder
  10. Lonicera anisotricha Bondarenko
  11. Lonicera annamensis Fukuoka
  12. Lonicera apodantha Ohwi
  13. Lonicera arborea Boiss.
  14. Lonicera arizonica Rehder
  15. Lonicera asperifolia (Decne.) Hook.f. & Thomson
  16. Lonicera aucheri Jaub. & Spach
  17. Lonicera biflora Desf.
  18. Lonicera bournei Hemsl.
  19. Lonicera braceana Hemsl.
  20. Lonicera bracteolaris Boiss. & Buhse
  21. Lonicera brevisepala P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang
  22. Lonicera buchananii Lace
  23. Lonicera buddleioides P.S.Hsu & S.C.Cheng
  24. Lonicera buschiorum Pojark.
  25. Lonicera caerulea L., modra kozja krv
  26. Lonicera calcarata Hemsl.
  27. Lonicera calvescens (Chun & F.C.How) P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang
  28. Lonicera cambodiana Pierre ex Danguy
  29. Lonicera canadensis J.Bartram & W.Bartram ex Marshall
  30. Lonicera caprifolium L., prava kozja krv
  31. Lonicera carnosifolia C.Y.Wu
  32. Lonicera caucasica Pall.
  33. Lonicera cerasina Maxim.
  34. Lonicera cerviculata S.S.White
  35. Lonicera chamissoi Bunge
  36. Lonicera chrysantha Turcz. ex Ledeb.
  37. Lonicera ciliosa Poir.
  38. Lonicera ciliosissima C.Y.Wu
  39. Lonicera cinerea Pojark.
  40. Lonicera codonantha Rehder
  41. Lonicera confusa DC.
  42. Lonicera conjugialis Kellogg
  43. Lonicera crassifolia Batalin
  44. Lonicera cyanocarpa Franch.
  45. Lonicera deleiensis C.E.C.Fisch. & Kaul
  46. Lonicera demissa Rehder
  47. Lonicera dioica L.
  48. Lonicera elisae Franch.
  49. Lonicera etrusca Santi, etruščanska kozja krv, orlovi nokti, zapletina
  50. Lonicera fargesii Franch.
  51. Lonicera fengkaiensis R.H.Miao & X.J.Liu
  52. Lonicera ferdinandi Franch.
  53. Lonicera ferruginea Rehder
  54. Lonicera flava Sims
  55. Lonicera floribunda Boiss. & Buhse
  56. Lonicera fragilis H.Lév.
  57. Lonicera fragrantissima Lindl. & Paxton
  58. Lonicera glabrata Wall.
  59. Lonicera glehnii F.Schmidt
  60. Lonicera gracilipes Miq.
  61. Lonicera graebneri Rehder
  62. Lonicera griffithii Hook.f. & Thomson
  63. Lonicera guatemalensis Véliz & E.Carrillo
  64. Lonicera gynochlamydea Hemsl.
  65. Lonicera harae Makino
  66. Lonicera heckrottii Osborn
  67. Lonicera × helvetica Brügger
  68. Lonicera hemsleyana Rehder
  69. Lonicera heterophylla Decne.
  70. Lonicera heterotricha Pojark. & Zakirov
  71. Lonicera hildebrandiana Collett & Hemsl., velika burmanska kozokrvina
  72. Lonicera himalayensis Gand.
  73. Lonicera hirsuta Eaton
  74. Lonicera hispida Pall. ex Schult.
  75. Lonicera hispidula (Lindl.) Douglas ex Torr. & A.Gray
  76. Lonicera humilis Kar. & Kir.
  77. Lonicera hypoglauca Miq.
  78. Lonicera hypoleuca Decne.
  79. Lonicera iberica M.Bieb.
  80. Lonicera iliensis Pojark.
  81. Lonicera implexa Aiton, isprepletena kozja krv, božje drvce
  82. Lonicera interrupta Benth.
  83. Lonicera involucrata (Richardson) Banks ex Spreng.
  84. Lonicera japonica Thunb.
  85. Lonicera jarmilae Halda
  86. Lonicera javanica DC.
  87. Lonicera jilongensis P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang
  88. Lonicera kabylica (Batt.) Rehder
  89. Lonicera kansuensis (Batalin) Pojark.
  90. Lonicera karelinii Bunge
  91. Lonicera kawakamii (Hayata) Masam.
  92. Lonicera kingdonii C.E.C.Fisch. & Kaul
  93. Lonicera korolkowii Stapf
  94. Lonicera kurobushiensis Kadota
  95. Lonicera laceana M.P.Nayar & G.S.Giri
  96. Lonicera lanceolata Wall.
  97. Lonicera leschenaultii Wall.
  98. Lonicera ligustrina Wall.
  99. Lonicera linderifolia Maxim.
  100. Lonicera litangensis Batalin
  101. Lonicera longiflora DC.
  102. Lonicera longituba H.T.Chang
  103. Lonicera maackii (Rupr.) Maxim.
  104. Lonicera macrantha (D.Don) Spreng.
  105. Lonicera magnibracteata M.P.Nayar & G.S.Giri
  106. Lonicera malayana M.R.Hend.
  107. Lonicera maximowiczii (Rupr.) Regel
  108. Lonicera mexicana (Kunth) Rehder
  109. Lonicera micrantha Trautv. ex Regel
  110. Lonicera microphylla Willd. ex Schult.
  111. Lonicera minutifolia Kitam.
  112. Lonicera mochidzukiana Makino
  113. Lonicera modesta Rehder
  114. Lonicera morrowii A.Gray
  115. Lonicera mucronata Rehder
  116. Lonicera myrtilloides Purpus
  117. Lonicera nervosa Maxim.
  118. Lonicera nigra L., crno pasje grožđe, crna kozja krv
  119. Lonicera nubium (Hand.-Mazz.) Hand.-Mazz.
  120. Lonicera nummulariifolia Jaub. & Spach
  121. Lonicera oblata K.S.Hao ex P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang
  122. Lonicera oblongifolia Hook.
  123. Lonicera obovata Royle ex Hook.f. & Thomson
  124. Lonicera oiwakensis Hayata
  125. Lonicera olgae Regel & Schmalh.
  126. Lonicera oreodoxa Harry Sm. ex Rehder
  127. Lonicera ovata Buch.-Ham. ex Hook.f.
  128. Lonicera pamirica Pojark.
  129. Lonicera pampaninii H.Lév.
  130. Lonicera paradoxa Pojark.
  131. Lonicera periclymenum L., šumska kozokrvina
  132. Lonicera pilosa (Kunth) Spreng.
  133. Lonicera praeflorens Batalin
  134. Lonicera prostrata Rehder
  135. Lonicera pulcherrima Ridl.
  136. Lonicera purpurascens (Jacquem. ex Decne.) Walp.
  137. Lonicera pyrenaica L.
  138. Lonicera quinquelocularis Hardw.
  139. Lonicera ramosissima Franch. & Sav. ex Maxim.
  140. Lonicera reticulata Raf.
  141. Lonicera retusa Franch.
  142. Lonicera rhytidophylla Hand.-Mazz.
  143. Lonicera robertsonii Gamble
  144. Lonicera rupicola Hook.f. & Thomson
  145. Lonicera ruprechtiana Regel
  146. Lonicera × sargentii Rehder
  147. Lonicera schmitziana Roezl ex Dippel
  148. Lonicera semenovii Regel
  149. Lonicera sempervirens L., vazdazelena kozja krv
  150. Lonicera serreana Hand.-Mazz.
  151. Lonicera setifera Franch.
  152. Lonicera siamensis Gamble
  153. Lonicera similis Hemsl.
  154. Lonicera simulatrix Pojark.
  155. Lonicera sovetkinae Tkatsch.
  156. Lonicera spinosa (Decne.) Jacquem. ex Walp.
  157. Lonicera stabiana Guss. ex Pasq.
  158. Lonicera standishii Jacques
  159. Lonicera stenantha Pojark.
  160. Lonicera stephanocarpa Franch.
  161. Lonicera steveniana Fisch. ex Pojark.
  162. Lonicera strophiophora Franch.
  163. Lonicera subaequalis Rehder
  164. Lonicera subhispida Nakai
  165. Lonicera sublabiata P.S.Hsu & H.J.Wang
  166. Lonicera subsessilis Rehder
  167. Lonicera subspicata Hook. & Arn.
  168. Lonicera sumatrana Miq.
  169. Lonicera tangutica Maxim.
  170. Lonicera tatarica L., tatarska kozja krv
  171. Lonicera tatarinowii Maxim.
  172. Lonicera tianshanica Pojark.
  173. Lonicera tolmatchevii Pojark.
  174. Lonicera tomentella Hook.f. & Thomson
  175. Lonicera tragophylla Hemsl.
  176. Lonicera tricalysioides C.Y.Wu
  177. Lonicera trichogyne Rehder
  178. Lonicera trichosantha Bureau & Franch.
  179. Lonicera trichosepala (Rehder) P.S.Hsu
  180. Lonicera tschonoskii Maxim.
  181. Lonicera tubuliflora Rehder
  182. Lonicera utahensis S.Watson
  183. Lonicera uzenensis Kadota
  184. Lonicera vaccinioides Rehder
  185. Lonicera vidalii Franch. & Sav.
  186. Lonicera villosa (Michx.) Schult.
  187. Lonicera virgultorum W.W.Sm.
  188. Lonicera webbiana Wall. ex DC.
  189. Lonicera × xylosteoides Tausch
  190. Lonicera xylosteum L., crvena kozja krv
  191. Lonicera yunnanensis Franch.
  192. Lonicera zeravshanica Pojark.
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Wikivrste imaju podatke o: Lonicera

Izvori

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Kozokrvina: Brief Summary ( Croatian )

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Kozokrvina (kozja krv, lat. Lonicera), veliki biljni rod iz porodice kozokrvnica kojemu pripada preko 190 vrsta listopadnih, rjeđe poluzimzelenih ili vazdazelenih penjačica ili uspravnih grmova. U Hrvatskoj raste nekoliko vrsta, od kojih se Borbaševa kozja krv (L. borbasiana) vodi kao hrvatski endem. Poznatije vrste su isprepletena kozja krv (Lonicera implexa), planinska kozja krv ili sitno pasje grožđe (L. alpigena), modra kozja krv (L. caerulea), crvena kozja krv (L. xylosteum) i druge

Rod je nekada nazivan Caprifolium, i po njemu je porodica dobila ime, ali se danas naziva Lonicera po njemačkom botaničaru Adamu Loniceru.

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Kozylist ( Upper Sorbian )

provided by wikipedia HSB

Kozylist[1][2] (Lonicera) je ród ze swójby kozylistowych rostlinow (Caprifoliaceae).

Družiny (wuběrk)

Srjedźnoeuroske družiny
Dalše družiny
Často plahowane a družiny a hybridy
Dalše družiny su sćěhowace

Nóžki

  1. 1,0 1,1 Pawoł Völkel: Prawopisny słownik hornjoserbskeje rěče. Hornjoserbsko-němski słownik. Ludowe nakładnistwo Domowina, Budyšin 2005, ISBN 3-7420-1920-1, str. 213.
  2. 2,0 2,1 W internetowym słowniku: Geißblatt

Eksterne wotkazy

Commons
Hlej wotpowědne dataje we Wikimedia Commons:
Kozylist
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Kozylist: Brief Summary ( Upper Sorbian )

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Kozylist (Lonicera) je ród ze swójby kozylistowych rostlinow (Caprifoliaceae).

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Kamperfuli ( Indonesian )

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Untuk kegunaan lain, lihat Kamperfuli (disambiguasi).

Kamperfuli (honeysuckles atau Lonicera, /[unsupported input]lɒˈnɪsərə/;[1] syn. Caprifolium Mill.) adalah tanaman perdu dan tumbuhan merambat yang terdapat terutama di belahan bumi utara. Kamperfuli ada sekitar 180 spesies, 100 spesies berada di China; Eropa, India dan Amerika Utara hanya mempunyai sekitar 20 spesies asli dari masing-masing tempat. Bunganya biasanya sangat semerbak baunya, berwarna putih, ros, merah, atau kuning. Bila bunganya gugur, terbentuk tandan buah yang bulat berwarna merah, ungu, jingga, atau hijau.

Ada tanaman kamperfuli yang tumbuh sebagai perdu yang tingginya mencapai 2,4m hingga 3m. Jenis-jenis lain tumbuh rendah, menyebar di tanah. Ada juga yang tumbuh tinggi, merambat pada tembok kebun.

Ada kamperfuli yang bunganya berbentuk pipa atau terompet. Bunganya tumbuh dalam kelompok atau tandan. Kamperfuli tumbuh sangat cepat.

Budidaya

Kamperfuli biasa digunakan sebagai tanaman pekarangan, karena kemampuannya untuk menutupi dinding yang tak terlihat, pembatas, atau menutupi bangunan bagian luar. Kamperfuli menghasilkan banyak bunga berbentuk tabung di musim panas, dengan aroma yang intens dari berbagai varietas.

Contoh Spesies

 src=
L. ciliosa
 src=
L. japonica fruit
 src=
L. sempervirens
 src=
L. tatarica
 src=
L.caprifolium, Chèvrefeuille

Lonicera acuminata
Lonicera albiflora (Kamperfuli Putih)
Lonicera alpigena (Kamperfuli Alpen)
Lonicera altmannii
Lonicera angustifolia
Lonicera anisocalyx
Lonicera arborea
Lonicera arizonica (Kamperfuli Arizona)
Lonicera biflora
Lonicera bournei
Lonicera brevisepala
Lonicera buchananii
Lonicera buddleioides
Lonicera caerulea
Lonicera calcarata
Lonicera calvescens
Lonicera canadensis
Lonicera caprifolium
Lonicera carnosifolis
Lonicera chrysantha
Lonicera ciliosa (Kamperfuli jingga)
Lonicera ciliosissima
Lonicera cinerea
Lonicera codonantha
Lonicera confusa
Lonicera conjugialis
Lonicera crassifolia
Lonicera cyanocarpa
Lonicera dasystyla
Lonicera dioica -
Lonicera elisae
Lonicera etrusca
Lonicera fargesii
Lonicera ferdinandii
Lonicera ferruginea
Lonicera flava (Kamperfuli kuning)
Lonicera fragilis
Lonicera fragrantissima
Lonicera fulvotomentosa
Lonicera glutinosa
Lonicera graebneri
Lonicera gynochlamydea
Lonicera hellenica
Lonicera hemsleyana
Lonicera heterophylla
Lonicera hildebrandiana
Lonicera hirsuta)
Lonicera hispida
Lonicera hispidula (Kamperfuli pink)
Lonicera humilis
Lonicera hypoglauca
Lonicera hypoleuca
Lonicera implexa
Lonicera inconspicua
Lonicera inodora
Lonicera interrupta
Lonicera involucrata
Lonicera japonica (Kamperfuli Jepang)
Lonicera jilongensis
Lonicera kansuensis
Lonicera kawakamii
Lonicera korolkowii
Lonicera lanceolata
Lonicera ligustrina
Lonicera litangensis
Lonicera longiflora
Lonicera longituba
Lonicera maackii
Lonicera macrantha
Lonicera macranthoides
Lonicera maximowiczii
Lonicera microphylla
Lonicera minuta
Lonicera minutifolia
Lonicera modesta
Lonicera morrowii
Lonicera mucronata
Lonicera myrtillus
Lonicera nervosa
Lonicera nigra
Lonicera nitida
Lonicera nubium
Lonicera nummulariifolia
Lonicera oblata
Lonicera oblongifolia
Lonicera oiwakensis
Lonicera oreodoxa
Lonicera orientalis
Lonicera pampaninii
Lonicera paradoxa
Lonicera periclymenum
Lonicera pileata
Lonicera pilosa
Lonicera praeflorens
Lonicera prostrata
Lonicera pyrenaica
Lonicera reticulata
Lonicera retusa
Lonicera rhytidophylla
Lonicera rupicola
Lonicera ruprechtiana
Lonicera saccata
Lonicera schneideriana
Lonicera semenovii
Lonicera sempervirens
Lonicera serreana
Lonicera setifera
Lonicera similis
Lonicera spinosa
Lonicera splendida
Lonicera standishii
Lonicera stephanocarpa
Lonicera subaequalis
Lonicera subhispida
Lonicera sublabiata
Lonicera subspicata
Lonicera szechuanica
Lonicera taipeiensis
Lonicera tangutica
Lonicera tatarica
Lonicera tatarinowii
Lonicera tomentella
Lonicera tragophylla
Lonicera tricalysioides
Lonicera trichogyne
Lonicera trichosantha
Lonicera trichosepala
Lonicera tubuliflora
Lonicera utahensis
Lonicera villosa
Lonicera virgultorum
Lonicera webbiana
Lonicera xylosteum
Lonicera yunnanensis

Referensi

[1] [2] [3] [4]

  1. ^ a b Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607
  2. ^ http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamperfoelie
  3. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honeysuckle
  4. ^ Walt Disney. (2002). Disney's My First Encyclopedia. Jakarta: PT Widyadara

Pranala luar

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Penulis dan editor Wikipedia
original
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wikipedia ID

Kamperfuli: Brief Summary ( Indonesian )

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Untuk kegunaan lain, lihat Kamperfuli (disambiguasi).

Kamperfuli (honeysuckles atau Lonicera, /[unsupported input]lɒˈnɪsərə/; syn. Caprifolium Mill.) adalah tanaman perdu dan tumbuhan merambat yang terdapat terutama di belahan bumi utara. Kamperfuli ada sekitar 180 spesies, 100 spesies berada di China; Eropa, India dan Amerika Utara hanya mempunyai sekitar 20 spesies asli dari masing-masing tempat. Bunganya biasanya sangat semerbak baunya, berwarna putih, ros, merah, atau kuning. Bila bunganya gugur, terbentuk tandan buah yang bulat berwarna merah, ungu, jingga, atau hijau.

Ada tanaman kamperfuli yang tumbuh sebagai perdu yang tingginya mencapai 2,4m hingga 3m. Jenis-jenis lain tumbuh rendah, menyebar di tanah. Ada juga yang tumbuh tinggi, merambat pada tembok kebun.

Ada kamperfuli yang bunganya berbentuk pipa atau terompet. Bunganya tumbuh dalam kelompok atau tandan. Kamperfuli tumbuh sangat cepat.

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Lonicera ( Italian )

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Lonicera L. 1753 è un genere di piante Spermatofite Dicotiledoni appartenenti alla famiglia delle Caprifoliaceae, originario dell'America ed Estremo Oriente. Le piante di questo genere sono comunemente note come caprifogli. Vi appartengono, tra gli altri il caprifoglio alpino (Lonicera alpigena), il caprifoglio comune (Lonicera caprifolium), il caprifoglio mediterraneo (Lonicera implexa) e il caprifoglio peloso (Lonicera xylosteum).

Sistematica

Il genere Lonicera comprende circa 200 specie provenienti dall'Asia, America settentrionale e Europa, di queste una decina appartengono alla flora spontanea italiana, mentre in Cina si trovano la maggioranza di specie presenti (circa 100). Nelle classificazioni più vecchie la famiglia di questo genere è anche chiamata Loniceraceae Vest. È da aggiungere inoltre che prima di Linneo questo genere era chiamato Caprifolium ma anche Peryclimenon, nomenclature talora usate anche in tempi moderni. Altri generi non più in uso, le cui specie sono passare al Lonicera, sono: Xylosteum, Nintooa e Chamaecerasus. Anche l'ordine (attualmente quello delle Dipsacales) non è sempre stato lo stesso: nelle prime classificazioni filogenetiche a opera del botanico Richard von Wettstein (1863-1931) nel suo Handbuch der Systematischen Botanik (traduzione italiana: Botanica sistematica) la famiglia delle Caprifoliaceae è assegnata all'ordine delle Rubiales, alla sottoclasse delle Sympetalae e quindi alla classe delle Dicotyledones.

La classificazione di questo genere è così organizzata:

Famiglia: Caprifoliaceae definita dal botanico francese Antoine-Laurent de Jussieu (1748-1836) in una pubblicazione del 1789.
Sottofamiglia: Loniceroideae definita da Kostel. nel 1833
Tribù: Lonicereae definita dal botanico e micologo svizzero Augustin Pyrame de Candolle (1778-1841) nel 1830.
Sottotribù: Lonicerinae definita dal botanico tedesco Bernhard Adalbert Emil Koehne (1848-1918) nel 1893.
Genere: Lonicera denominata da Carl von Linné (1753)

Il genere di questa scheda è riccamente polimorfo per cui viene suddiviso in più sezioni (o sottogeneri):

  • Periclymenum o Caprifolium : comprende le specie rampicanti di tipo lianoso con foglie superiori connate ossia formanti un disco o un collare attraversato dal fusto. Le specie spontanee italiane che appartengono a questa sezione sono: L. implexa, L. caprifolium, L. etrusca e L. periclymenum.
  • Chamaecerasus o Xylosteum : sono specie cespuglianti (a portamento arbustivo o cespuglioso); i rami sono glabri o pubescenti se giovani; i fiori sono peduncolati originati da un'ascella fogliare; la corolla può essere bilabiata o penta-labiata; i frutti sono coerenti fra di loro (non sono separati singolarmente). Nella nostra flora spontanea abbiamo: L. nigra, L. alpigena, L. xylosteum e L. coerulea.
  • Nintooa o Nontova : sono le specie rampicanti e sempreverdi con rami cavi e fiori ascellari e appaiati. Di questa sezione fa parte solo L. biflora (oltre naturalmente tutte le altre specie nel resto del mondo).

Altri botanici, considerando più a fondo i vari caratteri morfologici delle varie specie, hanno suddiviso il genere fino a 6 gruppi (in fondo alla presente scheda tramite il sistema delle chiavi analitiche dicotome vengono elencate le specie spontanee della nostra flora).
Sebbene il termine caprifoglio sia largamente usato per indicare genericamente ogni specie appartenente al genere Lonicera, sarebbe auspicabile limitarne l'impiego solo per designare la specie Lonicera caprifolium L., e chiamare tutte le altre indistintamente lonìcere; equivoci che comunque si possono dissipare facilmente affiancando sempre al nome comune anche la nomenclatura binomiale scientifica.

Etimologia

Il termine del genere (Lonicera) fu coniato da Linneo nel 1753 adattando al latino il cognome "Lonitzer", volendo ricordare il botanico Adam Lonitzer (1528-1586) - in italiano questo cognome si pronuncia Lonicer - medico condotto a Francoforte. Il nome comune (caprifolium) deriva dal latino ed è composto da due termini: “capra” e “folium” (capra e foglia). Probabilmente questa dizione deriva dal fatto che le capre usano brucare le foglie di alcune specie di questo genere.
Degli altri nomi assegnati a questo genere si può citare Dioscoride che insieme ai greci chiamava queste piante "periclymenon", che tradotto liberamente significa “accerchiamento” (termine che probabilmente deriva dal verbo “perikleio”, “io mi intreccio”). Ma un'altra etimologia fa derivare questo nome dal “polimorfo” personaggio di Periclimeno, figlio di Neleo, descritto da Omero nell'Odissea. “Madreselva”, altro nome per queste piante, si trova per la prima volta nell'opera dedicata ai medicamenti del medico romano Scribonio Largo
Gli altri nomi (Vincibosco – Ligabosco) sono di derivazione rinascimentale toscana.

Morfologia

Il portamento sotto il quale si presentano le varie specie del genere è assai diverso: può comprendere piante legnose e arbusti a portamento cespuglioso, sarmentoso, cespitoso (e quindi anche eretto), ma anche rampicante o lianoso (e quindi volubile); possono essere coltivate anche in diversi esemplari ibridi, sempreverdi o caducifoglia. Delle specie spontanee italiane ad esempio metà sono volubili e lianose, l'altra metà invece hanno un abito eretto-arbustivo.
Le piante di questo genere sono molto longeve, ma presentano dei cicli vegetativi intermedi caratterizzati dal fatto che dopo pochi anni di vita si essiccano quasi completamente. A questo punto dalla ceppaia vengono emessi nuovi polloni, che naturalmente dopo un certo numero di anni si atrofizzano e muoiono, ripetendo da capo il ciclo appena descritto.

Fusto

L'altezza del fusto è molto variabile: da 20 cm fino a 7 m e in genere è molto ramoso. Questa ramosità quasi cespitosa è data dalla presenza di gemme multiple, soprannumerali e in serie sovrapposte nelle zone ascellari del fusto. Un'altra particolarità del fusto è che questo è caratterizzato dalla formazione di un unico strato di fibre “liberiane” (fibre a membrana ispessita che entrano nella costituzione del “libro”, all'interno della corteccia), per ciascun ciclo vegetativo annuale, facilitando così la determinazione della sua età.

Foglie

Le foglie possono essere persistenti, semi-persistenti o caduche; la lamina quasi sempre è semplice di forma più o meno ovata; la disposizione delle foglie lungo il fusto è opposta a 2 a 2; possono essere picciolate (specialmente nei rami sterili – senza fiori) o sessili. Spesso sono connate ossia sono appaiate e saldate alla base tra di loro e formano quindi un'unica foglia amplessicaule attraversata nel centro dal fusto (lamina perfogliata). Le pagine fogliari possono essere glabre o vellutate. In alcuni casi sono presenti delle stipole. Le dimensioni delle foglie va 1 cm a 10 cm.

Infiorescenza

L'infiorescenza può essere ascellare o terminale. I fiori sono variamente disposti ma sempre in numero relativamente piccolo per ogni infiorescenza. A volte possono essere brevemente pedicellati su 2 brattee e 4 bratteole. Altre volte si hanno capolini sessili o infiorescenze cimose (corte o allungate).

Fiori

I fiori sono zigomorfi, ermafroditi, tetraciclici (calicecorollaandroceogineceo) e pentameri; sono inoltre profumati da sostanze di natura benzoloide (essenze nelle quali prevalgono i composti ad anello benzoico). Questa profumazione si rileva anche spezzando i fusti della pianta.

  • Calice: il calice, gamosepalo con 5 sepali saldati, normalmente è breve con 5 piccoli denti.
  • Corolla: la corolla, gamopetala a 5 petali più o meno saldati fra di loro, è monosimmetrica (o zigomorfa) a due labbra terminali; quello posteriore è formato da quattro petali concresciuti; entrambe le labbra sono riflesse (ripiegate all'indietro). La parte iniziale della corolla può essere tubolare, campanulata o a imbuto. Il tubo può essere breve o lungo o sottile ma anche gibboso.
  • Androceo: gli stami sono 5 con i filamenti staminali inseriti nel tubo corollino; spesso sporgono per un buon tratto dalla fauce della corolla.
  • Gineceo: l'ovario è infero con 2-3 o 5 loculi. Si riscontrano anche casi di fusione di ovarii fra due fiori.
  • Impollinazione: sono piante a fecondazione entomogama (insetti e farfalle). I fiori delle varie specie attraggono soprattutto le sfingidi e grossi imenotteri come i Bombi che con la loro lunga proboscide riescono a raccogliere il nettare contenuto, fino a metà altezza, nel lungo tubo corollino.

Frutti

Il frutto è una bacca succosa di colore rosso - violaceo o nero spesso tossica per la presenza di xilosteina, xylostosidina (glycoside iridoide e alkaloide thio C18H25NO8S) hederagenina . Contiene da pochi a numerosi semi discoidi.

Distribuzione e habitat

Queste piante allo stato libero crescono su un vastissimo territorio che comprende oltre all'Europa, qualsiasi altra zona posta nell'Emisfero boreale come l'Asia, l'Africa e l'America, con particolare rilevanza per le regioni montuose dell'Asia centrale e orientale. Possiamo infatti considerare l'Himalaya, a una altitudine compresa tra i 3000 e 4000 m s.l.m., l'area di origine del genere Lonicera. comprese comunque anche le zone montuose della Cina occidentale.

Usi

Cucina

In alcune zone dell'Himalaya si consumano le bacche zuccherine della L. angustifolia, mentre in Siberia sono ricercate quelle del L. coerulea (grande arbusto a grossi frutti). Altre specie commestibili sono due piante americane: L. involucrata e L. ciliata (questa informazione viene dal Ministero dell'Agricoltura di Washington).
Inoltre alcuni fiori delle Lonicere producono un dolce nettare commestibile che può essere utilizzato come sciroppo o sorbetto o in altri dolci.

Giardinaggio

L'impiego maggiore di queste piante si ha nel giardinaggio: sembra che almeno un terzo delle specie che si conoscono siano oggetto di coltivazione nei vari giardini d'Europa e degli altri paesi.
Sono considerati arbusti rustici o semi-rustici, a seconda del clima locale, i cui pregi di profumazione, dei fiori e di portamento assicurano a essi una larga diffusione commerciale. Le specie rampicanti sono utilizzate soprattutto per ricoprire muri o pergolati o creare galleria nel giardino. Quelle arbustive si prestano ottimamente per la formazione di macchie arbustive, per formare siepi o dividere zone diverse dei giardini.
Alcune specie fioriscono subito in Primavera (L. fragrantissima); ma la maggior parte delle specie di questo genere fiorisce nella stagione più calda (estate o anche fine dell'estate). Ci sono poi specie più delicate (L. sempervirens) alle quali vanno destinate zone più calde e protette. Altre sono striscianti (L. japonica-flexuosa) e allora saranno lasciate libere di vegetare come l'edera.

Note

  • Con il legno della pianta L. tartarica vengono costruiti dei giocattoli per i gatti in quanto contiene il nepetalactone, un terpene, che è ritenuto essere un surrogato dei feromoni sessuali felini (come ad esempio le sostanze contenute nell'erba gatta).
  • In alcune zone (come negli Stati Uniti o nella Nuova Zelanda) alcune specie di questo genere (L. japonica e L. maackii) sono considerate erbe infestanti invasive. Infatti il taglio della pianta o anche il fuoco non eliminano la possibilità di rigenerazione dai ceppi sotterranei che rimangono ancora attivi.

Specie spontanee della flora italiana

Magnifying glass icon mgx2.svgLo stesso argomento in dettaglio: Specie di Lonicera.

Per meglio comprendere e individuare le varie specie del genere (solamente per le specie spontanee della nostra flora) l'elenco che segue utilizza in parte il sistema delle chiavi analitiche.

  • Gruppo 1A : piante a portamento cespuglioso con fusti eretti; i fiori sono appaiati e hanno il peduncolo in comune;
  • Gruppo 2A : l'apice delle foglie è generalmente acuto; le bacche sono rosse o nere;
Lonicera xylosteum L. - Caprifoglio peloso, Ciliegia della volpe, Sanguini, Pomola del diavolo, Gisilostio: consiste in un cespuglio non molto alto (15 dm massimo) dalla corteccia grigio-bluastra; le foglie non sono molto grandi: 5 – 6 cm; la corolla, bilabiata, è bianca alla fioritura e successivamente giallastra o rosata; il frutto è formato da due bacche subsferiche acquose saldate solo alla base. È comune in tutta l'Italia fino a 1600 m s.l.m..
Lonicera alpigena L. - Caprifoglio alpino, Madreselva alpina, Ciliegia bastarda, Ciliegia selvatica, Ciliegia di monte, Camecèraso: è un alto cespuglio (3 metri) con corteccia chiara; le foglie sono lunghe da 10 a 14 cm; i fiori sono appaiati su un unico peduncolo e hanno la corolla colore rosso – bruno; il frutto è rosso formato da due bacche concresciute per tutta la loro lunghezza. Si trova facilmente sia nelle Alpi che negli Appennini dai 800 ai 2100 m s.l.m..
  • Gruppo 2B : le foglie sono arrotondate (in qualche caso sono ottuse all'apice); le bacche sono sempre di colore scuro;
Lonicera nigra L. - Caprifoglio nero: è un basso cespuglio (15 dm) con fusto e rami color bruno; la lamina delle foglie è ellittico-acuminata; la corolla è rosea e bilabiata; il frutto è formato da due bacche rotonde saldate solo alla base. Si trova solo al nord ed è rara; è meno rara nella parte orientale a quote tra gli 800 e 1800 m s.l.m..
Lonicera caerulea L. - Caprifoglio turchino: è una pianta formata da cespugli bassi e legnosi con corteccia rossastra; le foglie sono ellittico-lanceolate; la corolla è attinomorfa e di colore giallastro (un po' bianco e un po' verde); le bacche sono completamente concresciute in unico frutto di forma ellissoide. Si trova a quote alte (1200 – 2000 m s.l.m.) solo nelle Alpi ma è rara.
  • Gruppo 1B : piante a portamento più o meno lianoso; infiorescenza con 2 o più fiori;
  • Gruppo 3A : l'infiorescenza è composta da 3 o più fiori in brevi cime; le bacche del frutto sono separate; le piante sono spontanee e probabilmente indigene dell'Italia;
  • Gruppo 4A : le foglie superiori sono saldate a 2 a 2 fra di loro formando una sola lamina attraversata al centro dal fusto;
Lonicera implexa Aiton – Caprifoglio mediterraneo: è una pianta sempreverde di media altezza (18 dm); la corolla è bianco-rosea con labbra di circa 10 mm; lo stilo è breve e peloso. Si trova al centro e al sud fino a 800 m s.l.m..
Lonicera caprifolium L. - Caprifoglio comune, Abbracciabosco, Legabosco, Uva di San Giovanni, Manicciola: in Italia è la specie più comune del genere; può arrivare oltre i 6 metri di sviluppo a portamento lianoso; la corolla è bianca – rossa e le labbra sono lunghe quasi 2 cm; lo stilo sporge insieme agli stami ed è glabro.
  • Gruppo 5B : l'infiorescenza è inserita quasi sempre tramite un peduncolo sopra l'ultimo paio di foglie (brattee); i fiori sono inseriti all'ascella di una bratteola subrotonda;
Lonicera etrusca Santi – Caprifoglio etrusco: è una pianta a portamento lianoso; l'ultimo paio di foglie sono concresciute alla base; gli stami sporgo di 5 – 10 mm dalla corolla di colore biancastro con labbra inferiore giallo – roseo; le bacche del frutto sono rosse. È comune su tutto il territorio.
Lonicera stabiana Pasquale – Caprifoglio di Stabia: il portamento di questa pianta è quello di un arbusto rampicante; la forma della corolla è più allungata e gli stami sono appena sporgenti dalla stessa; la bacca del frutto è gialla. Si trova solamente nel napoletano a medie quote. È considerata una pianta rara ma sicuramente endemica per l'Italia.
  • Gruppo 4B : le foglie superiori sono ristrette alla base e ben separate le une dalla altre;
Lonicera periclymenum L. - Caprifoglio atlantico, Periclìmeno: il portamento è lianoso (può arrivare fino a 5 metri di sviluppo); la corolla è soffusa di purpureo e la bacca è di colore bruno – giallastra. Si trova al nord-est non frequentemente.
  • Gruppo 3B : l'infiorescenza è composta da due fiori su un unico peduncolo; le bacche del frutto sono appaiate; le piante sono state importate per essere coltivate e in un secondo tempo si sono inselvatichite;
Lonicera japonica Thumb. - Caprifoglio giapponese: raggiunge i 5 metri con un portamento lianoso sempreverde; i fiori profumano intensamente e le bacche sono nere. Si trova al nord.
Lonicera biflora Desf. : è simile alla precedente ma le bacche sono azzurro – nerastre. Si trova al sud.

Bibliografia

  • Giacomo Nicolini, Enciclopedia Botanica Motta. Volume secondo, Milano, Federico Motta Editore, 1960, p. 728.
  • Sandro Pignatti, Flora d'Italia. Volume secondo, Bologna, Edagricole, 1982, p. 641, ISBN 88-506-2449-2.
  • 1996 Alfio Musmarra, Dizionario di botanica, Bologna, Edagricole.

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Lonicera: Brief Summary ( Italian )

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Lonicera L. 1753 è un genere di piante Spermatofite Dicotiledoni appartenenti alla famiglia delle Caprifoliaceae, originario dell'America ed Estremo Oriente. Le piante di questo genere sono comunemente note come caprifogli. Vi appartengono, tra gli altri il caprifoglio alpino (Lonicera alpigena), il caprifoglio comune (Lonicera caprifolium), il caprifoglio mediterraneo (Lonicera implexa) e il caprifoglio peloso (Lonicera xylosteum).

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Sausmedis ( Lithuanian )

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Sausmedis (lot. Lonicera) – sausmedinių (Caprifoliaceae) šeimos augalų gentis. Ją sudaro Šiaurės pusrutulyje paplitę krūmai ir vijokliai. Dauguma rūšių aptiktos Kinijoje, kitos auga Europoje ir Šiaurės Amerikoje.

Dauguma sausmedžių – lapus metantys augalai, nors yra ir visžalių. Žiedai vamzdiški, kvapnūs, turi daug nektaro. Kai kurių rūšių uogos valgomos.

Rūšys

Gentį sudaro ~180 rūšių. Lietuvoje savaime auga viena rūšis – paprastasis sausmedis (Lonicera xylosteum).


Vikiteka

Dendrologija Botanika · Augalija · Flora · Augalai · Sumedėjęs augalas · Liana · Puskrūmis · Krūmokšnis · Krūmas · Krūmedis · Medis · Vaismedis

Iliustruotas Lietuvos augalų genčių vardynas · Lietuvos vietinės medžių ir krūmų rūšys · Lietuvos išskirtiniai medžiai · Lietuvos svetimžemė dendroflora · Pasaulio išskirtiniai medžiai

Miškas · Miško skliautas · Lietuvos miškai · Pasaulio miškai (šalys pagal miškų plotą) · Miškų nykimas (neteisėtas miško kirtimas)

Miškininkystė (ekologinė miškininkystė) · Miško atkūrimas · Įveisimas · Miškų ūkis · Miškų urėdija · Girininkija · Eiguva · Lietuvos miškų institutas

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Sausmedis: Brief Summary ( Lithuanian )

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Sausmedis (lot. Lonicera) – sausmedinių (Caprifoliaceae) šeimos augalų gentis. Ją sudaro Šiaurės pusrutulyje paplitę krūmai ir vijokliai. Dauguma rūšių aptiktos Kinijoje, kitos auga Europoje ir Šiaurės Amerikoje.

Dauguma sausmedžių – lapus metantys augalai, nors yra ir visžalių. Žiedai vamzdiški, kvapnūs, turi daug nektaro. Kai kurių rūšių uogos valgomos.

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Kamperfoelie ( Dutch; Flemish )

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Kamperfoelie (Lonicera) is een geslacht van slingerplanten en struiken dat zowel in Europa, China, Noordoost-Azië als in de Verenigde Staten voorkomt. Het geslacht behoort tot de kamperfoeliefamilie (Caprifoliaceae). De planten slingeren zich om andere planten en bomen heen.

De bloemen hebben vooral 's avonds een sterke zoete geur. Ze zijn er in diverse kleuren, veelvoorkomend is de roze-rode en geel-witte vorm. De plant is vrij gemakkelijk te vermeerderen uit zomer- of winterstekken.

Etymologie

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Kamperfoelie

Kamperfoelie wordt ook wel 'geitenblad' genoemd. Dat komt overeen met Frans 'chèvre-feuille', Duits 'Geißblatt' en Italiaanse 'caprifoglio'. De Nederlandse naam is een verbastering van de Italiaanse.

De botanische naam Lonicera is ontleend aan de Duitse natuurvorser Adam Lonitzer.

Klimmende soorten

  • Lonicera caprifolium - tuinkamperfoelie of gewone kamperfoelie
  • Lonicera japonica
  • Lonicera periclymenum - wilde kamperfoelie
  • Lonicera sempervirens
  • Lonicera ×heckrotti (Lonicera americana × Lonicera sempervirens)
  • Lonicera implexa

Groenblijvende struiken

  • Lonicera fragrantissima
  • Lonicera nitida - Chinese kamperfoelie
  • Lonicera pileata
  • Lonicera korolkowii
  • Lonicera ledebourii
  • Lonicera maackii
  • Lonicera morrowii
  • Lonicera tatarica
  • Lonicera xylosteum - rode kamperfoelie
  • Lonicera syringantha
  • Lonicera ×purpusii (kruising Lonicera standishii × Lonicera fragrantissima)
Wikimedia Commons Zie de categorie Lonicera van Wikimedia Commons voor mediabestanden over dit onderwerp.
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Kamperfoelie: Brief Summary ( Dutch; Flemish )

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Kamperfoelie (Lonicera) is een geslacht van slingerplanten en struiken dat zowel in Europa, China, Noordoost-Azië als in de Verenigde Staten voorkomt. Het geslacht behoort tot de kamperfoeliefamilie (Caprifoliaceae). De planten slingeren zich om andere planten en bomen heen.

De bloemen hebben vooral 's avonds een sterke zoete geur. Ze zijn er in diverse kleuren, veelvoorkomend is de roze-rode en geel-witte vorm. De plant is vrij gemakkelijk te vermeerderen uit zomer- of winterstekken.

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Leddvedslekta ( Norwegian )

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Leddvedslekta (Lonicera) er utbreidd i Nord-Amerika, Europa og Aust-Asia med nesten 200 artar av buskar og lianar. Dei har motsette, heilranda blad. Blomstrane er 5-talige og sitt anten parvist ved bladhjørna eller i endestilte standar som er støtta av høgblad. Begerblada er røyr- eller begerforma samanvaksne, og det same er skjedd med kronblad, som dannar eit langt kronrøyr som har to eller fem lappar ved munningen. Ved blomsteropningen er kronblada spalta, slik at dei fire øvste til saman dannar ei leppe, medan den einslege, nedste dannar ei anna. Frukta er bær som sit enkeltvis eller to saman.

Namnet «Lonicera» stammar frå renessansebotanikaren Adam Lonicer.

Fleire artar av Lonicera har blitt invasive artar når dei er introdusert utanfor sitt naturlege vekstområde. Dette gjeld særleg på New Zealand og i USA. Mellom desse finn ein L. japonica, L. maackii, L. morrowii og L. tatarica.

 src=
L. alpigena
 src=
L. ciliosa
 src=
L. sempervirens
 src=
L. hildebrandiana

Arter i Noreg

Artar ein kan finne i Noreg:

Hybridar

Det finst mange hydridar og kultivarar som er nytta som hageplanter. Mange av desse har ukjent opphav.[2][3]

Andre artar

  • Lonicera acuminata
  • Lonicera affinis
  • Lonicera albiflora
  • Lonicera alpigena
  • Lonicera alseuosmoides
  • Lonicera altmannii
  • Lonicera arborea
  • Lonicera arizonica
  • Lonicera asperifolia
  • Lonicera bracteolaris
  • Lonicera canadensis
  • Lonicera caucasica
  • Lonicera chaetocarpa
  • Lonicera chamissoi
  • Lonicera chrysantha
  • Lonicera ciliosa
  • Lonicera confusa
  • Lonicera dasystyla
  • Lonicera demissa
  • Lonicera dioica
  • Lonicera discolor
  • Lonicera etrusca
  • Lonicera ferdinandi
  • Lonicera flava
  • Lonicera floribunda
  • Lonicera fragrantissima
  • Lonicera fuchsioides
  • Lonicera glabrata
  • Lonicera gracilipes
  • Lonicera gynochlamydea
  • Lonicera heteroloba
  • Lonicera heterophylla
  • Lonicera hispida
  • Lonicera hispidula
  • Lonicera hypoglauca
  • Lonicera hypoleuca
  • Lonicera iberica
  • Lonicera implexa
  • Lonicera interrupta
  • Lonicera involucrata
  • Lonicera japonica
  • Lonicera javanica
  • Lonicera koehneana
  • Lonicera korolkowii
  • Lonicera lanceolata
  • Lonicera longa
  • Lonicera maackii
  • Lonicera macrantha
  • Lonicera maximowiczii
  • Lonicera microphylla
  • Lonicera morrowii
  • Lonicera myrtillus
  • Lonicera nervosa
  • Lonicera nigra
  • Lonicera nummulariifolia
  • Lonicera oblongifolia
  • Lonicera obovata
  • Lonicera oresbia
  • Lonicera orientalis
  • Lonicera praeflorens
  • Lonicera prostrata
  • Lonicera pyrenaica
  • Lonicera quinquelocularis
  • Lonicera ramosissima
  • Lonicera reticulata
  • Lonicera rupicola
  • Lonicera ruprechtiana
  • Lonicera saccata
  • Lonicera sempervirens
  • Lonicera similis
  • Lonicera spinosa
  • Lonicera standishii
  • Lonicera stephanocarpa
  • Lonicera subsessilis
  • Lonicera subspicata
  • Lonicera tatarinovii
  • Lonicera tatsienensis
  • Lonicera tenuipes
  • Lonicera tomentella
  • Lonicera tragophylla
  • Lonicera trichopoda
  • Lonicera trichosantha
  • Lonicera utahensis
  • Lonicera webbiana

Kjelder

Bakgrunnsstoff

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Leddvedslekta: Brief Summary ( Norwegian )

provided by wikipedia NN

Leddvedslekta (Lonicera) er utbreidd i Nord-Amerika, Europa og Aust-Asia med nesten 200 artar av buskar og lianar. Dei har motsette, heilranda blad. Blomstrane er 5-talige og sitt anten parvist ved bladhjørna eller i endestilte standar som er støtta av høgblad. Begerblada er røyr- eller begerforma samanvaksne, og det same er skjedd med kronblad, som dannar eit langt kronrøyr som har to eller fem lappar ved munningen. Ved blomsteropningen er kronblada spalta, slik at dei fire øvste til saman dannar ei leppe, medan den einslege, nedste dannar ei anna. Frukta er bær som sit enkeltvis eller to saman.

Namnet «Lonicera» stammar frå renessansebotanikaren Adam Lonicer.

Fleire artar av Lonicera har blitt invasive artar når dei er introdusert utanfor sitt naturlege vekstområde. Dette gjeld særleg på New Zealand og i USA. Mellom desse finn ein L. japonica, L. maackii, L. morrowii og L. tatarica.

 src= L. alpigena  src= L. ciliosa  src= L. sempervirens  src= L. hildebrandiana
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Leddvedslekta ( Norwegian )

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Leddvedslekta (Lonicera) er ei planteslekt som har omkring 180 arter på verdensbasis. 9 arter har fått offisielt norsk navn. To arter er viltvoksende i Norge, men flere finnes forvillet. Slekten er i Norge lett gjenkjennelig med sine motsatte og helrandete blader.

Utseende

Artene i leddvedslekta har hele blader, med blomster som normalt sitter parvise ved bladfestene langsmed greinstammen. Hos noen arter sitter blomstene i tette hoder, hos de med norske navn gjelder dette vivendel og kaprifol. Disse blomstene blir omdannet til hvert sitt bær, mens bærparene hos blåleddved vokser i sammen så de ser ut som ett bær.

Bilde som viser bunnen av blåleddvedens dobbeltbær og tidligere blomsterbunn.

Man ser likevel fortsatt rester etter to blomsterbunner på undersiden av bærene. Blomstene eller bærene pleier å ha støtteblader og to forblader, som stort sett er fri, men også noen ganger sammenvokste med frukten (blåleddved). Blomstene er monosymmetrisk, og blomstene har hvit, gul, eller rød farge, men også blandinger av disse (lysegul og rosa). Blomstene har firefliket overleppe og en udelt underleppe. Underleppa er så å si radiærsymetriske hos blåleddved. Blomstene har fem pollenbærere, og bærene er saftige.


Utbredelse

Det er kun leddved og vivendel som har en naturlig utbredelse her hos oss. De andre er innført, da som regel igjennom hager og parker. De andre i slekta man finner ute i naturen, har da spredd seg fra hager, hageavfall eller fugler som har spist bærene, og spredd frø gjennom avføringen. Leddved er vanlig til spredt til Dovre og Tynset, men den er sjeldnere nord til Verdal, der den foretrekker baserik jord. Den er også antageligvis dyrket som hageplante og dermed forvillet på Åkerøya ved Mo i Rana og fire steder på Svalbard.

Svarteliste

Flere av de innførte artene i leddvedslekta har havnet på svartelista. Det er oppdaget at måten disse artene sprer seg, og utkonkurrer andre arter på, at noen av dem er en risiko for den naturlige floraen og faunaen i Norge. På svartelista blir plantene sortert etter faren de utgjør, og i leddvedslekta er farene artene utgjør fordelt slik:

SE Svært høy risiko
  • blåleddved
HI Høy risiko
  • kaprifol
  • skjermleddved
  • tartarleddved
LO Lav risiko
  • alpeleddved
  • svartleddved
  • Lonicera morrowii
NK Ingen kjent risiko
  • Lonicera japonica
  • prydleddved
  • Lonicera sempervirens

Giftighet

Alle artene i leddvedslekta er moderat til lett giftige, mens blåleddved er brukt i syltetøy og liknende blant annet i Russland. Om blåleddvedbærene du finner i Norge, er sikre å spise, er usikkert. Det anbefales ikke å gjøre dette, da spiseligheten i Russland kan ha noe med tilberedning å gjøre, eventuelt at det dreier seg om forskjellige underarter, varieteter eller sorter. Det er observert forgiftninger, dog vanligvis ikke alvorlige, hos andre arter. Vanligvis ender det med oppkast og annet ubehag, men det er også i sjeldne tilfeller beskrevet forgiftninger med dødelig utgang, antageligvis barn som har spist mange bær. Giftstoffene er for det meste sapoiner. Men det er også funnet spor av alkaloider, deriblant en som heter xylostosidin.

Etymologi

Lonicera er oppkalt etter den tyske legen Adam Lonitzer (1528-1586). Det er Charles Plumier, som brukte dette navnet først på en plante i 1703.

Litteratur

  • Lid, Johannes og Lid, Dagny Tande: Norsk flora. 7. utg. Redigert av Elven Reidar. Samlaget, 2005. ISBN 978-82-05-32563-0 (Side 728-731)
  • Stenberg, Lennart og Mossberg, Bo: Gyldendals store nordiske flora. Gyldendal 2007. ISBN 82-521-6029-8 (Side 570-572)
  • Høeg, Ove Arbo, Christphersen, Anne Sofie Wyller, Faarlund, Torbjørn, Lauritzen, Eva Mæhre, Løkken, Sverre, Røssberg, Bjørn Olav, Salvesen, Per H. og Sævre, Rune: Våre medisinske planter. ISBN 82-7010-156-7 (Side 311, 340)
  • Grey-Wilson, Christopher, Blamey, Marjorie: Teknologisk forlags store illustrerte flora for Norge og Nord-Europa" Oversatt og tilpasset til norsk av Faarlund, Torbjørn, Sundig, Per. Teknologisk forlag 1992. ISBN 82-512-0355-4 (Side 382-383)
  • Nielsen, Harald, Sivertsen, Bente: Giftplanter J.W. Cappelens forlag 1979. ISBN 82-02-04225-9 (Side 129, 130)

Eksterne lenker

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Leddvedslekta: Brief Summary ( Norwegian )

provided by wikipedia NO

Leddvedslekta (Lonicera) er ei planteslekt som har omkring 180 arter på verdensbasis. 9 arter har fått offisielt norsk navn. To arter er viltvoksende i Norge, men flere finnes forvillet. Slekten er i Norge lett gjenkjennelig med sine motsatte og helrandete blader.

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Wiciokrzew ( Polish )

provided by wikipedia POL
Wikisłownik Hasło w Wikisłowniku
 src=
Owoce suchodrzewu pospolitego

Wiciokrzew, suchodrzew (Lonicera L.) – rodzaj roślin wieloletnich należący do rodziny przewiertniowatych (Caprifoliaceae). Rośliny zielne i pnące nazywane są wiciokrzewami, natomiast krzewy i niewielkie drzewa – suchodrzewami. Rodzaj liczy około 180 gatunków szeroko rozprzestrzenionych na całej półkuli północnej[3][4], na południe sięgając do Meksyku, północnej Afryki, Jawy i Filipin[5]. W Polsce występują trzy gatunki rodzime: wiciokrzew pomorski (L. periclymenum), czarny (L. nigra) i pospolity (L. xylosteum). Zadomowionymi antropofitamiwiciokrzew przewiercień (L. caprifolium) i wiciokrzew tatarski (L. tatarica)[6]. Rośliny te rosną zwykle w lasach i zaroślach. Około stu gatunków uprawianych jest jako rośliny ozdobne, ze względu najczęściej na silnie pachnące, efektowne kwiaty i pnący pokrój, ewentualnie przydatność krzewów do nasadzeń w formie żywopłotów[5]. Jako roślina owocowa uprawiana jest odmiana wiciokrzewu sinego L. caerulea var. kamtschatica znana pod nazwą jagody kamczackiej[7]. Kwiaty u tych roślin przeważnie są wonne, silnie zwłaszcza wieczorami i nocą, wytwarzają nektar i zapylane są przez owady i kolibry[5].

Morfologia

Pokrój
Pnącza osiągające ponad 10 m wysokości, krzewy o pędach łukowatych lub prosto wzniesionych, rzadko niewielkie drzewa do 5 m wysokości[5]. Pędy puste wewnątrz lub pełne, z białawym lub brązowym rdzeniem[4].
Liście
Rodzaj obejmuje zarówno rośliny wieczniezielone, jak i o ulistnieniu sezonowym[3][5]. Ulistnienie nakrzyżległe, rzadko okółkowe[4]. Blaszki liściowe zwykle osadzone na krótkich ogonkach, bez przylistków, czasem z przylistkami znajdującymi się między parą liści lub z linią łączącą nasady ogonków. U niektórych gatunków górne liście podkwiatostanowe siedzące lub połączone nasadami[4]. Blaszka zwykle całobrzega, długo zaostrzona na szczycie[5].
Kwiaty
Zebrane w naprzeciwległe kwiatostany wierzchotkowe w kątach liści lub na szczytach pędów, często zredukowane do pary kwiatów, czasem pojedynczych lub trzech kwiatów. Czasem oś kwiatostanów silnie skrócona, tak że kwiaty są główkowato skupione[4]. Działki kielicha w liczbie 5, czasem 4[4], zwykle drobne[5]. Płatków korony jest 5 i są one zrośnięte w krótszą lub dłuższą rurkę, zakończoną dwiema wargami lub promieniście rozpostartymi łatkami. U L. hildebrandiana korona osiąga do 15 cm długości. Płatki mają barwę białą, purpurową, czerwoną lub żółtą. Pręcików jest 5. Zalążnia jest dolna, z 2, 3 lub 5 komorami zawierającymi liczne zalążki. Szyjka słupka pojedyncza, zakończona główkowatym znamieniem[5].
Owoce
jagody, czasem zrośnięte parami, barwy czerwonej, zielonej, niebieskoczarnej lub czarnej, zawierające pojedyncze lub liczne nasiona[4].

Systematyka

Synonimy taksonomiczne[2]

Caprifolium Mill., Euchylia Dulac

Homonimy taksonomiczne[2]

Lonicera J. Gaertner = Loranthus L., Lonicera Boehmer in C. G. Ludwig = Psittacanthus C. F. P. Martius

Pozycja systematyczna według APweb (aktualizowany system system APG IV z 2016)

Rodzaj z podrodziny Caprifolioideae Eaton z rodziny przewiertniowatych Caprifoliaceae[1].

Wykaz gatunków (taksony o nazwach zaakceptowanych według The Plant List)[8]

Przypisy

  1. a b Stevens P.F.: Angiosperm Phylogeny Website (ang.). 2001–. [dostęp 2010-04-27].
  2. a b c Index Nominum Genericorum. [dostęp 2009-02-05].
  3. a b Geoff Burnie i inni: Botanica. Rośliny ogrodowe. Könemann, 2005. ISBN 3-8331-1916-0.
  4. a b c d e f g Lonicera Linnaeus. W: Flora of China [on-line]. eFloras.org. [dostęp 2018-09-03].
  5. a b c d e f g h Roger Philips, Martyn Rix: The Botanical Garden. Volume I. London: Macmillan, 2002, s. 446. ISBN 0-333-73003-8.
  6. Zbigniew Mirek, Halina Piękoś-Mirkowa, Adam Zając, Maria Zając: Flowering plants and pteridophytes of Poland : a checklist. Krytyczna lista roślin naczyniowych Polski. Instytut Botaniki PAN im. Władysława Szafera w Krakowie, 2002. ISBN 83-85444-83-1.
  7. Maarten J. M. Christenhusz, Michael F. Fay, Mark W. Chase: Plants of the World: An Illustrated Encyclopedia of Vascular Plants. Richmond, Chicago: Kew Publishing, The University of Chicago Press, 2017, s. 421-425. ISBN 978-1842466346.
  8. Lonicera. W: The Plant List. Version 1.1 [on-line]. [dostęp 2018-09-03].
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Wiciokrzew: Brief Summary ( Polish )

provided by wikipedia POL
 src= Kwiaty suchodrzewu pospolitego  src= Owoce suchodrzewu pospolitego  src= Kwiaty wiciokrzewu pomorskiego  src= Kwiaty wiciokrzewu przewiercienia

Wiciokrzew, suchodrzew (Lonicera L.) – rodzaj roślin wieloletnich należący do rodziny przewiertniowatych (Caprifoliaceae). Rośliny zielne i pnące nazywane są wiciokrzewami, natomiast krzewy i niewielkie drzewa – suchodrzewami. Rodzaj liczy około 180 gatunków szeroko rozprzestrzenionych na całej półkuli północnej, na południe sięgając do Meksyku, północnej Afryki, Jawy i Filipin. W Polsce występują trzy gatunki rodzime: wiciokrzew pomorski (L. periclymenum), czarny (L. nigra) i pospolity (L. xylosteum). Zadomowionymi antropofitamiwiciokrzew przewiercień (L. caprifolium) i wiciokrzew tatarski (L. tatarica). Rośliny te rosną zwykle w lasach i zaroślach. Około stu gatunków uprawianych jest jako rośliny ozdobne, ze względu najczęściej na silnie pachnące, efektowne kwiaty i pnący pokrój, ewentualnie przydatność krzewów do nasadzeń w formie żywopłotów. Jako roślina owocowa uprawiana jest odmiana wiciokrzewu sinego L. caerulea var. kamtschatica znana pod nazwą jagody kamczackiej. Kwiaty u tych roślin przeważnie są wonne, silnie zwłaszcza wieczorami i nocą, wytwarzają nektar i zapylane są przez owady i kolibry.

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Lonicera ( Portuguese )

provided by wikipedia PT
 src=
Lonicera japonica

Lonicera L. é um gênero botânico pertencente a família das Caprifoliaceae.

As espécies incluídas no gênero Lonicera normalmente são conhecidas pelo nome popular de madressilvas, nativas do hemisfério norte. São arbustos arqueados ou parreiras sarmentosas, a maioria com fragrâncias doces, com flores na forma de campainha.

O termo madressilva foi usado por muito tempo para designar as espécies integrantes do gênero Lonicera, porém deveria ser aplicado apenas para designar a espécie Lonicera caprifolium L., planta sarmentosa encontrada nos bosques europeus, e denominar as demais simplesmente como loniceras.

As folhas são opostas, ovaladas, simples, com 10 cm de comprimento; na maioria das espécies as folhas são decíduas, porém algumas são perenes. Muitas das espécies apresentam flores que apresentam um odor perfumado, produzindo um doce néctar comestível. A fruta é uma baga de coloração, roxa, azul ou preta contendo várias sementes; na maioria das espécies as bagas são levemente tóxicas, porém algumas (notadamente a Lonicera caerulea) têm bagas comestíveis. A planta é fonte de alimento de larvas de algumas espécies de Lepidopteras.

A Lonicera xylosteum é uma planta usada em homeopatia para tratamento de asmas, dificuldades respiratórias e sífilis. A Lonicera periclymenum é usada como remédio homeopático para o tratamento da irritabilidade com explosões violentas. A madeira da espécie Lonicera tartarica, nativa da Eurásia, é vendida para a produção de brinquedos para gatos porque contém um princípio ativo ao qual os gatos reagem favoravelmente.

A Lonicera caprifolium é muito apreciada como planta ornamental, devido a suas bonitas e aromáticas flores.

A Lonicera japonica e a Lonicera maackii são espécies consideradas invasivas nos Estados Unidos e na Nova Zelândia. O controle é feito pelo corte e queima das plantas, operação que deve ser repetida por semanas, ou pela aplicação do herbicida glifosato.

O termo "Lonicera" foi usado pela primeira vez por Carl Linné em 1753 adaptando ao latim o nome "Lonicer", em homenagem ao médico e botânico Adam Lonicer (1528-1586).

No sistema de classificação filogenética Angiosperm Phylogeny Website, este género é sinónimo de Dendrophthoe.

Sinonímia

Principais espécies

O gênero é constituido por aproximadamente 840 espécies. As principais são:

Ver também

 title=
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Lonicera: Brief Summary ( Portuguese )

provided by wikipedia PT
 src= Lonicera japonica

Lonicera L. é um gênero botânico pertencente a família das Caprifoliaceae.

As espécies incluídas no gênero Lonicera normalmente são conhecidas pelo nome popular de madressilvas, nativas do hemisfério norte. São arbustos arqueados ou parreiras sarmentosas, a maioria com fragrâncias doces, com flores na forma de campainha.

O termo madressilva foi usado por muito tempo para designar as espécies integrantes do gênero Lonicera, porém deveria ser aplicado apenas para designar a espécie Lonicera caprifolium L., planta sarmentosa encontrada nos bosques europeus, e denominar as demais simplesmente como loniceras.

As folhas são opostas, ovaladas, simples, com 10 cm de comprimento; na maioria das espécies as folhas são decíduas, porém algumas são perenes. Muitas das espécies apresentam flores que apresentam um odor perfumado, produzindo um doce néctar comestível. A fruta é uma baga de coloração, roxa, azul ou preta contendo várias sementes; na maioria das espécies as bagas são levemente tóxicas, porém algumas (notadamente a Lonicera caerulea) têm bagas comestíveis. A planta é fonte de alimento de larvas de algumas espécies de Lepidopteras.

A Lonicera xylosteum é uma planta usada em homeopatia para tratamento de asmas, dificuldades respiratórias e sífilis. A Lonicera periclymenum é usada como remédio homeopático para o tratamento da irritabilidade com explosões violentas. A madeira da espécie Lonicera tartarica, nativa da Eurásia, é vendida para a produção de brinquedos para gatos porque contém um princípio ativo ao qual os gatos reagem favoravelmente.

A Lonicera caprifolium é muito apreciada como planta ornamental, devido a suas bonitas e aromáticas flores.

A Lonicera japonica e a Lonicera maackii são espécies consideradas invasivas nos Estados Unidos e na Nova Zelândia. O controle é feito pelo corte e queima das plantas, operação que deve ser repetida por semanas, ou pela aplicação do herbicida glifosato.

O termo "Lonicera" foi usado pela primeira vez por Carl Linné em 1753 adaptando ao latim o nome "Lonicer", em homenagem ao médico e botânico Adam Lonicer (1528-1586).

No sistema de classificação filogenética Angiosperm Phylogeny Website, este género é sinónimo de Dendrophthoe.

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Tryar ( Swedish )

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Tryar (Lonicera)[1] är ett släkte av kaprifolväxter med cirka 130 arter varav fem förekommer som vilda eller förvildade i Sverige. Tryar ingår i familjen kaprifolväxter.[1]

De är vanligen lövfällande buskar eller klängande lianer. Bladen är motsatta, enkla och har helbräddad kant. Blommorna är vita till gula eller orange, ibland svagt purpurfärgade eller rosa, de är oskaftade och sitter parvis eller i ett huvudlikt knippe. Fodret är femflikigt. Kronan är tvåläppig (zygomorf), den övre läppen är fyrflikad och den undre läppen är hel. Mer sällan är blommorna radiärsymmetriska med fem nästan likstora flikar. Ståndarna är fem och stiftet ett, ett långt med knapplikt märke. Frukten är ett fåfröigt rödgult, rött eller blåsvart bär. Bären är giftiga och ger kräkningar, ansiktsrodnad, överdriven törst och vidgade pupiller[2].

Den tyske läkaren Adam Lonicerus (1528-1586) har fått ge namn åt släktet.

Dottertaxa till Tryar, i alfabetisk ordning[1]

Bildgalleri

Referenser

  1. ^ [a b c] Roskov Y., Kunze T., Orrell T., Abucay L., Paglinawan L., Culham A., Bailly N., Kirk P., Bourgoin T., Baillargeon G., Decock W., De Wever A., Didžiulis V. (ed) (9 april 2014). ”Species 2000 & ITIS Catalogue of Life: 2014 Annual Checklist.”. Species 2000: Reading, UK. http://www.catalogueoflife.org/annual-checklist/2014/browse/tree/id/17270187. Läst 26 maj 2014.
  2. ^ Wigander, Millan (1976). Farliga växter. Stockholm: Almqvist & Wiksell Förlag. sid. 58-59, 89. ISBN 91-20-04445-3

Externa länkar

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Tryar: Brief Summary ( Swedish )

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Tryar (Lonicera) är ett släkte av kaprifolväxter med cirka 130 arter varav fem förekommer som vilda eller förvildade i Sverige. Tryar ingår i familjen kaprifolväxter.

De är vanligen lövfällande buskar eller klängande lianer. Bladen är motsatta, enkla och har helbräddad kant. Blommorna är vita till gula eller orange, ibland svagt purpurfärgade eller rosa, de är oskaftade och sitter parvis eller i ett huvudlikt knippe. Fodret är femflikigt. Kronan är tvåläppig (zygomorf), den övre läppen är fyrflikad och den undre läppen är hel. Mer sällan är blommorna radiärsymmetriska med fem nästan likstora flikar. Ståndarna är fem och stiftet ett, ett långt med knapplikt märke. Frukten är ett fåfröigt rödgult, rött eller blåsvart bär. Bären är giftiga och ger kräkningar, ansiktsrodnad, överdriven törst och vidgade pupiller.

Den tyske läkaren Adam Lonicerus (1528-1586) har fått ge namn åt släktet.

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Hanımeli ( Turkish )

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Hanımeli, Caprifoliaceae familyasına ait, çalı ve/veya sarmaşık grubundan bir bitkidir. Yaklaşık 180 türü vardır, bunun 100 kadarı Çin'dedir. Avrupa ve Kuzey Amerika'da 20şer türü vardır. En çok bilinen türleri Lonicera periclymenum (Avrupa Hanımelisi), Lonicera japonica (Japon Hanımelisi, Beyaz Hanımeli) ve Lonicera sempervirens (Mercan Hanımelisi, Trompet Hanımelisi) dir.

Yapraklar karşılıklı, basit oval ve 1–10 cm uzunlukta çoğunlukla dökülen olmakla beraber sürekli olanlarıda bulunur. Türlerin çoğu hoş kokulu, yenilebilen nektar üreten, çan şeklinde çiçeklere sahibtir. Meyvesi çok çekirdekli kırmızı, mavi ya da siyah çitlenbik şeklindedir, çoğu türde meyveleri hafif zehirli olmakla beraber birkaçı (Lonicera caerulea) yenilebilir meyvelere sahiptir.

Bitki bazı Lepidoptera türlerinin larvaları tarafından yenilir.

Stub icon İki çenekliler ile ilgili bu madde bir taslaktır. Madde içeriğini geliştirerek Vikipedi'ye katkıda bulunabilirsiniz.
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Жимолость ( Ukrainian )

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Поширення і екологія

Відомо близько 190 видів майже у всіх областях Північної півкулі, в більшості із Гімалаїв і Східної Азії.

Ботанічний опис

Досить крупні квітки (білі, рожеві, жовтуваті та блакитні) розташовані часто попарно в кутках листків чи на кінцях гілок в суцвіттях. Із слабо розвинутої чашечки виходить неправильний (у більшості) трубчастий віночок, розділений на кінці на п'ять частин; неправильність квіток, побудованих по п'ятірному плану, залежить від зростання трьох передніх пелюсток і нерівномірного їх розвитку, че́рез що віночок є двогубим; в трубці віночка п'ять тичинок і довгий стовпчик маточки.

Ягоди розміщені попарно, часто зростаються між собою .

Верхні листки в деяких видів (а в деяких і всі) зростаються разом, утворюючи одну спільну пластинку або широку облямівку, крізь яку проходить кінець гілки з квітами.

Значення і застосування

Багато видів жимолості дуже часто розводять в садах як красиві декоративні кущі, придатні для груп, алей і альтанок; квітнуть на початку літа, тобто в кінці травня і до середини червня. Досить часто зустрічається на узліссях жимолость справжня (Lonicera xylosteumalt) з жовто-білими квітами і червоними ягодами, листки знизу пухнасті. Висаджується часто в садах.

Інша, жимолость татарська (Lonicera tatarica), з рожевими квітками і гладкими листям, давно розмножується в садах, частіше попередньої. В'юнка і пахуча жимолость духмяна (капріфоль або козяча, чи Шевр-Фель, Lonicera caprifolium L.), родом з Південної Європи, росте в Криму і Бессарабії, з червонуватими чи білими квітками, при відцвітанні жовтими: ягоди червоні.

Найпівнічніший український дикорослий вид — жимолость блакитна (Lonicera caerulea), з жовтуватими, майже правильними квітками і блакитнуватими ягодами, які утворюються кожна із пари плодів, що зрослись; найпівнічніша європейська — жимолость в’юнка (Lonicera periclymenum), в якої листки ніколи разом не зростаються (жимолость жирна, папороть духмяна). В садівництві відомі ще декілька американських видів.

На Кавказі відомі ще жимолость грузинська (Lonicera iberica), з червоно-жовтими квітками, і жимолость кавказька (Lonicera caucasica), з багряними квітками; плоди першої — червоні, другої — чорні; обидва види мають дуже щільну деревину, придатну для дрібних столярних виробів.

У горах Хінгана, біля річки Амур, відкрита жимолость Максимовича (Lonicera maximowiczii).

Плоди деяких видів жимолості їстівні, наприклад, жимолость їстівна.

Класифікація

Рід налічує багато видів, кількість яких приблизно 200. Різні класифікації визнають різну кількість видів.[1]

Деякі види

Фотогалерея

Див. також

Джерела

Посилання

Примітки


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Chi Kim ngân ( Vietnamese )

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Đối với các định nghĩa khác, xem Kim ngân (định hướng).

Chi Kim ngân hay còn gọi là chi nhẫn đông (danh pháp khoa học: Lonicera, đồng nghĩa: Caprifolium Mill.) là chi thực vật gồm một số loài cây bụi hoặc dây leo trong họ Kim ngân (Caprifoliaceae) thực vật bản địa của Bắc bán cầu. Có khoảng 180 loài kim ngân, ở Trung Quốc có độ đa dạng cao nhất với hơn 100 loài, châu ÂuBắc Mỹ mỗi nơi có khoảng 20 loài. Các loài phổ biến gồm có Lonicera periclymenum (kim ngân châu Âu), Lonicera japonica (kim ngân trắng hay kim ngân Nhật, phổ biến ở Nhật Bản, Trung Quốc, Việt Nam) và Lonicera sempervirens. Kim ngân rất thu hút chim ruồi.

Lá kim ngân mọc đối, hình bầu dục, dài từ 1 đến 10 cm. Đa số các loài kim ngân có lá sớm rụng, nhưng một số là cây thường xanh. Nhiều loài có hoa thơm, hình chuông, trong có chứa mật ngọt ăn được. Khi bẻ cuống hoa sẽ thấy mùi hương thơm. Quả kim ngân là loại quả đơn (mỗi quả phát triển từ một noãn) màu đen, xanh lam, hoặc đỏ, trong có chứa vài hạt. Quả của đa số các loài kim ngân có chứa chất độc nhẹ, một số loài (nổi tiếng nhất là Lonicera caerulea) có quả ăn được.

Một số loài kim ngân được dùng làm thuốc Đông y như Lonicera confusa[1]Lonicera japonica[2].

Một số loài chọn lọc

Chú thích

 src= Wikispecies có thông tin sinh học về Chi Kim ngân  src= Wikimedia Commons có thư viện hình ảnh và phương tiện truyền tải về Chi Kim ngân
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Chi Kim ngân: Brief Summary ( Vietnamese )

provided by wikipedia VI
Đối với các định nghĩa khác, xem Kim ngân (định hướng).

Chi Kim ngân hay còn gọi là chi nhẫn đông (danh pháp khoa học: Lonicera, đồng nghĩa: Caprifolium Mill.) là chi thực vật gồm một số loài cây bụi hoặc dây leo trong họ Kim ngân (Caprifoliaceae) thực vật bản địa của Bắc bán cầu. Có khoảng 180 loài kim ngân, ở Trung Quốc có độ đa dạng cao nhất với hơn 100 loài, châu ÂuBắc Mỹ mỗi nơi có khoảng 20 loài. Các loài phổ biến gồm có Lonicera periclymenum (kim ngân châu Âu), Lonicera japonica (kim ngân trắng hay kim ngân Nhật, phổ biến ở Nhật Bản, Trung Quốc, Việt Nam) và Lonicera sempervirens. Kim ngân rất thu hút chim ruồi.

Lá kim ngân mọc đối, hình bầu dục, dài từ 1 đến 10 cm. Đa số các loài kim ngân có lá sớm rụng, nhưng một số là cây thường xanh. Nhiều loài có hoa thơm, hình chuông, trong có chứa mật ngọt ăn được. Khi bẻ cuống hoa sẽ thấy mùi hương thơm. Quả kim ngân là loại quả đơn (mỗi quả phát triển từ một noãn) màu đen, xanh lam, hoặc đỏ, trong có chứa vài hạt. Quả của đa số các loài kim ngân có chứa chất độc nhẹ, một số loài (nổi tiếng nhất là Lonicera caerulea) có quả ăn được.

Một số loài kim ngân được dùng làm thuốc Đông y như Lonicera confusaLonicera japonica.

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Жимолость ( Russian )

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Царство: Растения
Подцарство: Зелёные растения
Отдел: Цветковые
Надпорядок: Asteranae
Семейство: Жимолостные
Подсемейство: Caprifolioideae
Род: Жимолость
Международное научное название

Lonicera L.

Синонимы
Типовой вид Виды
Сокращённый список — см. текст
Полный список — Виды рода Жимолость
Wikispecies-logo.svg
Систематика
на Викивидах
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Изображения
на Викискладе
ITIS 35281NCBI 49606EOL 60796GRIN g:6947IPNI 6097-1

Жи́молость (лат. Lonícera) — род прямостоячих, вьющихся или ползучих кустарников; типовой род семейства Жимолостные (Caprifoliaceae). Своё латинское название род получил в честь немецкого математика, физика и ботаника Адама Лоницера (1528—1586), хотя первоначально Карл Линней собирался назвать их каприфолями (Caprifolium), поскольку чаще всего в садах Европы выращивали именно жимолость каприфоль[4]. Ягоды некоторых видов жимолости употребляются в пищу; некоторые, наоборот, ядовиты, в том числе жимолость обыкновенная, широко распространённая в лесах средней полосы России.

Распространение и экология

Известно около 190 видов почти во всех областях Северного полушария, а большей частью из Гималаев и Восточной Азии. В России дикорастущих 14 видов.

Ботаническое описание

 src=  src=

Довольно крупные цветки (белые, розоватые, желтоватые и голубые) расположены чаще попарно в углах листьев или на концах ветвей в головчатых соцветиях. Из слабо развитой чашечки выходит неправильный (у большинства) трубчатый венчик, на конце разделённый на пять долей; неправильность цветов, построенных по пятерному плану, зависит от срастания трёх передних лепестков и неравномерного их развития, вследствие чего венчик является двугубым; в трубке венчика пять тычинок и длинный столбик пестика.

Ягодообразные плоды сидят попарно, а нередко и срастаются друг с другом.

Верхние листья у некоторых видов (а у иных и все) срастаются вместе, образуя одну общую пластинку или широкую оторочку, сквозь которую проходит конец ветви с цветками.

Значение и применение

Много видов жимолости очень часто разводятся в садах как красивые декоративные кустарники, хорошо пригодные для групп, аллей и беседок; российские виды цветут в начале лета, то есть в конце мая и до середины июня. В Средней России довольно часто встречается по опушкам лесов и по рощам ядовитая Lonicera xylosteum L.Жимолость настоящая, или жиломусть, или волчьи ягоды с жёлто-белыми цветками и красными ягодами, листья снизу пушистые. Разводится часто в садах, но в Южной России дико не растёт.

Другая, Жимолость татарская (Lonicera tatarica L.), с розовыми цветками и гладкими листьями, давно разводится в садах, чаще предыдущей, в дикорастущем виде известна по Средней Волге, Казахстане и в Сибири до Алтая.

Вьющаяся и пахучая Жимолость душистая (или козья, Lonicera caprifolium L.), родом из Южной Европы, за Кавказом в изобилии. Также кое-где в Крыму и Бессарабии, с красноватыми или белыми цветками, при отцветании желтеющими: ягоды красные.

Самый северный дикорастущий вид в России — Жимолость голубая (Lonicera caerulea L.), с желтоватыми, почти правильными цветками и голубоватыми ягодами, образованными каждая из пары сросшихся плодов; самая северная европейская, не попадающаяся дико в России, но разводимая, — Жимолость вьющаяся (Lonicera periclymenum L.), у которых листья никогда не срастаются вместе (Жимолость жирная, папороть душистая). В садоводстве известно ещё несколько американских видов.

На Кавказе известны ещё Жимолость грузинская (Lonicera iberica Bieb.), с красно-жёлтыми цветками, и Жимолость кавказская (Lonicera caucasica Pall.), с пурпурными цветками; плоды у первой — красные, у второй — чёрные; оба вида имеют очень плотную древесину, годную для мелких токарных поделок.

В горах Хингана, близ реки Амура, открыта Жимолость Максимовича (Lonicera maximowiczii Rupr.).

Виды

Основная статья: Виды рода Жимолость

По информации базы данных The Plant List, род включает 103 вида[5]. Некоторые из них:

По информации базы данных The Plant List, на октябрь 2016 г., статус видов Жимолость Шамиссо (Lonicera chamissoi Bunge)[6], Жимолость съедобная (Lonicera edulis Turcz.)[7], Жимолость Глена (Lonicera glehnii F.Schmidt)[8] и Жимолость Королькова (Lonicera korolkowii Stapf)[9] не определён.

Некоторые сорта

Культурные съедобные сорта жимолости выведены из Жимолости камчатской и Жимолости съедобной. Некоторые из них:

Примечания

  1. Об условности указания класса двудольных в качестве вышестоящего таксона для описываемой в данной статье группы растений см. раздел «Системы APG» статьи «Двудольные».
  2. 1 2 3 По данным сайта GRIN (см. карточку растения).
  3. 1 2 Entry for Lonicera L. (англ.). NCU-3e. Names in current use for extant plant genera. Electronic version 1.0 (Sept 24, 1997). Проверено 29 ноября 2010. Архивировано 3 июня 2012 года.
  4. Жимолость (Lonicera) сем. Жимолостные (рус.). Энциклопедия декоративных садовых растений. Проверено 12 февраля 2010. Архивировано 19 февраля 2012 года.
  5. Lonicera (англ.). The Plant List. Version 1.1. (2013). Проверено 12 октября 2016.
  6. Lonicera chamissoi (англ.). The Plant List. Version 1.1. (2013). Проверено 12 октября 2016.
  7. Lonicera edulis (англ.). The Plant List. Version 1.1. (2013). Проверено 12 октября 2016.
  8. Lonicera glehnii (англ.). The Plant List. Version 1.1. (2013). Проверено 12 октября 2016.
  9. Lonicera korolkowii (англ.). The Plant List. Version 1.1. (2013). Проверено 12 октября 2016.
  10. Савинкова, Н. В., Гагаркин, А. В. Жимолость на Бакчарском опорном пункте северного садоводства, этапы работы и некоторые итоги // Мат-лы конф. «Состояние и перспективы развития культуры жимолости в современных условиях».
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Жимолость: Brief Summary ( Russian )

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Жи́молость (лат. Lonícera) — род прямостоячих, вьющихся или ползучих кустарников; типовой род семейства Жимолостные (Caprifoliaceae). Своё латинское название род получил в честь немецкого математика, физика и ботаника Адама Лоницера (1528—1586), хотя первоначально Карл Линней собирался назвать их каприфолями (Caprifolium), поскольку чаще всего в садах Европы выращивали именно жимолость каприфоль. Ягоды некоторых видов жимолости употребляются в пищу; некоторые, наоборот, ядовиты, в том числе жимолость обыкновенная, широко распространённая в лесах средней полосы России.

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忍冬属 ( Chinese )

provided by wikipedia 中文维基百科

忍冬属学名Lonicera)是忍冬科下的一个属,为直立或攀援状灌木植物。该属共有大约180种,分布于北半球温带亚热带地区[1]。大约100个这些物种都可以在中国找到,大约20个本土物种已被确认在欧洲,20个在印度,和20个在北美。常见的物种有忍冬贯月忍冬等。

参考文献

  1. ^ 中国种子植物科属词典. 中国数字植物标本馆. (原始内容存档于2012-04-11).

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忍冬属: Brief Summary ( Chinese )

provided by wikipedia 中文维基百科

忍冬属(学名:Lonicera)是忍冬科下的一个属,为直立或攀援状灌木植物。该属共有大约180种,分布于北半球温带亚热带地区。大约100个这些物种都可以在中国找到,大约20个本土物种已被确认在欧洲,20个在印度,和20个在北美。常见的物种有忍冬贯月忍冬等。

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スイカズラ属 ( Japanese )

provided by wikipedia 日本語
スイカズラ属 Lonicera japonica, flower.JPG 分類 : 植物界 Plantae 階級なし : 被子植物 Angiosperms 階級なし : 真正双子葉類 Eudicots 階級なし : キク類 Asterids 階級なし : キキョウ類 Campanulids : マツムシソウ目 Dipsacales : スイカズラ科 Caprifoliaceae : スイカズラ属 Lonicera 学名 Lonicera L. 英名 Honeysuckle 種
  • 本文参照
 src= ウィキメディア・コモンズには、スイカズラ属に関連するメディアがあります。  src= ウィキスピーシーズにスイカズラ属に関する情報があります。

スイカズラ属Lonicera または Caprifolium)はスイカズラ科の属の一つ。

特徴[編集]

低木または蔓性木本からなる。北半球におよそ180種が分布する。特に中国に100種以上を産し、日本にもスイカズラウグイスカグラキンギンボク(ヒョウタンボク)をはじめ20種ほどある。が美しくまたは芳香を放つため栽培されるものもある。日本原産のスイカズラも栽培されたものがアメリカなどで野生化し問題になっている。

は卵形の単葉で対生し、縁は全縁か、まれに裂ける。ツキヌキニンドウは花序直下の2枚の葉が融合している。多くは落葉性であるが常緑性のものもある。花はラッパ形または筒形の花冠を持ち、色は白、赤、黄色など。芳香を持つものが多く、またを多く出す。果実は液果で赤、青、黒などに熟し、数個の種子を含む。ハスカップ(クロミノウグイスカグラ)など一部の果実は食用になるが、キンギンボクなど毒性のあるものも多い。

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日本に自生する種[編集]

その他の種[編集]

ギャラリー[編集]

参考文献[編集]

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ウィキペディアの著者と編集者
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wikipedia 日本語

スイカズラ属: Brief Summary ( Japanese )

provided by wikipedia 日本語

スイカズラ属(Lonicera または Caprifolium)はスイカズラ科の属の一つ。

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
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ウィキペディアの著者と編集者
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia 日本語