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{{Short description|Species of flowering plant}}
{{Short description|Species of flowering plant}}{{good article}}
{{Speciesbox
{{Speciesbox
|image = Hypericum russeggeri.jpg
| image = Hypericum russeggeri.jpg
|genus = Hypericum
| genus = Hypericum
|parent = Hypericum sect. Adenotrias
| parent = Hypericum sect. Adenotrias
|species = russeggeri
| species = russeggeri
|authority = (Fenzl) R. Keller
| authority = ([[Eduard Fenzl|Fenzl]]) [[Robert Keller (botanist)|R.Keller]]
| synonyms = *''Adenotrias kotschyi'' {{small|[[Jaub.]] & [[Édouard Spach|Spach]]}}
|synonyms =
*''Adenotrias kotschyi'' <small>Jaub. & Spach</small>
*''Adenotrias phrygia'' {{small|Jaub. & Spach}}
*''Elodes russegeri'' {{small|(Fenzl) [[Walp.]]}}
*''Adenotrias phrygia'' <small>Jaub. & Spach</small>
*''Hypericum empetrifolium'' {{small|[[Karl Georg Theodor Kotschy|Kotschy]] ''ex'' Jaub. & Spach}}
*''Elodea russeggeri'' <small>(Fenzl) Walp.</small>
*''Elodes russeggeri'' <small>(Fenzl) Greuter</small>
*''Triadenia russeggeri'' {{small|Fenzl}}
| synonyms_ref = <ref name="POWO"/>
*''Hypericum empetrifolium'' <small>sensu Kotschy ''ex'' Jaub. & Spach</small>
*''Triadenia russeggeri'' <small>Fenzl</small>
|synonyms_ref = <ref>{{Cite book|title=Studies in the genus Hypericum L. (Guttiferae)|last=Robson|first=Norman|pages=Sections 20. Myriandra to 28. Elodes}}</ref>
}}
}}


'''''Hypericum russeggeri''''' is a [[species]] of [[flowering plant]] in the St John's wort family [[Hypericaceae]]. The plant is a small [[shrub]] with many branches that spread across the ground, and it has many small flowers with pale yellow [[Petal|petals]]. It is found only among [[Calcareous|calcareous rocks]] along the coast and in the foothills of the [[Nur Mountains]] of eastern Turkey and northern Syria. While ''H. russeggeri'' has an array of [[Phytochemical|phytochemicals]] present in its flowering structures and leaves, these are found in lower concentrations than other species of ''[[Hypericum]]''. The species was first [[Species description|described]] in 1842 as ''Triadenia russeggeri'', and it has been placed into various defunct genera including ''Elodea'' and ''Adenotrias''. It is now known as ''Hypericum russeggeri'' and is the [[type species]] of [[Hypericum sect. Adenotrias|''Hypericum'' section ''Adenotrias'']], a small section that also includes ''[[Hypericum aegypticum|H. aegypticum]]'' and ''[[Hypericum aciferum|H. aciferum]]''.
'''''Hypericum russeggeri''''' is a species of shrub in the genus ''[[Hypericum]]'' and is the type species of [[Hypericum sect. Adenotrias|sect. ''Adenotrias'']].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://hypericum.myspecies.info/taxonomy/term/942|title=Nomenclature {{!}} Hypericum online|website=hypericum.myspecies.info|access-date=2019-04-04}}</ref>

== Etymology ==
The [[genus]] name ''Hypericum'' is possibly derived from the [[Greek language|Greek]] words {{Lang|el|hyper}} (above) and {{Lang|el|eikon}} (picture), in reference to the tradition of hanging the plant over religious [[Icon|icons]] in the home.{{Sfn|Coombes|2012|p=172}} The [[specific epithet]] ''russeggeri'' is in honor of Austrian [[geologist]] [[Joseph Russegger]] who worked in [[Anatolia]].{{Sfn|Robson|1996|p=152}}

== Description ==
''Hypericum russeggeri'' is a small shrub that has a great number of branches that twist and bend. These spread outwards and across the ground, and either ascend upwards at the end or lie entirely on the ground. The plant completely lacks hairs and dark [[Gland (botany)|glands]].{{Sfn|Robson|1996|p=152}} It has a [[chromosome number]] of n=10.{{Sfn|Löve|1980|p=165}}

''Hypericum russeggeri'' has many similarities to ''Hypericum aegypticum''. It can be told apart from that species by the shape of its leaves, its [[deciduous]] petals and [[Stamen|stamens]], and that two [[Ovule|ovules]] are found in its [[Carpel|placentae]].{{Sfn|Robson|1996|p=153}} It is also related to ''H. aciferum'', but that species has narrower leaves, fewer flowers, petals with less curling, and fewer stamens in each bundle.{{Sfn|Robson|1996|p=153}}

=== Foliage ===
The stems of ''Hypericum russeggeri'' have four longitudinal lines and have a flattened cross-section when young, but become two-lined when mature. The length of stem between sets of leaves is usually shorter than the length of the leaf blade.{{Sfn|Robson|1996|p=152}}

The leaves are directly connected to the stem, or have a very short [[Petiole (botany)|petiole]]. They remain on the plant until its second season, then become [[deciduous]]. The leaf blades are 0.4–2.0 centimeters long by 0.15–0.3 cm wide, and are the shape of a narrow lance with the tip pointing towards the stem. Their top and bottom sides are the same color, and they have a blunt tip. The [[Midrib|midrib vein]] is sometimes prominently visible from the bottom.{{Sfn|Robson|1996|p=152}}

=== Flowering structures ===
The [[Inflorescence|flower clusters]] usually have 3–7 flowers, but can have up to 9. The [[Bract|bracts]] appear the same as the normal foliage leaves, and the [[bracteoles]] are small and scale-shaped. The [[Peduncle (botany)|peduncle]] is 1–2 cm long and the [[Pedicel (botany)|pedicel]] is 0.15–0.25 cm long. The flowers themselves are about 1 cm wide, and are an oval shape when [[Bud|budding]].{{Sfn|Robson|1996|p=152}}

The [[Sepal|sepals]] are green and overlap one another; they are of varying sizes and shapes. The [[Petal|petals]] are a quite pale yellow color, and are deciduous. Each petal is 0.6–0.9 cm long and 0.3–0.45 cm wide and they are a similar shape to the leaves. They curve outwards to create a corolla that is somewhat tubular. Each flower has around 30 stamens, the longest of which grow up to 0.5 cm. Inside the ovary is a placenta that has two [[Ovule|ovules]] attached to it. The ovules hold a small [[Capsule (fruit)|seed capsule]], with longitudinal valves. Inside the capsule are black-brown seeds about 0.2 cm in length.{{Sfn|Robson|1996|p=153}}

In the protective layer of the [[Seed-coat|tegmen]] in the seed, angular crystals of [[calcium oxalate]] are present. While the cells of the tegmen have slight undulations in their cell walls, they are much less pronounced than in other species like ''[[Hypericum confertum]]''. This means that the cells appear almost rectangular when viewed.{{Sfn|Reynaud|1985|p=87}}

=== Chemistry ===
The first assessment of the [[phytochemistry]] of ''Hypericum russeggeri'' was undertaken in 2016.{{Sfn|Odabas|Radusiene|Ivanauskas|Jakstas|2016|p=194}} Most of its phytochemicals are present in the flowering structures; these include [[hypericin]], [[pseudohypericin]], [[hyperforin]], [[hyperoside]], [[isoquercetin]], [[quercitrin]], [[avicularin]], [[amentoflavone]], and [[catechin]]. In the leaves, [[Neochlorogenic acid|neochlorogenic]] and [[dihydroxybenzoic acid]] can be found.{{Sfn|Cirak|Radusiene|2019|p=202}} The concentrations of these chemicals is generally lower in ''Hypericum russeggeri'' than in the similar species ''[[Hypericum hircinum|H. hircinum]]'', ''[[Hypericum lanugisonum|H. lanugisonum]]'', and ''[[Hypericum pallens|H. pallens]]''. The only compounds present in ''H. russeggeri'' in greater concentrations than some of the similar species are neochlorogenic acid, hyperoside, quercitrin, and epicatechin.{{Sfn|Odabas|Radusiene|Ivanauskas|Jakstas|2016|p=195–196}}

== Taxonomy ==
[[File:Triadenia_russeggeri_description.png|left|thumb|Original description of the species by Eduard Fenzl in 1842 under the synonym ''Triadenia russeggeri''{{Sfn|Fenzl|1842|p=7}}]]
Plants of the species were first collected in 1836 by botanists [[Theodor Kotschy]] and {{Ill|Ernest Coquebert de Montbret|fr}}. While the collection locations for many of Kotschy's specimens are ambiguous, some of them state that they were found near [[Antioch]]; this agrees with Montbret's collections from the [[Hatay Province|Hatay province]] of Turkey and from northwestern Syria, and establishes that region as its [[Type locality (biology)|type locality]].{{Sfn|Robson|1996|p=152}}

In 1842, [[Eduard Fenzl]] used Kotschy's specimens to [[Species description|describe]] the new species as ''Triadenia russeggeri'' in the plant family "Hypericineae" (now Hypericaceae). He noted its very branchy and [[Prostrate shrub|prostrate]] growth habit, its occurrence in Syria, and its similarity in appearance to ''Triadenia thymifolia'' (now ''[[Hypericum aegypticum]]'' subsp. ''webbii'').{{Sfn|Fenzl|1842|p=7}}<ref>{{Cite POWO|id=434081-1|title=''Triadenia thymifolia''|access-date=14 May 2024}}</ref> Later that year, it was proposed that the species should be placed in the genus ''Elodea'' (which would give the [[Combinatio nova|new combination]] ''Elodea russeggeri''). Also, new specimens from near the type locality were described as ''Adenotrias phrygia'' and ''A. kotschyi.'' These plants were later determined to be specimens of ''Hypericum russeggeri'' and the new names were synonymized.{{Sfn|Robson|1996|p=152}}

The name ''Hypericum russeggeri'' was established by [[Robert Keller (botanist)|Robert Keller]] in [[Adolf Engler|Adolf Engler's]] textbook ''[[Die Natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien]]'' in 1893.<ref name="POWO">{{Cite POWO|id=77176815-1|title=''Hypericum russeggeri''|access-date=12 April 2024}}</ref> The species was moved into ''Hypericum'', and its previous placement in a separate genus was stated to be unwarranted, thus making it the type and only species (at that time) of [[Hypericum sect. Adenotrias|''Hypericum'' section ''Adenotrias'']].{{Sfn|Engler|Krause|Pilger|Prantl|1893|p=209}} [[Norman Robson (botanist)|Norman Robson]] affirmed the new name and its designation as section type in the first volume of his [[monograph]] of the genus ''Hypericum'' in 1977,{{Sfn|Robson|1977|p=334}} and the species has continued to be retained in ''Hypericum'' since then based on [[molecular phylogenetics]].{{Sfn|Robson|2016|p=191}}

== Distribution, habitat, and ecology ==
{{Location map|Turkey|caption=The [[Nur Mountains]] in Turkey, where ''Hypericum russeggeri'' can be found|lat_deg=36.75|lon_deg=36.3333}}

''Hypericum russeggeri'' is confined to a habitat of [[Calcareous|calcareous rocks]], and it has been found at elevations of up to 100 meters above sea level. It is native to Hatay province in southeastern Turkey, and the northern coast of Syria. Within this distribution, it is found along the coast and in the foothills of the [[Nur Mountains]]. At one point, it may have been present near [[Edremit, Balıkesir|Edremit]] in western Anatolia, but it is now [[Extinction|extinct]] in that region.{{Sfn|Robson|1996|p=153}}

The species is [[Parasitism|parasitized]] by ''[[Cyphodema rubrica]],'' a [[Miridae|capsid bug]]. It lives as a [[Vagrancy (biology)|vagrant]] on the leaves of the plant and can cause malformations.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Ellis |first=W.N. |date=2022 |title=''Hypericum russeggeri'' |url=https://bladmineerders.nl/host-plants/plantae/spermatopsida/angiosperma/eudicots/superrosids/rosids/fabids/malpighiales/hypericaceae/hypericum/hypericum-russeggeri/ |access-date=11 April 2024 |website=Plant Parasites of Europe}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
<references responsive="1"></references>
{{Reflist}}


=== Bibliography ===
{{Hypericum species Navbox}}


* {{Cite journal |last1=Cirak |first1=Cuneyt |last2=Radusiene |first2=Jolita |date=2019 |title=Factors affecting the variation of bioactive compounds in ''Hypericum'' species |url=https://real.mtak.hu/133148/1/26768607-BiologiaFuturaFactorsaffectingthevariationofbioactivecompoundsinHypericumspecies.pdf |journal=Biologia Futura |volume=70|issue=3 |pages=198–209 |doi=10.1556/019.70.2019.25 |pmid=34554448 |bibcode=2019BioFu..70..198C }}
* {{cite book |last1=Coombes |first1=Allen J. |title=The A to Z of plant names: a quick reference guide to 4000 garden plants |date=2012 |publisher=Timber Press, Inc. |isbn=978-1-60469-196-2 |location=Portland, Oregon |page=}}
* {{Cite book |last1=Engler |first1=Adolf |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/56529#page/223/mode/1up |title=Die Natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien |last2=Krause |first2=Kurt |last3=Pilger |first3=Robert |last4=Prantl |first4=Karl |publisher=W. Engelmann |year=1893 |volume=3 |location=Leipzig |language=de |display-authors=3 |issue=6}}
* {{Cite book |last=Fenzl |first=Eduard |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pi4YAAAAYAAJ |title=Pugillus plantarum novarum Syriæ et Tauri occidentalis primus |publisher=Apud Fridericum Beck |year=1842 |location=Austria |language=la}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Löve |first=Áskell |date=1980 |title=IOPB Chromosome Number Reports LXVI |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/1219623.pdf |journal=Taxon |volume=29 |issue=1 |pages=163–169 |doi=10.1002/j.1996-8175.1980.tb00607.x |jstor=1219623 |via=JSTOR}}
* {{Cite journal |last1=Odabas |first1=Mehmet |last2=Radusiene |first2=Jolita |last3=Ivanauskas |first3=Liudas |last4=Jakstas |first4=Valdas |display-authors=3 |date=2016 |title=Secondary metabolites in ''Hypericum'' species and their distribution in different plant parts |url=https://zemdirbyste-agriculture.test.deimantinis.lm.lt/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/103_2_str25.pdf |journal=Zemdirbyste-Agriculture |volume=103 |issue=2|pages=193–198 |doi=10.13080/z-a.2016.103.025 }}
* {{Cite journal |last=Reynaud |first=C. |date=1985 |title=Étude des téguments des graines de quelques ''Hypericum'' (Guttiferae) méditerranéens observés au M.E.B. |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/part/276300 |journal=Bulletin du Muséum National d'Histoire |volume=7 |issue=1 |via=Biodiversity Heritage Library}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Robson |first=Norman |date=1977 |title=Studies in the Genus ''Hypericum'' {{small|L.}} (Guttiferae) 1. Infrageneric Classification |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/2297901#page/405/mode/1up |journal=Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Botany |volume=5 |via=Biodiversity Heritage Library}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Robson |first=Norman |date=1996 |title=Studies in the genus ''Hypericum'' {{small|L.}} (Guttiferae) 6. Sections 20. ''Myriandra'' to 28. ''Elodes'' |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/2349860#page/3/mode/1up |journal=Bulletin of the Natural History Museum |series=Botany |volume=26 |issue=2 |via=Biodiversity Heritage Library}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Robson |first=Norman |date=2016 |title=And then came molecular phylogenetics—Reactions to a monographic study of ''Hypericum'' (Hypericaceae) |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/301252437 |journal=Phytotaxa |volume=255 |issue=3 |page=181 |doi=10.11646/phytotaxa.255.3.1 |via=ResearchGate}}
{{Hypericum species Navbox}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q17812739}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q17812739}}


[[Category:Hypericum|russeggeri]]
[[Category:Hypericum|russeggeri]]
[[Category:Plants described in 1842]]

[[Category:Flora of Turkey]]

[[Category:Flora of Syria]]
{{Hypericum-stub}}
[[Category:Taxa named by Eduard Fenzl]]

Latest revision as of 04:18, 12 July 2024

Hypericum russeggeri
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Malpighiales
Family: Hypericaceae
Genus: Hypericum
Section: Hypericum sect. Adenotrias
Species:
H. russeggeri
Binomial name
Hypericum russeggeri
Synonyms[1]
  • Adenotrias kotschyi Jaub. & Spach
  • Adenotrias phrygia Jaub. & Spach
  • Elodes russegeri (Fenzl) Walp.
  • Hypericum empetrifolium Kotschy ex Jaub. & Spach
  • Triadenia russeggeri Fenzl

Hypericum russeggeri is a species of flowering plant in the St John's wort family Hypericaceae. The plant is a small shrub with many branches that spread across the ground, and it has many small flowers with pale yellow petals. It is found only among calcareous rocks along the coast and in the foothills of the Nur Mountains of eastern Turkey and northern Syria. While H. russeggeri has an array of phytochemicals present in its flowering structures and leaves, these are found in lower concentrations than other species of Hypericum. The species was first described in 1842 as Triadenia russeggeri, and it has been placed into various defunct genera including Elodea and Adenotrias. It is now known as Hypericum russeggeri and is the type species of Hypericum section Adenotrias, a small section that also includes H. aegypticum and H. aciferum.

Etymology

[edit]

The genus name Hypericum is possibly derived from the Greek words hyper (above) and eikon (picture), in reference to the tradition of hanging the plant over religious icons in the home.[2] The specific epithet russeggeri is in honor of Austrian geologist Joseph Russegger who worked in Anatolia.[3]

Description

[edit]

Hypericum russeggeri is a small shrub that has a great number of branches that twist and bend. These spread outwards and across the ground, and either ascend upwards at the end or lie entirely on the ground. The plant completely lacks hairs and dark glands.[3] It has a chromosome number of n=10.[4]

Hypericum russeggeri has many similarities to Hypericum aegypticum. It can be told apart from that species by the shape of its leaves, its deciduous petals and stamens, and that two ovules are found in its placentae.[5] It is also related to H. aciferum, but that species has narrower leaves, fewer flowers, petals with less curling, and fewer stamens in each bundle.[5]

Foliage

[edit]

The stems of Hypericum russeggeri have four longitudinal lines and have a flattened cross-section when young, but become two-lined when mature. The length of stem between sets of leaves is usually shorter than the length of the leaf blade.[3]

The leaves are directly connected to the stem, or have a very short petiole. They remain on the plant until its second season, then become deciduous. The leaf blades are 0.4–2.0 centimeters long by 0.15–0.3 cm wide, and are the shape of a narrow lance with the tip pointing towards the stem. Their top and bottom sides are the same color, and they have a blunt tip. The midrib vein is sometimes prominently visible from the bottom.[3]

Flowering structures

[edit]

The flower clusters usually have 3–7 flowers, but can have up to 9. The bracts appear the same as the normal foliage leaves, and the bracteoles are small and scale-shaped. The peduncle is 1–2 cm long and the pedicel is 0.15–0.25 cm long. The flowers themselves are about 1 cm wide, and are an oval shape when budding.[3]

The sepals are green and overlap one another; they are of varying sizes and shapes. The petals are a quite pale yellow color, and are deciduous. Each petal is 0.6–0.9 cm long and 0.3–0.45 cm wide and they are a similar shape to the leaves. They curve outwards to create a corolla that is somewhat tubular. Each flower has around 30 stamens, the longest of which grow up to 0.5 cm. Inside the ovary is a placenta that has two ovules attached to it. The ovules hold a small seed capsule, with longitudinal valves. Inside the capsule are black-brown seeds about 0.2 cm in length.[5]

In the protective layer of the tegmen in the seed, angular crystals of calcium oxalate are present. While the cells of the tegmen have slight undulations in their cell walls, they are much less pronounced than in other species like Hypericum confertum. This means that the cells appear almost rectangular when viewed.[6]

Chemistry

[edit]

The first assessment of the phytochemistry of Hypericum russeggeri was undertaken in 2016.[7] Most of its phytochemicals are present in the flowering structures; these include hypericin, pseudohypericin, hyperforin, hyperoside, isoquercetin, quercitrin, avicularin, amentoflavone, and catechin. In the leaves, neochlorogenic and dihydroxybenzoic acid can be found.[8] The concentrations of these chemicals is generally lower in Hypericum russeggeri than in the similar species H. hircinum, H. lanugisonum, and H. pallens. The only compounds present in H. russeggeri in greater concentrations than some of the similar species are neochlorogenic acid, hyperoside, quercitrin, and epicatechin.[9]

Taxonomy

[edit]
Original description of the species by Eduard Fenzl in 1842 under the synonym Triadenia russeggeri[10]

Plants of the species were first collected in 1836 by botanists Theodor Kotschy and Ernest Coquebert de Montbret [fr]. While the collection locations for many of Kotschy's specimens are ambiguous, some of them state that they were found near Antioch; this agrees with Montbret's collections from the Hatay province of Turkey and from northwestern Syria, and establishes that region as its type locality.[3]

In 1842, Eduard Fenzl used Kotschy's specimens to describe the new species as Triadenia russeggeri in the plant family "Hypericineae" (now Hypericaceae). He noted its very branchy and prostrate growth habit, its occurrence in Syria, and its similarity in appearance to Triadenia thymifolia (now Hypericum aegypticum subsp. webbii).[10][11] Later that year, it was proposed that the species should be placed in the genus Elodea (which would give the new combination Elodea russeggeri). Also, new specimens from near the type locality were described as Adenotrias phrygia and A. kotschyi. These plants were later determined to be specimens of Hypericum russeggeri and the new names were synonymized.[3]

The name Hypericum russeggeri was established by Robert Keller in Adolf Engler's textbook Die Natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien in 1893.[1] The species was moved into Hypericum, and its previous placement in a separate genus was stated to be unwarranted, thus making it the type and only species (at that time) of Hypericum section Adenotrias.[12] Norman Robson affirmed the new name and its designation as section type in the first volume of his monograph of the genus Hypericum in 1977,[13] and the species has continued to be retained in Hypericum since then based on molecular phylogenetics.[14]

Distribution, habitat, and ecology

[edit]
Hypericum russeggeri is located in Turkey
Hypericum russeggeri
The Nur Mountains in Turkey, where Hypericum russeggeri can be found

Hypericum russeggeri is confined to a habitat of calcareous rocks, and it has been found at elevations of up to 100 meters above sea level. It is native to Hatay province in southeastern Turkey, and the northern coast of Syria. Within this distribution, it is found along the coast and in the foothills of the Nur Mountains. At one point, it may have been present near Edremit in western Anatolia, but it is now extinct in that region.[5]

The species is parasitized by Cyphodema rubrica, a capsid bug. It lives as a vagrant on the leaves of the plant and can cause malformations.[15]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Hypericum russeggeri". Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 12 April 2024.
  2. ^ Coombes 2012, p. 172.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Robson 1996, p. 152.
  4. ^ Löve 1980, p. 165.
  5. ^ a b c d Robson 1996, p. 153.
  6. ^ Reynaud 1985, p. 87.
  7. ^ Odabas et al. 2016, p. 194.
  8. ^ Cirak & Radusiene 2019, p. 202.
  9. ^ Odabas et al. 2016, p. 195–196.
  10. ^ a b Fenzl 1842, p. 7.
  11. ^ "Triadenia thymifolia". Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
  12. ^ Engler et al. 1893, p. 209.
  13. ^ Robson 1977, p. 334.
  14. ^ Robson 2016, p. 191.
  15. ^ Ellis, W.N. (2022). "Hypericum russeggeri". Plant Parasites of Europe. Retrieved 11 April 2024.

Bibliography

[edit]