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Thursday, 3 September 2015

Αιωνόβια Συκομουριά, Συκομωρέας ή Τουμπεζιά (ficus sycomorus) Αμμόχωστος έξω από την εκκλησία (τζαμί) του Αγίου Νικολάου. - Cyprus



In front of the main entrance to the St Nicholas Cathedral is a very old tree of huge size. According to the botanists, the tree was planted here when the cathedral was built in 1299 A.D. (716 years old)


Ficus sycomorus, called the sycamore fig or the fig-mulberry (because the leaves resemble those of the Mulberry), sycamore, or sycomore, is a fig species that has been cultivated since ancient times. (The term sycamore spelled with an A has been used for a variety of plants and is widely used in England to refer to the Great Maple, Acer pseudoplatanus. For clarity, this species of fig is usually exclusively referred to as "sycomore", with an O rather than an A as the second vowel.)
Ficus sycomorus is native to Africa south of the Sahel and north of the Tropic of Capricorn, also excluding the central-west rainforest areas. It also grows naturally in Lebanon, where the famous Gemmayzeh Street is named after its Arabic name Gemmayz, the southern Arabian Peninsula, in Cyprus and in very localized areas in Madagascar, and has been naturalised in Israel and Egypt. In its native habitat, the tree is usually found in rich soils along rivers and in mixed woodlands.
Ficus sycomorus grows to 20 m tall and has a considerable spread as can be seen from the photograph below right, with a dense round crown of spreading branchesThe leaves are heart-shaped with a round apex, 14 cm long by 10 cm wide, and arranged spirally around the twig. They are dark green above and lighter with prominent yellow veins below, and both surfaces are rough to the touch. The petiole is 0.5–3 cm long and pubescent. The fruit is a large edible fig, 2–3 cm in diameter, ripening from buff-green to yellow or red. They are borne in thick clusters on long branchlets or the leaf axil. Flowering and fruiting occurs year-round, peaking from July to December. The bark is green-yellow to orange and exfoliates in papery strips to reveal the yellow inner bark. Like all other figs, it contains a latex.
According to botanists Daniel Zohary (b. 1926) and Maria Hopf (1914-2008), the ancient Egyptians cultivated this species "almost exclusively. Remains of F. sycomorus begin to appear in predynastic levels and in quantity from the start of the third millennium BCE. It was the ancient Egyptian Tree of Life. Zohary and Hopf note that "the fruit and the timber, and sometimes even the twigs, are richly represented in the tombs of the Egyptian Early, Middle and Late Kingdoms." In numerous cases the parched fruiting bodies, known as sycons, "bear characteristic gashing marks indicating that this art, which induces ripening, was practiced in Egypt in ancient times.
Although this species of fig requires the presence of the symbiotic wasp Ceratosolen arabicus to reproduce sexually, and this insect is extinct in Egypt, Zohay and Hopf have no doubt that Egypt was "the principal area of sycamore fig development. Some of the caskets of mummies in Egypt are made from the wood of this tree. In tropical areas where the wasp is common, complex mini-ecosystems involving the wasp, nematodes, other parasitic wasps, and various larger predators revolve around the life cycle of the fig. The trees' random production of fruit in such environments assures its constant attendance by the insects and animals which form this ecosystem.From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

.Photos Amochostos 11/6/2013 by George Konstantinou






























See also

Η Αμμοχώστος εντός των ενετικών τειχών - Cyprus


Η Εκκλησία των Καρμελιτών εντός των ενετικών τειχών της Αμμοχώστου













Sunday, 30 August 2015

Apterola (Apterola) kuenckeli (Mulsant & Rey, 1866) - Cyprus

Family Lygaeidae

 A member of Seed Bugs 


.Photos  24/8/2015 by George Konstantinou




Saturday, 29 August 2015

Το χωριό Λιμνάτης - Limnatis Village - Cyprus

See also
 - Κατάλογος δήμων και κοινοτήτων της Κύπρου












Ο Λιμνάτης είναι χωριό της επαρχίας Λεμεσού στην Κύπρο. Απέχει από την πόλη της Λεμεσού περίπου 20 χιλιόμετρα. Σύμφωνα με την απογραφή του 2011 είχε 314 κατοίκους.

.Photos 29/8/2015 by George Konstantinou





Αιωνόβιος Δρύς Quercus infectoria subsp. veneris - Mediterranean Oak - Δρύς - korfi village - Cyprus




.Photos Korfi 29/8/2015 by George Konstantinou





Water mint - Mentha aquatica L. - Νερομέντα - Cyprus


Kρισίμως κινδυνεύον RED DATA BOOK CATEGORY

 

Mentha aquatica (water mint; syn. Mentha hirsuta Huds.) is a perennial plant in the genus Mentha, that grows in damp places and is native to much of Europe, northwest Africa and southwest Asia
Water mint is a herbaceous rhizomatous perennial plant growing to 90 centimetres (35 in) tall. The stems are square in cross section, green or purple, and variably hairy to almost hairless. The rhizomes are wide-spreading, fleshy, and bear fibrous roots. The leaves are ovate to ovate-lanceolate, 2 to 6 centimetres (0.79 to 2.36 in) long and 1 to 4 centimetres (0.39 to 1.57 in) broad, green (sometimes purplish), opposite, toothed, and vary from hairy to nearly hairless. The flowers of the watermint are tiny, densely crowded, purple, tubular, pinkish to lilac in colour and form a terminal hemispherical inflorescence; flowering is from mid to late summer. Water mint is visited by many types of insects, and can be characterized by a generalized pollination syndrome, but can also spread by underground rhizomes. All parts of the plant have a distinctly minty smell. A variety known as Mentha aquatica var. litoralis is native to areas of Sweden and Finland near the Baltic Sea. It is unbranched, hairless, with narrower leaves and paler flowers
Water mint is native to much of Europe, northern Africa and western Asia. It has been introduced to North and South America, Australia and some Atlantic islands.[7]
As the name suggests, water mint occurs in the shallow margins and channels of streams, rivers, pools, dikes, ditches, canals, wet meadows, marshes and fens. If the plant grows in the water itself, it rises above the surface of the water. It generally occurs on mildly acidic to calcareous (it is common on soft limestone) mineral or peaty soils. M. aquatica can occur in certain fen-meadow habitats such as the Juncus subnodulosus-Cirsium palustre plant association. It is a component of Purple moor grass and rush pastures - a type of Biodiversity ActPlan habitat in the UK.
It hybridises with Mentha spicata (spearmint) to produce Mentha × piperita (peppermint), a sterile hybrid; with Mentha suaveolens (apple mint) to produce Mentha × suavis; with Mentha arvensis (corn mint) to produce Mentha × verticillata; and with both M. arvensis and M. spicata to give the tri-species hybrid Mentha × smithiana. It can be used to make a herbal tea. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Photos Fasouri 29/8/2015 by George Konstantinou





Linum maritimum L. - Cyprus

RED DATA BOOK CATEGORY

Linum maritimum occurs in Central-East Europe and Mediterranean countries. In Cyprus it grows at three sites, all located within the Akrotiri peninsula, although other locations have been identified since the publication of the Red Book.
Its habitat is salt water and fresh water wetlands near sea level.
It is threatened by fire, drainage, invasive Acacia saligna and Phragmites australis and maintenance of forest roads and ditches.
.Photos Fasouri 29/8/2015 by George Konstantinou



Saltmarsh morning glory - Ipomoea sagittata Poir. - Cyprus



RED DATA BOOK CATEGORY


Ipomoea sagittata, commonly called the saltmarsh morning glory, is a species of flowering plant in the morning glory family. It is native to the CaribbeanMexico, and the Southeastern United States where it is found in coastal areas. Its natural habitats are thickets on barrier islands, the edges of salt marshes, and in hammocks.
.Photos Fasouri 29/8/2015 by George Konstantinou





Euphorbia hirsuta L. - Cyprus

Πολύ σπάνιο ιθαγενές φυτό που σήμερα μόνο στο Λιβάδι Φασσουρίου  το ξέρουμε.

RED DATA BOOK CATEGORY

Euphorbia hirsuta is a species of herb in the family Euphorbiaceae

Photos Fasouri 29/8/2015 by George Konstantinou






Teucrium scordium subsp. scordioides - Cyprus


Teucrium is a large genus of perennial plants in the family Lamiaceae. The name is believed to refer to King Teucer of Troy. Members of the genus are commonly known as germanders. There are hundreds of species, including herbs, shrubs or subshrubs. They are found all over the world but are most common in Mediterranean climates.
An unusual feature of this genus compared with other members of Lamiaceae is that the flowers completely lack the upper lip of thecorolla, although it is somewhat reduced also in other genera (Ajuga among them).
Several species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including the Coleophora case-bearers Coleophora auricella and Coleophora chamaedriella. The latter is only known from Wall Germander (T. chamaedrys).
Teucrium species are rich in essential oils. They are valued as ornamental plants and a pollen source, and some species have culinary and/or medical value..From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

.Photos Fasouri 29/8/2015 by George Konstantinou


Friday, 28 August 2015

Autumn Ladies Tresses - Spiranthes spiralis (L.) Chevall. - Cyprus

Spiranthes spiralis, commonly known as autumn lady's-tresses, is a palearctic orchid which in Europe blooms in August and September. It is characterised by a spiral inflorescence produced after the leaves have died down. The inflorescence can be very small (as little as 50 millimetres or 2.0 inches high) especially in short grazed grassland. In Western Europe it occurs most frequently in close cropped grassland overlying chalk or limestone.
S. spiralis is a short tuberous perennial which reaches heights between 5 and 30 centimeters. The stem is stickily-hairy.The plant has two tubers as storage organs, rarely, one or three. From Autumn two new tubers are formed and the old tubers lowly die off. The shiny oval-elliptical foliage leaves form a basal rosette close to the ground and to one side of the flower-spike. There are from three to seven and they have a length of 1.5 to 3.5 cm and a width of 1 to 1.5 cm. The leaves are often withered by flowering time. The stem leaves are scale-like and overlapping;the bracts are shorter than the flowers.
The flowers are white, 6-7mm long. There are up to 20 borne in a slender spiral 3 to 12 cm long.The outer 2 sepals are spreading, the upper sepal and the petals fuse to form a tube with the lip. The lip has up-curved edges and is yellowish-green. The edge of the lip is notched and appears viewed up close as frayed.
The growth cycle differs from most other European orchids. Between July and August the flowering stem begins to grow. At this time, no leaves are visible. Between late August and early October, the leaves develop next to the flowering stem. They survive the winter and grow until the beginning of summer when they wither.The next flowering stem then grows from the center of the withered rosette of leaves .
Dry grassy places, meadows, garigue, heaths, pine woodland, generally on calcareous soils..From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Photos Diorios 30/10/2015 by George Konstantinou






Serapias levantina H. Baumann & Künkele - Cyprus


Serapias is a genus of terrestrial orchids that can be found all over southern Europe to Asia Minor. The genus was named after Serapis, a syncretic Hellenistic-Egyptian god in Antiquity. Serapias have spurless flowers and usually go dormant during the winter seasons.

Photos Kormakitis 4/4/2015 by George Konstantinou




Serapias bergonii E.G.Camus - Cyprus


Serapias bergonii is a species of orchids found from Italy to western and southern Turkey.
Photos Akrotiri 19/3/2014 by George Konstantinou





Platanthera holmboei H. Lindb.- Cyprus


Platanthera holmboei is a species of orchid native to the eastern Mediterranean (northern Israel, Syria, Lebanon, Turkey, the Greek Islands, and Cyprus).

Photos Tsakkistra 13/4/2013 by George Konstantinou