Translate

Wednesday, 30 March 2016

Pale stonecrop - Sedum sediforme (Jacq.) Pau - Cyprus

Petrosedum sediforme, the pale stonecrop, is a perennial flowering plant in the family Crassulaceae. It has pointed, succulent, glaucous blue leaves and yellow, five-pointed flowers emerging on and inflorescence. The plant is native to mountainous and coastal regions of the Mediterranean Basin. It is sometimes cultivated as an ornamental rock garden plant.

Sedum is a large genus of flowering plants in the family Crassulaceae, members of which are commonly known as stonecrops. The genus has been described as containing up to 600 species of leaf succulents that are found throughout the Northern Hemisphere, varying from annual and creeping herbs to shrubs. The plants have water-storing leaves. The flowers usually have five petals, seldom four or six. There are typically twice as many stamens as petals.

A number of species formerly classified as Sedum are now the separate genus Hylotelephium.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Photos Gialousa 4/6/2015 by George Konstantinou

















Sedum litoreum Guss. - Cyprus

Sedum litoreum is a species of annual herb in the family Crassulaceae. Individuals can grow to 3.7 cm

Sedum is a large genus of flowering plants in the family Crassulaceae, members of which are commonly known as stonecrops. The genus has been described as containing up to 600 species of leaf succulents that are found throughout the Northern Hemisphere, varying from annual and creeping herbs to shrubs. The plants have water-storing leaves. The flowers usually have five petals, seldom four or six. There are typically twice as many stamens as petals.

A number of species formerly classified as Sedum are now the separate genus Hylotelephium.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Photos Larnakas Lapithou 30/1/2015 by George Konstantinou

Cardoon - Cynara cardunculus L. - Αρκοτζινάρα - Αγριαγκινάρα - Cyprus


The cardoon (Cynara cardunculus), also called the artichoke thistle, cardone, cardoni, carduni, or cardi, is a thistle-like plant in the sunflower family. It is a naturally occurring species that is sometimes considered to include the globe artichoke, and has many cultivated forms. It is native to the western and central Mediterranean region, where it was domesticated in ancient times.

The wild cardoon is a stout herbaceous perennial plant growing 0.8 to 1.5 m (31 to 59 in) tall, with deeply lobed and heavily spined green to grey-green tomentose (hairy or downy) leaves up to 50 cm (20 in) long, with yellow spines up to 3.5 cm long. The flowers are violet-purple, produced in a large, globose, massively spined capitulum up to 6 cm (2 in) in diameter.

It is adapted to dry climates, native across an area from Morocco and Portugal east to Libya and Greece and north to France and Croatia; it may also be native on Cyprus, the Canary Islands and Madeira. In France, it only occurs wild in the Mediterranean south (Gard, Hérault, Aude, Pyrénées-Orientales, Corsica). It has become an invasive weed in the pampas of Argentina, and is also considered a weed in Australia and California.

In cultivation in the United Kingdom, this plant has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

Photos Charzia 4/6/2015 by George Konstantinou





















Mediterranean cypress, Italian cypress, Tuscan cypress, Graveyard cypress, or Pencil pine - Cupressus sempervirens L. - Τζυπάρισσος, Τζυπαρίσσιν - Μεσογειακό κυπαρίσσι - Κυπαρίσσι - Cyprus


Cupressus sempervirens, the Mediterranean cypress (also known as Italian cypress, Tuscan cypress, graveyard cypress, or pencil pine), is a species of cypress native to the eastern Mediterranean region, in northeast Libya, southern Albania, southern coastal Croatia (Dalmatia), southern Greece, southern Turkey, Cyprus, northern Egypt, western Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Malta, Italy, western Jordan, and also a disjunct population in Iran.

C. sempervirens is a medium-sized coniferous evergreen tree to 35 m (115 ft) tall, with a conic crown with level branches and variably loosely hanging branchlets. It is very long-lived, with some trees reported to be over 1,000 years old.

The foliage grows in dense sprays, dark green in colour. The leaves are scale-like, 2–5 mm long, and produced on rounded (not flattened) shoots. The seed cones are ovoid or oblong, 25–40 mm long, with 10-14 scales, green at first, maturing brown about 20–24 months after pollination. The male cones are 3–5 mm long, and release pollen in late winter. It is moderately susceptible to cypress canker, caused by the fungus Seiridium cardinale, and can suffer extensive dieback where this disease is common. The species name sempervirens comes from the Latin for 'evergreen'.

Mediterranean Cypress has been widely cultivated as an ornamental tree for millennia away from its native range, mainly throughout the whole Mediterranean region, and in other areas with similar hot, dry summers and mild, rainy winters, including California, southwest South Africa and southern Australia. It can also be grown successfully in areas with cooler, moister summers, such as the British Isles, New Zealand and the Pacific Northwest (coastal Oregon, Washington and British Columbia). It is also planted in south Florida as an ornamental tree. In some areas, particularly the United States, it is known as "Italian" or "Tuscan cypress".

The vast majority of the trees in cultivation are selected cultivars with a fastigiate crown, with erect branches forming a narrow to very narrow crown often less than a tenth as wide as the tree is tall. The dark green "exclamation mark" shape of these trees is a highly characteristic signature of Mediterranean town and village landscapes. Formerly, the species was sometimes separated into two varieties, the wild C. sempervirens var. sempervirens (syn. var. horizontalis), and the fastigiate C. s. var. pyramidalis (syn. var. fastigiata, var. stricta), but the latter is now only distinguished as a Cultivar Group, with no botanical significance.

It is also known for its very durable, scented wood, used most famously for the doors of St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican City, Rome. Cypress used to be used in distilleries as staves to hold mash ferments to make alcohol before the invention of stainless steel. Commonly seen throughout New Mexico, the Mediterranean Cypress is also known as the "drama tree" because of its tendency to bend with even the slightest of breezes.

In cosmetics it is used as astringent, firming, anti-seborrheic, anti-dandruff, anti-aging and as fragance

Cypress, Cupressus sempervirens, was the first choice for Iranian Gardens. In all of the famous Persian Gardens, such as Fin Garden, Shazdeh Garden, Dowlat-Abad, and others, this tree plays a central role in their design.[citation needed] The oldest living Cypress is the Sarv-e-Abarkooh in Iran's Yazd Province. Its age is estimated to be approximately 4,000 years.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Photos Pentadaktilos 6/11/2014 by George Konstantinou










Damasonium bourgaei Coss. - Cyprus

Damasonium bourgaei is a species of plant in the family Alismataceae

Damasonium is a genus of six species of flowering plants in the family Alismataceae, commonly known as starfruit and by the older name thrumwort. The genus has a subcosmopolitan but very patchy distribution

They are aquatic perennial herbaceous plants growing in shallow water or mud beside ponds. The leaves are all basal, floating, or aerial in plants on pond margins. The flowers are hermaphrodite, in one to many whorls, in umbels, racemes or panicles; they have six stamens, and six to nine carpels arranged in a whorl, connate at the base, each with two to many ventral ovules; The styles are terminal. The fruit is a whorl of follicles; the follicles are laterally compressed, stellately radiating, with a more or less elongated apical beak
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Photos Potamos Liopetriou 14/2/2013 by George Konstantinou






false yellowhead, woody fleabane, sticky fleabane and yellow fleabane - Dittrichia viscosa subsp. angustifolia (Bég.) Greuter - Διτριχία η ιξώδης - Κόνυζος - Cyprus


Dittrichia viscosa, also known as false yellowhead, woody fleabane, sticky fleabane and yellow fleabane, is a flowering plant in the daisy family.

Dittrichia viscosa is a highly branching perennial common throughout the Mediterranean Basin. It has long, narrow leaves that are pointed at both ends and have teeth along the edges and glandular hairs on the surfaces. One plant can produce many yellow flower heads each with as many as 16 ray florets and 44 disc florets.

Originally, the species was found mainly in dry riverbeds and abandoned fields up to a 1500 m (5000 feet) elevation. Nowadays it is quite common in roadsides and ruderal habitats, even in urban areas. It is considered an invasive species in Australia. The false yellowhead is a tough plant, very resistant to adverse conditions and degraded environments. It is important as food for the caterpillars of certain butterflies and moths, like Ioana iolas.

Despite the fresh-looking green color of its leaves and its attractive inflorescence, this plant is sticky and has a certain smell that most people find unpleasant. It contains an essential oil and has been used in traditional medicine since ancient times, especially in the Levant, as an astringent.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Photos Geri 8/11/2014 by George Konstantinou






Squirting cucumber or Exploding cucumber - Ecballium elaterium (L.) A. Rich -- Εκβάλλιον το ελατήριο, Πικραγγουριά, Πικραγγουρκά - Cyprus

Ecballium is a genus of flowering plants in the family Cucurbitaceae containing a single species, Ecballium elaterium, also called the squirting cucumber or exploding cucumber (but not to be confused with Cyclanthera explodens). It gets its unusual name from the fact that, when ripe, it squirts a stream of mucilaginous liquid containing its seeds, which can be seen with the naked eye. It is thus considered to have rapid plant movement.

It is native to Europe, northern Africa, and temperate areas of Asia. It is grown as an ornamental plant elsewhere, and in some places it has naturalized.

It is suspected to provide food for the caterpillars of the tortrix moth Phtheochroa rugosana.

This plant, and especially its fruit, is poisonous, containing cucurbitacins. In the ancient world it was considered to be an abortifacient.

Elaterium or elaterin is the name of the greenish substance extracted from the juice of the fruit that is used as a purgative.

In Turkey, the fresh fruit juice of this plant is directly applied into the nostrils for the treatment of sinusitis as a herbal medicine. Clinical tests on voluntary patients revealed that the healing rate of double-high dosage application is higher than that of the single-low dosage (71.0 and 56.6%, respectively). In addition, total relief from the main symptoms is observed in 20% of the patients, although the sinuses are not completely drained off on x-ray examination
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
.
Η πικραγγουριά (Ecballium elaterium, Εκβάλλιον το ελατήριο) είναι φυτό της οικογένειας των κολοκυνθοειδών, συγγενικό φυτό με την κολοκυθιά, την αγγουριά και την καρπουζιά. Είναι έρπων ετήσιο φυτό, το οποίο είναι αυτοφυές στη Μεσόγειο. Το φυτό επίσης έχει προσαρμοστεί και σε άλλες περιοχές στις οποίες εισήχθη ως καλλωπιστικό. Το φυτό είναι δηλητηριώδες, όμως χρησιμοποιείται για θεραπευτικούς σκοπούς από την αρχαιότητα.

Το φυτό φτάνει σε ύψος τα 30 εκατοστά και σε διάμετρο το ένα μέτρο. Κάνει έντονα κίτρινα μονόοικα άνθη, δηλαδή τα άνθη είναι είτε αρσενικά είτε θηλυκά, αλλά υπάρχουν δύο άνθη πάνω στο φυτό. Το φυτό μπορεί να αυτογονιμοποιηθεί. Η ανθοφορία του διαρκεί από τον Ιούνιο μέχρι το Αύγουστο. Το επιστημονικό όνομά του το φυτό το πήρε επειδή όταν κάποιος αγγίξει τους ώριμους καρπούς, αυτοί ανοίγουν και οι σπόροι εκτοξεύονται παντού. Οι καρποί καλύπτονται από τριχίδια.
Από τη Βικιπαίδεια, την ελεύθερη εγκυκλοπαίδεια

Ηostplant of a beetle Bryony ladybird - Henosepilachna argus (Geoffroy,1762) - Cyprus

Photos Geri 8/10/2014 by George Konstantinou