Biology:Thymelaea

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Short description: Genus of flowering plants

Thymelaea
Thymelaea hirsuta.jpg
Thymelaea hirsuta
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Malvales
Family: Thymelaeaceae
Subfamily: Thymelaeoideae
Genus: Thymelaea
Mill.
Type species
Thymelaea sanamunda

Thymelaea (the sparrow-worts) is a genus of about 30 species of evergreen shrubs and herbs in the flowering plant family Thymelaeaceae, native to the Canary Islands, the Mediterranean region, north to central Europe, and east to central Asia.

Etymology

The genus name Thymelaea is a combination of the Greek name for the herb thyme θύμος (thúmos) and that for the olive ἐλαία (elaía) - in reference to its thyme-like foliage and olive-like fruit; while the English name Sparrow-wort (used by Thomas Green in his 18th century Universal Herbal) is a translation of the name of the genus Passerina (in which Thymelaea was formerly placed), derived from the word passer "sparrow" - given the plants in reference to a perceived similarity of the shape of the fruit to a sparrow's beak.[1]

Species
  • Thymelaea antiatlantica
  • Thymelaea aucheri
  • Thymelaea broteriana
  • Thymelaea calycina
  • Thymelaea cilicica
  • Thymelaea coridifolia
  • Thymelaea dioica
  • Thymelaea granatensis
  • Thymelaea gussonei
  • Thymelaea hirsuta
  • Thymelaea lanuginosa
  • Thymelaea lythroides
  • Thymelaea mesopotamica
  • Thymelaea microphylla
  • Thymelaea myrtifolia
  • Thymelaea nitida
  • Thymelaea passerina (spurge flax)
  • Thymelaea procumbens
  • Thymelaea pubescens
  • Thymelaea putorioides
  • Thymelaea ruizii
  • Thymelaea salsa
  • Thymelaea sanamunda
  • Thymelaea sempervirens
  • Thymelaea subrepens
  • Thymelaea tartonraira
  • Thymelaea tinctoria
  • Thymelaea virgata
  • Thymelaea virescens
  • Thymelaea villosa

References

  1. The Royal Horticultural Society Dictionary of Gardening ed. Chittenden, Fred J., 2nd edition, by Synge, Patrick M. Volume III : Je-Pt. Pub. Oxford at the Clarendon Press 1965. Reprinted 1984. ISBN:0-19-869106-8

Wikidata ☰ Q159448 entry