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Taxa
Achillea
EOL Text
Achillea is a genus of flowering plants comprised of approximately 85 distinct species that are distributed across North America, Eurasia and North Africa.
Known by the common names of Yarrow or Milfoil, these strongly scented perennials have alternate leaves, which are simple to 3-pinnately dissected.
For the inflorescence: heads are generally radiate, in flat-topped clusters; The ray flowers are few, white, pink, or yellow. Disk flowers are typically many, and corollae are short, white to purple or yellow.
Fruits are oblong to obovate.
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Rights holder/Author | C. Michael Hogan, C. Michael Hogan |
Source | No source database. |
Achillea /ækɨˈliːə/[3] is a group of flowering plants in the family Asteraceae described as a genus by Linnaeus in 1753.[4][5]
The genus is native primarily to Europe, temperate areas of Asia, and North America.[6][7]
The common name "yarrow" is usually applied to Achillea millefolium,[8] but may also be used for other species within the genus. These plants typically have frilly, hairy, aromatic leaves.
These plants show large, flat clusters of small flowers at the top of the stem. These flowers can be white, yellow, orange, pink or red.
The genus was named after the Greek mythological character Achilles. According to the Iliad, Achilles' soldiers used yarrow to treat their wounds,[9] hence some of its common names such as allheal and bloodwort.
Achillea species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species - see list of Lepidoptera that feed on Achillea.
Cultivation[edit]
A number of species - notably A. filipendulina, A. millefolium, A. ptarmica, are popular garden plants.
List of species[edit]
- Accepted species
- Achillea abrotanoides
- Achillea absinthoides
- Achillea acuminata
- Achillea aegyptiaca: Egyptian Yarrow
- Achillea ageratifolia : Balkan Yarrow, Greek Yarrow
- Achillea ageratum : Sweet Yarrow, Sweet Nancy, English Mace
- Achillea albicaulis
- Achillea × albinea
- Achillea aleppica
- Achillea alexandri-regis
- Achillea alpina
- Achillea ambrosiaca
- Achillea apiculata
- Achillea arabica
- Achillea armenorum
- Achillea asiatica
- Achillea asplenifolia
- Achillea atrata : Black Yarrow
- Achillea aucheri
- Achillea auriculata
- Achillea baikalensis
- Achillea barbeyana
- Achillea barrelieri
- Achillea biserrata
- Achillea boissieri
- Achillea brachyphylla
- Achillea bucharica
- Achillea callichroa
- Achillea cappadocica
- Achillea carpatica
- Achillea chamaecyparissus
- Achillea chamaemelifolia
- Achillea cheilanthifolia
- Achillea chrysocoma
- Achillea clavennae : Silvery Yarrow
- Achillea clusiana
- Achillea clypeolata
- Achillea coarctata
- Achillea coarctata
- Achillea collina
- Achillea condensata
- Achillea conferta
- Achillea cretica
- Achillea crithmifolia
- Achillea cucullata
- Achillea cuneatiloba
- Achillea decolorans
- Achillea decolorans
- Achillea distans : Alps Yarrow
- Achillea erba-rotta : Musk Milfoil
- Achillea eriophora
- Achillea euxina
- Achillea falcata
- Achillea filipendulina Fernleaf Yarrow
- Achillea formosa
- Achillea fraasii : Filigree Yarrow
- Achillea fragantissima
- Achillea glaberrima
- Achillea goniocephala
- Achillea × graja
- Achillea grandifolia
- Achillea gypsicola
- Achillea haussknechtii
- Achillea heterophylla
- Achillea holosericea
- Achillea horanszkyi
- Achillea huber-morathii
- Achillea × illiczevski
- Achillea impatiens
- Achillea incognita
- Achillea inundata
- Achillea japonica
- Achillea karatavica
- Achillea kellalensis
- Achillea ketenoglui
- Achillea kotschyi
- Achillea laggeri
- Achillea latiloba
- Achillea ledebourii
- Achillea leptophylla
- Achillea leptophylloides
- Achillea lereschei
- Achillea ligustica : Ligurian Yarrow
- Achillea lingulata
- Achillea lycaonica
- Achillea macrocephala
- Achillea macrophylla : Broad-leaved Yarrow
- Achillea magna
- Achillea magnifica
- Achillea maritima
- Achillea maura
- Achillea membranacea
- Achillea micrantha
- Achillea micranthoides
- Achillea millefolium : Milfoil, Yarrow, Allheal, Thousand-leaf, Bloodwort, Carpenter's Grass, Cammock, Green arrow, Sneezeweed, Nosebleed, Green Adder's Mouth, Soldier's Woundwort, Dog Daisy, Old-man's-pepper
- Achillea milliana
- Achillea mollis
- Achillea monocephala
- Achillea multifida
- Achillea nana : Dwarf Alpine Yarrow
- Achillea nigrescens
- Achillea nobilis : Noble Yarrow, Creamy Yarrow
- Achillea obscura
- Achillea occulta
- Achillea ochroleuca
- Achillea odorata
- Achillea oligocephala
- Achillea oxyloba
- Achillea oxyodonta
- Achillea pachycephala
- Achillea phrygia
- Achillea pindicola
- Achillea pseudoaleppica
- Achillea pseudopectinata
- Achillea ptarmica : Sneezewort, Sneezeweed, Sneezewort Yarrow
- Achillea ptarmicifolia
- Achillea ptarmicoides
- Achillea pyrenaica
- Achillea rhodoptarmica
- Achillea roseo-alba
- Achillea rupestris
- Achillea salicifolia
- Achillea santolinoides
- Achillea schischkinii
- Achillea schmakovii
- Achillea schneideri
- Achillea schugnanica
- Achillea sedelmeyeriana
- Achillea seidlii
- Achillea sergievskiana
- Achillea setacea
- Achillea sieheana
- Achillea sinensis
- Achillea sintenisii
- Achillea sipikorensis
- Achillea spinulifolia
- Achillea squarrosa
- Achillea stepposa
- Achillea styriaca
- Achillea × submicrantha
- Achillea × subtaurica
- Achillea talagonica
- Achillea taygetea
- Achillea tenuifolia
- Achillea teretifolia
- Achillea thracica
- Achillea tomentosa : Woolly Yarrow
- Achillea tuzsonii
- Achillea umbellata
- Achillea vermicularis
- Achillea virescens
- Achillea wilsoniana : Wilson's Yarrow
Gallery[edit]
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References[edit]
- ^ lectotype designated by Green, Prop. Brit. Bot. 182 (1929)
- ^ "Achillea". Index Nominum Genericorum. International Association for Plant Taxonomy. 2006-02-20. Retrieved 2008-05-21.
- ^ Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607
- ^ Linnaeus, Carl von. 1753. Species Plantarum 2: 896-897. in Latin
- ^ Tropicos, Achillea L.
- ^ Flora of North America Achillea Linnaeus
- ^ Flora of China Vol. 20-21 Page 759 蓍属 shi shu Achillea Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 2: 896. 1753.
- ^ RHS A-Z encyclopedia of garden plants. United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. 2008. p. 1136. ISBN 1405332964.
- ^ Jalali, Farnood Shokouhi Sabet; Tajik, Hossein, Hadian, Mojtaba (2010). "Efficacy of topical application of alcoholic extract of yarrow in the healing process of experimental burn wounds in rabbit". Comparative Clinical Pathology. doi:10.1007/s00580-010-1081-7.
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Source | http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Achillea&oldid=642012410 |
Perennial herbs. Leaves alternate, finely pinnatisect. Capitula in corymbs, heterogamous. Phyllaries many-seriate; margin scarious. Receptacular scales narrow, scarious. Ray florets female, white or pink (in ours) or yellow. Disk florets bisexual, tubular, white or yellow. Achenes strongly flattened, not ribbed; apex truncate. Pappus 0.
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Rights holder/Author | Mark Hyde, Bart Wursten, Petra Ballings, Flora of Zimbabwe |
Source | http://www.zimbabweflora.co.zw/speciesdata/genus.php?genus_id=1541 |
"Milfoil, achillée [for Greek god Achilles, who is supposed to have used the plants to treat his wounds]
Perennials [subshrubs], 6–80 cm (usually rhizomatous, sometimes fibrous rooted or taprooted; usually aromatic). Stems 1(–4+, clustered), usually erect, branched mostly distally, glabrous or sparsely to densely lanate (hairs usually basifixed). Leaves basal (often withering before flowering) and cauline; alternate; petiolate or sessile (bases ± clasping); blades (cauline equaling basal or slightly smaller distally) linear to oblong-lanceolate, usually 1–2[–4]-pinnately lobed, ultimate margins entire, abaxial faces sparsely to densely lanate, adaxial faces glabrate to sparsely tomentose. Heads radiate [discoid], in compact to open (± flat-topped), simple or compound, corymbiform arrays [borne singly]. Involucres campanulate to hemispheric, mostly 2–3(–5+) mm diam. Phyllaries persistent, 10–30 in (1–)2–3(–4) series, oblong, ovate, or oblanceolate to lanceolate (midribs conspicuous), unequal, margins and apices (pale to black) scarious. Receptacles usually flat to slightly convex, rarely conic, paleate; paleae membranous, ± folded (sometimes each with central resin duct). Ray florets [0] 3–5(–12+), usually pistillate and fertile; corollas usually white (laminae yellow at bases), sometimes pale yellow to pink or purple (tubes ± flattened), laminae orbiculate to suborbiculate (becoming reflexed). Disc florets usually (5–)15–75+, rarely 0, bisexual, fertile; corollas white to grayish or yellowish [yellow, pink], tubes ± flattened (bases ± saccate, clasping apices of cypselae), throats ± campanulate, lobes 5, ± deltate. Cypselae obcompressed, oblong to obovate (margins sometimes winged, apices rounded); ribs usually 2, lateral (sometimes plus 1 adaxial), faces glabrous (pericarps with myxogenic cells, sometimes with resin sacs; embryo sac development monosporic). x = 9. Species ca. 115 (4 in the flora): subtropic to temperate and arctic regions of North America and Eurasia. Centers of diversity for Achillea are in Europe and Asia. Achillea ageratum, A. distans, and A. ligustica have been reported as occurring in North America. Labels on herbarium specimens examined indicated that those reports were based on cultivated plants; there is no evidence that any of the three has become established in our flora. Achillea filipendulina may be persistent or established in California (F. Hrusa et al. 2002) and in Michigan (E. Voss 1972–1996, vol. 3). Achillea includes aromatic herbs with diverse vegetative morphologies. Floral characters show much less variation. Some species are widely cultivated both in Eurasia and North America. Interspecific hybridization has made identifications difficult and has evidently contributed to long lists of synonyms for some species. Plants of Achillea contain secondary metabolites with purported therapeutic and pharmacologic uses. Native Americans used the plants to treat earaches, diarrhea, and hemorrhages."
License | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ |
Rights holder/Author | Hamilton, Hayley, Trock, Debra K., Compositae |
Source | http://compositae.lifedesks.org/pages/2637 |
Foodplant / gall
Asterolecanium fimbriatum causes gall of stem of Achillea
Foodplant / gall
Brachycaudus helichrysi causes gall of inflorescence of Achillea
Foodplant / feeds on
larva of Cheilosia vernalis feeds on stem of Achillea
Remarks: Other: uncertain
Foodplant / gall
Craspedolepta nervosa causes gall of leaf of Achillea
Foodplant / gall
larva of Dithryca guttularis causes gall of stem (base) of Achillea
Foodplant / gall
Eriophyes kiefferi causes gall of inflorescence of Achillea
Plant / resting place / on
Haplothrips setiger may be found on live flower of Achillea
Foodplant / gall
larva of Lasioptera francoisi causes gall of leaf of Achillea
In Great Britain and/or Ireland:
Foodplant / open feeder
adult of Longitarsus succineus grazes on leaf of Achillea
Foodplant / gall
Macrosiphoniella millefolii causes gall of inflorescence of Achillea
Foodplant / gall
larva of Misopatha palearum causes gall of stem of Achillea
Foodplant / feeds on
larva of Mordellistena parvula feeds on Achillea
Plant / resting place / within
puparium of Ophiomyia curvipalpis may be found in stem of Achillea
Other: major host/prey
Foodplant / gall
larva of Oxyna flavipennis causes gall of stem (base) of Achillea
Foodplant / gall
larva of Ozirhincus millefolii causes gall of inflorescence of Achillea
Foodplant / feeds on
Pseudostyphlus pillumus feeds on Achillea
Foodplant / gall
larva of Rhopalomyia millefolii causes gall of leaf of Achillea
Foodplant / gall
larva of Rhopalomyia ptarmicae causes gall of inflorescence of Achillea
Plant / resting place / on
male of Thrips pillichi may be found on live flower of Achillea
Remarks: season: 6-9
Foodplant / miner
larva of Trypeta zoe mines leaf of Achillea
Remarks: Other: uncertain
License | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ |
Rights holder/Author | BioImages, BioImages - the Virtual Fieldguide (UK) |
Source | http://www.bioimages.org.uk/html/Achillea.htm |
Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD) Stats
Specimen Records:197
Specimens with Sequences:249
Specimens with Barcodes:124
Species:69
Species With Barcodes:68
Public Records:135
Public Species:66
Public BINs:0