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Orobanche

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Broomrape
Orobanche uniflora 3303f.JPG
Naked broomrape (Orobanche uniflora)
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Orobanchaceae
Tribe:
Genus: Orobanche
L.
Species

See "Selected species"

Orobanche, commonly known as broomrape, is a genus of over 200 species of small parasitic herbaceous plants, mostly native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere.[1] It is the type genus of the broomrape family Orobanchaceae.

Description[]

Broomrapes are generally small, only 10–60 centimetres (4–24 inches) tall depending on species. They are best recognized by the yellow- to straw-coloured stems completely lacking chlorophyll, bearing yellow, white, or blue snapdragon-like flowers. The flower shoots are scaly, with a dense terminal spike of 10-20 flowers in most species, although single in one-flowered broomrape (Orobanche uniflora). The leaves are merely triangular scales. The seeds are minute, tan or brown, blackening with age. These plants generally flower from late winter to late spring. When they are not flowering, no part of the plants is visible above the surface of the soil.

Parisitism[]

As they have no chlorophyll, the broomrapes are totally dependent on other plants for nutrients. Broomrape seeds remain dormant in the soil, often for many years, until stimulated to germinate by certain compounds produced by living plant roots.[2] Broomrape seedlings put out a root-like growth, which attaches to the roots of nearby hosts. Once attached to a host, the broomrape robs its host of water and nutrients.

Some species are only able to parasitise a single plant species, and they are often named after the plant they parasitise, such as ivy broomrape (O. hederae) being restricted to parasitising ivy. Others can infect several genera, such as the lesser broomrape O. minor, which lives on clover and other related Fabaceae.

Branched broomrape Orobanche ramosa, native to central and southwestern Europe but widely naturalised elsewhere, is considered a major threat to crops in some areas. Plants that it targets are tomato, eggplant, potato, cabbage, coleus, bell pepper, sunflower, celery, and beans. In heavily infested areas, branched broomrape can cause total crop failure.

The bean broomrape Orobanche crenata, which targets the fava bean, has stems that are gathered and eaten in the region of Apulia, in southern Italy, where they are given the name of sporchia.[3]

Etymology[]

The generic name Orobanche comes from the Greek ὄροβος (órobos "bitter vetch") + ἄγχω (ánkhō (I) "strangle").[4][5] The common name "broomrape" comes from the English "broom" + Latin rapum ('tuber').[6]

Selected species[]

Note that this list includes names of more recently described species that may, under further taxonomic scrutiny, prove to be synonyms of a single species. Also, some species formerly included in this genus have been referred to Conopholis.

  • Moreno Mor. et al.
  • Orobanche aegyptiaca Pers. — Egyptian broomrape; Fenzhi broomrape
  • Honda
  • Stephan ex Willd. — Thyme broomrape; baihua broomrape
  • Tineo
  • A.Pujadas
  • K.Koch
  • Kirschl. — Alsace broomrape; Duose broomrape
  • Thuill. — Eryngium broomrape
  • C.A.Mey.
  • Boiss. & Reut.
  • Novopokr.
  • Peteaux & St.-Lag.
  • F.W.Schultz
  • Gilli
  • Sennen
  • F.W.Schultz
  • Borkh. — Wormwood broomrape
  • Gontsch.
  • Tzvelev
  • Vaucher ex Gaudin
  • Mouterde
  • Mouterde
  • F.Muell.
  • M.J.Y.Foley
  • Novopokr. & V.V.Nikitin
  • Sennen & Pau
  • A.Pujadas
  • Greuter
  • Rätzel & Uhlich
  • Webb & Berthel.
  • Rchb.f.
  • Beck
  • Turcz.
  • Novopokr.
  • Novopokr.
  • Viv.
  • (Novopokr.) Novopokr.
  • Novopokr.
  • F.W.Schultz
  • Novopokr.
  • Orobanche bulbosa Beck
  • Beck
  • Steph. ex Willd.
  • Pomel
  • Orobanche californica Cham. & Schltdl.
  • Boiss. & Reut.
  • C.Presl
  • Guss.
  • Sm. — Bedstraw broomrape; Simao broomstraw
  • Deflers
  • Beck
  • De Not.
  • Loefl. — Nodding broomrape; Wanguan broomrape
  • Formánek
  • Lojac.
  • Maire
  • Beck
  • Beck
  • Hook.f. — Xizang broomrape
  • Pomel
  • Schiman-Czeika
  • C.Vicioso
  • (Reut.) Boiss. & Reut. ex Beck — Changchi broomrape
  • Stephan ex Willd.
  • K.Koch
  • H.St.John & English
  • Novopokr.
  • Viv.
  • Rouy
  • K.Koch
  • Schiman-Czeika
  • Orobanche cooperi (A.Gray) A.Heller — Cooper's broomrape
  • Orobanche corymbosa (Rydb.) Ferris — Flat-top broomrape
  • Orobanche crenata Forssk. — Bean broomrape
  • Boiss. & Balansa ex Boiss.
  • Pomel
  • Kotschy
  • Beck
  • Jeanm., Habashi & Manen
  • Salzm. ex Reut.
  • Moris
  • M.J.Y.Foley
  • Maire
  • (S.Watson) Munz
  • Huter & Rigo
  • Orobanche elatior Sutton — Knapweed broomrape; Duanchun broomrape
  • Bornm. & Gauba
  • Pančić
  • Rchb.f.
  • Orobanche fasciculata Nutt. — Cluster broomrape; fascicled broomrape
  • H.Lév.
  • Nakai ex Hyun, Y.S.Lim & H.C.Shin
  • Mart. ex F.W.Schultz — Butterbur broomrape
  • Poir.
  • Reut. ex Jord.
  • Maire
  • Reut.
  • (Carlon et al.) A.Pujadas
  • C.A.Mey.
  • Tzvelev
  • Novopokr. & Nepli
  • Sm. — Slender broomrape
  • F.W.Schultz
  • Beck — Gray's broomrape
  • Novopokr.
  • Reut.
  • Novopokr.
  • Beck
  • Reut.
  • Orobanche hederae Duby – Ivy broomrape
  • J.St.-Hil.
  • Miégev.
  • Mouterde
  • Tzvelev
  • Ball
  • Maire
  • Colenso
  • Reut.
  • M.J.Y.Foley
  • A.Pujadas & P.Fraga
  • Franch.
  • Pau
  • E.D.Clarke
  • Guim.
  • Pers.
  • Novopokr. & Abramov
  • Kern.
  • Serg.
  • Pavlov
  • C.B.Clarke ex Hook.f.
  • Novopokr. — Duanchi broomrape
  • Reut. — Yitong broomrape
  • Beck — Siduomao broomrape
  • Boiss. & Hausskn.
  • Arv.-Touv.
  • Huter, Porta & Rigo
  • (C.A.Mey.) Beck ex Krylov — Mao broomrape
  • Reut. ex Jord.
  • Orobanche latisquama (F.W.Schultz) Batt.
  • Rchb.
  • Uhlich & Rätzel
  • Pomel
  • Novopokr.
  • Schiman-Czeika
  • Terracc.
  • A.Braun — Barberry Broomrape
  • Orobanche ludoviciana Nutt. — Prairie broomrape; desert broomrape
  • Baumg. — Medick broomrape
  • F.W.Schultz
  • A.Pujadas
  • Pugsley — Carrot broomrape
  • Harry Sm. — Dahua broomrape
  • Beck
  • Orobanche minor Sm. — Common broomrape; clover broomrape; lesser broomrape; small broomrape
  • Beck — Zhonghua broomrape
  • A.Pujadas & D.Gómez García
  • Novopokr.
  • Brandegee
  • Hu — Baoxing broomrape
  • F.J.Y.Foley
  • H.Lév. & É.Labbé
  • Novopokr.
  • Markgr.
  • Raf.
  • Hance — Maoyao broomrape
  • Beck
  • (Reut.) Beck
  • Blakelock
  • Beck
  • Butkov
  • [7]
  • Gontsch. & Novopokr.
  • Beck
  • L.Corb.
  • Orobanche parishii (Jeps.) Heckard
  • Vell.
  • Caldesi
  • Gilli
  • M.J.Y.Foley
  • Vell.
  • F.W.Schultz — Oxtongue broomrape
  • Orobanche pinorum Geyer ex Hook.
  • A.Pujadas & M.B.Crespo
  • C.B.Clarke ex Hook.f.
  • Novopokr.
  • d'Urv. — Hairy broomrape
  • Gilli
  • Jacq. — Yarrow broomrape
  • M.R.Almeida
  • Hance — Huanghua broomrape
  • Orobanche ramosa L. — Branched broomrape; hemp broomrape
  • Orobanche rapum-genistae Thuill. — Greater broomrape
  • Gilli
  • Orobanche reticulata Wallr. — Thistle broomrape
  • Brügger
  • L.T.Collins
  • Tzvelev
  • F.W.Schultz ex Koch
  • C.Presl
  • Loscos & J.Pardo
  • Kotov
  • Tzvelev
  • Novopokr.
  • Mutel
  • Beck
  • Gilli
  • Pomel
  • Beck & Petrovič
  • Beck
  • Gilli
  • Porta
  • Harry Sm. (Sichuan broomrape)
  • Beck ex Hand.-Mazz.
  • Beck
  • Novopokr.
  • Novopokr. & Pissjauk.
  • C.B.Clarke (Changbao broomrape)
  • C.A.Mey. — Danhuang broomrape
  • Noronha
  • Boiss.
  • F.W.Schultz
  • Mattf.
  • Phil.
  • Ball
  • Holandre — Germander broomrape
  • Lojac.
  • Tzvelev
  • (Webb & Berthel.) Beck
  • Wagn. ex Claus
  • Beck
  • Orobanche uniflora L. — Naked broomrape; one-flower cancer-root
  • Beck — Duochi broomrape
  • Novopokr.
  • Orobanche valida Jeps.
  • Orobanche vallicola (Jeps.) Heckard
  • Hazsl.
  • Novopokr.
  • Mattf.
  • Boiss.
  • Novopokr.
  • (Beck) Hand.-Mazz. — Dianlie Broomrape
List sources :[8][9]

References[]

  1. ^ Beck-Mannagetta, G. (1930) Orobanchaceae. In Engler, A. (ed.) Das Pflanzenreich 4: 1-348. (Engelmann:Leipzig).
  2. ^ Yoder, J.I. (2001) Host-plant recognition by parasitic Scrophulariaceae. Current Opinion in Plant Biology 4:359-365.
  3. ^ Luard, E. European peasant cookery, Grub Street, 2004, p.380
  4. ^ Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature and Art (1868). Report & transactions. p. 256.
  5. ^ ὄροβος, ἄγχω. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  6. ^ rapum. Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short. A Latin Dictionary on Perseus Project.
  7. ^ http://www.plantsoftheworldonline.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:662567-1
  8. ^ GRIN. "Species in GRIN for genus Orobanche". Taxonomy for Plants. , Beltsville, Maryland: USDA, ARS, National Genetic Resources Program. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved October 30, 2009.
  9. ^ "Plant Name Query Results for Orobanche". IPNI. Retrieved November 1, 2009.

External links[]

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