Scabiosa
Template:Short description Template:Automatic taxobox
Scabiosa Template:IPAc-en<ref>Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607</ref> is a genus in the honeysuckle family (Caprifoliaceae) of flowering plants.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> Many of the species in this genus have common names that include the word scabious, but some plants commonly known as scabious are currently classified in related genera such as Knautia and Succisa; at least some of these were formerly placed in Scabiosa. Another common name for members of this genus is pincushion flowers.
EtymologyEdit
The common name 'scabious' comes the Latin word scabiosus meaning 'mangy, rough or itchy' which refers to the herb's traditional usage as a folk medicine to treat scabies, an illness that causes a severe itching sensation.<ref>Umberto Quattrocchi Template:Google books</ref>
DescriptionEdit
Some species of Scabiosa are annuals, others perennials. Some are herbaceous plants; others have woody rootstocks. The leaves of most species are somewhat hairy and partly divided into lobes, but a few are smooth and some species have simple leaves. The flowers are borne on inflorescences in the form of heads; each head contains many small florets, each floret cupped in a membranous, saucer-shaped bract. The calyx has five sepals in the form of awns almost as long as the petals. After the flowers have dropped, the calyces together with the bracts form a spiky ball that may be the reason for the "pincushion" common name. The calyx is persistent and remains as a crown on the fruit after it is shed. The corolla has four to five lobes fringing a narrow funnel with a furry throat, the funnel being somewhat longer than the lobes. The florets have four stamens each, set high in the tube, and sticking out. Each fruit has just one seed.
In a few species the heads are sessile but in most species they are borne singly on a tall peduncle.
Scabiosa species and varieties differ in the colours of their flowers, but most are soft lavender blue, lilac or creamy white.
TaxonomyEdit
It was first published in Species Plantarum on page 98 in 1753.<ref name="POWO"/>
SpeciesEdit
As accepted by Plants of the World Online;<ref name="POWO">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Template:Div col
- Scabiosa adzharica Template:Small
- Scabiosa africana Template:Small
- Scabiosa albanensis Template:Small
- Scabiosa amoena Template:Small
- Scabiosa andryifolia Template:Small
- Scabiosa angustiloba Template:Small
- Scabiosa arenaria Template:Small
- Scabiosa atropurpurea Template:Small
- Scabiosa austroafricana Template:Small
- Scabiosa balcanica Template:Small
- Scabiosa × beauverdiana Template:Small
- Scabiosa bipinnata Template:Small
- Scabiosa buekiana Template:Small
- Scabiosa canescens Template:Small
- Scabiosa cartenniana Template:Small
- Scabiosa cephalarioides Template:Small
- Scabiosa cinerea Template:Small
- Scabiosa colchica Template:Small
- Scabiosa columbaria Template:Small
- Scabiosa comosa Template:Small
- Scabiosa correvoniana Template:Small
- Scabiosa corsica Template:Small
- Scabiosa crinita Template:Small
- Scabiosa daucoides Template:Small
- Scabiosa drakensbergensis Template:Small
- Scabiosa eremophila Template:Small
- Scabiosa farinosa Template:Small
- Scabiosa fumarioides Template:Small
- Scabiosa galianoi Template:Small
- Scabiosa holosericea Template:Small
- Scabiosa imeretica Template:Small
- Scabiosa incisa Template:Small
- Scabiosa ispartaca Template:Small
- Scabiosa japonica Template:Small
- Scabiosa jezoensis Template:Small
- Scabiosa lacerifolia Template:Small
- Scabiosa lachnophylla Template:Small
- Scabiosa libyca Template:Small
- Scabiosa lucida Template:Small
- Scabiosa × lucidula Template:Small
- Scabiosa mollissima Template:Small
- Scabiosa nitens Template:Small
- Scabiosa ochroleuca Template:Small
- Scabiosa owerinii Template:Small
- Scabiosa paphlagonica Template:Small
- Scabiosa parielii Template:Small
- Scabiosa parviflora Template:Small
- Scabiosa praemontana Template:Small
- Scabiosa pyrenaica Template:Small
- Scabiosa semipapposa Template:Small
- Scabiosa silenifolia Template:Small
- Scabiosa sirnakia Template:Small
- Scabiosa sivrihisarica Template:Small
- Scabiosa solymica Template:Small
- Scabiosa sosnowskyi Template:Small
- Scabiosa taygetea Template:Small
- Scabiosa tenuis Template:Small
- Scabiosa thysdrusiana Template:Small
- Scabiosa transvaalensis Template:Small
- Scabiosa triandra Template:Small
- Scabiosa triniifolia Template:Small
- Scabiosa turolensis Template:Small
- Scabiosa tuzluca Template:Small
- Scabiosa tysonii Template:Small
- Scabiosa velenovskiana Template:Small
- Scabiosa vestina Template:Small
- Scabiosa webbiana Template:Small
DistributionEdit
Members of this genus are native to Africa, Europe and Asia. Some species of Scabiosa, notably small scabious (S. columbaria) and Mediterranean sweet scabious (S. atropurpurea) have been developed into cultivars for gardeners.
In 1782, a mysterious pale yellow scabious, called "Scabiosa trenta", was described by Belsazar Hacquet, an Austrian physician, botanist, and mountaineer, in his work Plantae alpinae Carniolicae. It became a great source of inspiration for later botanists and mountaineers discovering the Julian Alps, especially Julius Kugy. The Austrian botanist Anton Kerner von Marilaun later proved Belsazar Hacquet had not found a new species, but a specimen of the already known submediterranean Cephalaria leucantha.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
They are found in various habitats such as Scabiosa solymica (formerly named Lomelosia solymica), which is a chasmophyte (a plant adapted to growing in crevices or hollows) of montane, sea facing cliffs of the Tahtalı Dağı (mountain) in the western Taurus Mountains, south of Antalya, Turkey.<ref name="Parolly2005">Template:Cite journal</ref>
EcologyEdit
Scabious flowers are nectar rich and attractive to many insects including butterflies and moths such as the six-spot burnet. Scabiosa species are food plants for the larvae of some species of Lepidoptera such as the grey pug moth.Template:Citation needed