Platanus
{{Short description|Genus of flowering plants constituting the family Platanaceae}}
{{Redirect|Plane tree|the mathematical structure|Ordered tree}}
{{for-multi|the mythological figure|Platanus (mythology)|the ancient town|Platanus (Cilicia)|medieval fortress|Platanus (castle)|the asteroid|9309 Platanus}}
{{Automatic taxobox
| image = Platanus orientalis fruits, Thasos.jpg
| fossil_range = {{fossilrange|Late Cretaceous | Present}}
| image_caption = Leaves and fruit of an Oriental plane
| taxon = Platanus
| authority = L.
| subdivision_ranks = Species
| subdivision = See text
}}
Platanus ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|p|l|æ|t|ə|n|ə|s}} {{respell|PLAT|ən|əss}}{{sfn|Sunset Western Garden Book|1995}}) is a genus consisting of a small number of tree species native to the Northern Hemisphere. They are the sole living members of the family Platanaceae.
All mature members of Platanus are tall, reaching {{convert|30|-|50|m|ft|0|abbr=on}} in height. The type species of the genus is the Oriental plane Platanus orientalis. All except for P. kerrii are deciduous, and most are found in riparian or other wetland habitats in the wild, though proving drought-tolerant in cultivation. The hybrid London plane (Platanus × hispanica) has proved particularly tolerant of urban conditions, and has been widely planted in London and elsewhere across the temperate world.
They are often known in English as planes or plane trees. A formerly used name that is now rare is plantain tree (not to be confused with other, unrelated, species with the name).{{cite OED|plantain, n.2}} Some North American species are called sycamores (especially Platanus occidentalis),{{sfn|Merriam Webster}} although the term is also used for several unrelated species of trees. The genus name Platanus comes from Ancient Greek {{lang|grc|πλάτανος}}, which referred to Platanus orientalis.{{LSJ|pla/tanos|πλάτανος|ref}}
Botany
Image:Platane, Trsteno.JPG, Croatia]]
File:Plane tree fruit 20180707 092951.jpg
The flowers are reduced and are borne in balls (globose heads); 3–7 hairy sepals may be fused at the base, and the petals are 3–7 and are spatulate. Male and female flowers are separate, but borne on the same plant (monoecious). The number of heads in one cluster (inflorescence) is indicative of the species (see table below). The male flower has 3–8 stamens; the female has a superior ovary with 3–7 carpels. Plane trees are wind-pollinated. Male flower-heads fall off after shedding their pollen.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}
After being pollinated, the female flowers become achenes that form an aggregate ball. The fruit is a multiple of achenes (plant systematics, Simpson M. G., 2006). Typically, the core of the ball is 1 cm in diameter and is covered with a net of mesh 1 mm, which can be peeled off. The ball is 2.5–4 cm in diameter and contains several hundred achenes, each of which has a single seed and is conical, with the point attached downward to the net at the surface of the ball. There is also a tuft of many thin stiff yellow-green bristle fibers attached to the base of each achene. These bristles help in wind dispersion of the fruits as in the dandelion.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}
The leaves are simple and alternate. In the subgenus Platanus they have a palmate outline. The base of the leaf stalk (petiole) is enlarged and completely wraps around the young stem bud in its axil. The axillary bud is exposed only after the leaf falls off.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}
The mature bark peels off or exfoliates easily in irregularly shaped patches, producing a mottled, scaly appearance. On old trunks, bark may not flake off, but thickens and cracks instead.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}
Phylogeny
There are two subgenera, subgenus Castaneophyllum containing the anomalous P. kerrii, and subgenus Platanus, with all the others; recent studies in Mexico{{Cite journal |last1=Nixon |first1=Kevin C. |last2=Poole |first2=Jackie M. |year=2003 |title=Revision of the Mexican and Guatemalan Species of Platanus (Platanaceae) |journal=Lundellia |language=en |volume=6 |issue=1 |pages=103–137 |doi=10.25224/1097-993X-6.1.4 |s2cid=90869751 |issn=1097-993X|doi-access=free }}{{Cite journal |last1=Grimm |first1=Guido W. |last2=Denk |first2=Thomas |year=2010 |title=The reticulate origin of modern plane trees (Platanus, Platanaceae): A nuclear marker puzzle |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/tax.591014 |journal=Taxon |language=en |volume=59 |issue=1 |pages=134–147 |doi=10.1002/tax.591014}}{{Cite journal |last1=De Castro |first1=Olga |last2=Di Maio |first2=Antonietta |last3=Lozada García |first3=José Armando |last4=Piacenti |first4=Danilo |last5=Vázquez-Torres |first5=Mario |last6=De Luca |first6=Paolo |year=2013 |title=Plastid DNA sequencing and nuclear SNP genotyping help resolve the puzzle of central American Platanus |journal=Annals of Botany |language=en |volume=112 |issue=3 |pages=589–602 |doi=10.1093/aob/mct134 |issn=1095-8290 |pmc=3718222 |pmid=23798602}} have increased the number of accepted species in this subgenus. Within subgenus Platanus, evidence from both chloroplast{{Cite journal |last1=Feng |first1=Yun |last2=Oh |first2=Sang-Hun |last3=Manos |first3=Paul S. |date=2005-10-01 |title=Phylogeny and Historical Biogeography of the Genus Platanus as Inferred From Nuclear and Chloroplast DNA |url=http://www.ingentaselect.com/rpsv/cgi-bin/cgi?ini=xref&body=linker&reqdoi=10.1600/036364405775097851 |journal=Systematic Botany |language=en |volume=30 |issue=4 |pages=786–799 |doi=10.1600/036364405775097851|s2cid=86021109 }} and nuclear gene{{Cite journal |last1=Grimm |first1=Guido W. |last2=Denk |first2=Thomas |date=2007-12-18 |title=ITS Evolution in Platanus (Platanaceae): Homoeologues, Pseudogenes and Ancient Hybridization |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aob/mcm305 |journal=Annals of Botany |volume=101 |issue=3 |pages=403–419 |doi=10.1093/aob/mcm305 |issn=1095-8290 |pmc=2701810 |pmid=18089582}} sequences suggests that the P. racemosa species complex in Western North America (including P. racemosa, P. gentryi, P. wrightii) is more closely related to the Eurasian P. orientalis than it is to the other North American species (P. mexicana sensu lato, including up to four species: P. chiapaensis, P. lindeniana, P. [×] mexicana sensu stricto, P. oaxacana; P. occidentalis s.l. with two [sub]species: P. occidentalis, P. palmeri; P. rzedowskii). The two groups form genetically and morphologically distinct evolutionary lineages (sister clades), informally called the “ANA clade” (Atlantic North American lineage) and “PNA-E clade” (Pacific North American-European lineage). Both lineages have been affected by reticulate evolutionary processes in the past (ancient or recent hybridization and introgression):
- Platanus palmeri (= P. occidentalis var. palmeri) – forming the southwesternmost populations of P. occidentalis s.l. – carries nuclear intron sequences (second intron of the Leafy gene) of PNA-E origin. It lacks the plastid haplotype specific for the northeastern populations (P. occidentalis s.str.)
- The internal transcribed spacers of the nuclear-encoded rRNA genes of P. occidentalis s.l. and P. rzedowskii include ANA-specific variants with functional 5.8S rDNA as well as PNA-E-specific variants showing signs of pseudogeny. The latter are shared with P. gentryi, the PNA-E species closest to the ANA clade area and the northern/ interior populations of P. mexicana s.l. This indicates that already the common ancestor of P. rzedowskii and P. occidentalis s.l. had been in contact with a member of the PNA-E clade.
- Likewise, P. rzedowskii from Nuevo León is a genetic mosaic, and may have originated from earlier hybridization within the ANA clade, between southernmost P. occidentalis s.l. (P. palmeri) and P. mexicana s.l., or their ancestors. Today the ranges of P. occidentalis s.l. and P. mexicana s.l. are mutually exclusive. Platanus rzedowskii is geographically and morphologically intermediate between P. occidentalis s.l. and P. mexicana s.l.
- Morphological reinvestigation including the originally collected material revealed that the interior populations of P. mexicana (northern Querétaro and northern Hidalgo; P. mexicana var. interior according Nixon & Poole) mark the hybrid zone between P. rzedowskii and P. mexicana s.l. and the (former) contact zone to the species of the PNA-E clade (P. gentryi, P. wrightii). Since the holotype of P. mexicana is from this zone and shows the characteristical intermediate morphology, P. mexicana s.str. would represent a nothospecies: P. × mexicana.{{Cite journal |last1=Denk |first1=Thomas |last2=Grimm |first2=Guido W. |last3=Röseler |first3=Anne-Katrin |year=2012 |title=When field botany meets history: taxonomy of Platanus mexicana in Mexico |url=https://bioone.org/journals/willdenowia/volume-42/issue-1/wi.42.42113/When-field-botany-meets-history--taxonomy-of-Platanus-mexicana/10.3372/wi.42.42113.full |journal=Willdenowia |volume=42 |issue=1 |pages=99–115 |doi=10.3372/wi.42.42113 |s2cid=84804295 |issn=0511-9618}} The remaining populations of P. mexicana s.l., P. lindeniana, show no sign of introgression from either P. rzedowskii, P. occidentalis-palmeri or the Western North American species (P. racemosa species aggregate), with the exception of one heterozygotic P. oaxacana population from northcentral Oaxaca.
File:PlatanusNuclearEvolution.png nuclear loci contributing to the gene pool of modern-day species of Platanus (after)]]
The genus Platanus exemplarily illustrates the concept of a Coral of Life, a species network. Its modern-day species are not only the product of evolutionary dichotomies (cladogenesis), the splitting of an ancestral lineage into two (Tree of Life metaphor) but also evolutionary anastomoses: hybridization and introgression.
The fossil record of leaves and fruit identifiable to Platanus begins in the Paleocene.{{cite journal |author1=McNair, D.M. |author2=D.Z. Stults |author3=B. Axsmith |author4=M.H. Alford |author5=J.E. Starnes |title=Preliminary investigation of a diverse megafossil floral assemblage from the middle Miocene of southern Mississippi, USA |journal=Palaeontologia Electronica |date=2019 |volume=22 |issue=2 |doi=10.26879/906 |url=https://palaeo-electronica.org/content/pdfs/906.pdf|doi-access=free }} Despite the geographic separation between North America and Old World, species from these continents will cross readily resulting in fertile hybrids such as the London plane, which is an anthropogenic hybrid (cultivar) between the North American P. occidentalis sensu stricto (ANA clade) and the Mediterranean P. orientalis (PNA-E clade). Widely used as a park tree across the Northern Hemisphere, it frequently backcrosses with both its parents.
File:Skhtorashen176.jpg|The {{age|-20}}-year-old Platanus orientalis tree Tnjri in Nagorno-Karabakh.
File:Platanus dissecta USNM P38122 img3.jpg|Miocene Platanus dissecta leaf, Latah Formation
Species
The following are named species of Platanus; not all are accepted by all authorities:
class="wikitable"
! Botanical name !! Common names !! Distribution and taxonomic notes !! Flowerheads !! Systematics | ||||
Platanus chiapensis Standl. [https://www.ipni.org/n/201683-2 IPNI] | Chiapas plane | Mexico (Chiapas);
part of P. mexicana species aggregate, probably a junior synonym of P. lindeniana | Subgenus Platanus,
ANA clade | |
Platanus gentryi [https://www.ipni.org/a/24117-1 Nixon] & [https://www.ipni.org/a/20000148-1 J.M.Poole] [https://www.ipni.org/n/60429575-2 IPNI] | Gentry's plane | Mexico (tripoint area of Chihuahua, Sinaloa and Sonora);
part of the P. racemosa species aggregate | ? | Subgenus Platanus,
PNA-E clade | |
Platanus kerrii Gagnep. | Kerr's plane | Laos, Vietnam | 10–12 | Subgenus Castaneophyllum |
Platanus mexicana [https://www.ipni.org/a/12691-1 Moric.] sensu lato | Mexican sycamore, Mexican plane | Mexico, Guatemala;
in a strict sense synonymous with P. mexicana var. interior Nixon & Poole, restricted to Guanajuato, Hidalgo, Querétaro and San Luis Potosí, and of hybrid origin | s.l.: 1–7 | Subgenus Platanus, ANA clade | ||
Platanus lindeniana M.Martens & Galeotti [https://www.ipni.org/n/685862-1 IPNI]
syn Platanus occidentalis var. lindeniana | |Mexico (Chiapas, Hidalgo, Puebla, Oaxaca, Veracruz), Guatemala; part of the P. mexicana species aggregate, synonymous with P. mexicana var. mexicana according Nixon & Poole |Subgenus Platanus, ANA clade | ||||
Platanus oaxacana Standl. | Oaxaca plane | Mexico (Oaxaca); part of the P. mexicana species aggregate, | Subgenus Platanus,
ANA clade | |
Platanus occidentalis L. | American sycamore, American plane, buttonwood, occidental plane, water beech | Canada (Ontario), United States | 1–2 | Subgenus Platanus,
ANA clade |
Platanus palmeri (Kuntze) ined. | Mexico (Coahuila) and United States (Texas) | 1–2 | Subgenus Platanus,
ANA clade | |
Platanus rzedowskii Nixon & J.M.Poole [https://www.ipni.org/n/60429577-2 IPNI] | Rzedowski's plane, Rzedowskii's sycamore | Mexico (Nuevo León, San Luis Potosí, Tamaulipas) | 1–2 | Subgenus Platanus,
ANA clade |
Platanus orientalis L. | Oriental plane | Eurasia | 3–6 | Subgenus Platanus
PNA-E clade |
Platanus racemosa Nutt. | California sycamore, western sycamore, aliso | United States (California), Mexico (Baja California) | 3–7 | Subgenus Platanus
PNA-E clade |
Platanus wrightii S.Watson | Arizona sycamore | United States (Arizona, New Mexico), Mexico (Sonora, Chihuahua);
part of the P. racemosa species aggregate | 2–4 | Subgenus Platanus
PNA-E clade | |
Platanus × hispanica Mill. ex Muenchh.
(syn. P. × acerifolia (Aiton) Willd., P. hybrida Brot.) | London plane, hybrid plane | Worldwide, cultivated origin;
hybrid of P. occidentalis and P. orientalis | 1–4(–6) | Subgenus Platanus;
interlineage hybrid |
Diseases
{{Main|List of Platanus diseases}}
Planes are susceptible to plane anthracnose (Apiognomonia veneta), a fungal disease that can defoliate the trees in some years. The most severe infections are associated with cold, wet spring weather. P. occidentalis and the other American species are the most susceptible, with P. orientalis the most resistant. The hybrid London plane is intermediate in resistance.
Ceratocystis platani, a wilt disease, has become a significant problem in recent years in much of Europe.{{sfn|Pathology note 7|2008}} The North American species are mostly resistant to the disease, with which they probably coevolved, while the Old World species are highly sensitive.
Other diseases such as powdery mildew occur frequently, but are of lesser importance.
Platanus species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Phyllonorycter platani and Setaceous Hebrew Character.
In the 21st century a disease, commonly known as Massaria disease, has attacked plane trees across Europe. It is caused by the fungus Splanchnonema platani, and causes large lesions on the upper sides of branches.{{cite web |url=http://www.forestry.gov.uk/fr/massaria |title=Massaria disease |publisher=Forestry Commission |access-date=November 7, 2012}}{{cite web |url=http://www.treetree.co.uk/massaria-disease-of-planes.html |title=Massaria disease of plane trees |publisher=Treetree |access-date=November 7, 2012}}
Effects on humans
There have been cases of "platanus cough", symptoms of shortness of breath, coughing, and irritated eyes, which may affect several people in a place, and have led to initial suspicion of an attack with an irritant gas. After one such mass attack which affected schoolchildren in classrooms with open windows densely surrounded by plane tees, children had to be admitted to hospital, where they were treated and recovered without ill effects. It was found that the symptoms were due to the fine star-shaped trichomes (hairs) on all parts of platanus trees, which are broken off by strong wind after a prolonged dry period. The dust created causes direct irritation and scratchiness in the eyes, throat, and nose, but not the runny nose and itching eyes and nose caused by an allergy. The school incident took place after a dry period, with a fairly high temperature of {{convert|29|C}}, and wind blowing at {{cvt|50|km/h}}.{{cite web | title=What Are Platanus Cough and Thunderstorm Asthma? |first=Ute|last=Eppinger|publisher=Medscape | date=15 April 2024 | url=https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/what-are-platanus-cough-and-thunderstorm-asthma-2024a100073q}}
Protection against platanus cough is provided by avoiding contact and wearing protective glasses and masks under weather conditions promoting release of trichomes. When cleaning in an urban environment, sweeping up fallen leaves and branches can release hairs; cleaning by suction is preferred. It is not recommended that trees in cities be felled, as they are beneficial; in particular the platanus trichomes act as biofilters for air pollutants. Where there are urban concentrations presenting a risk, seasonal spraying of trees with a solution of apple pectin can prevent the star hair from breaking off.
Uses
The principal use of these trees is as ornamental trees, especially in urban areas and by roadsides. The London plane is particularly popular for this purpose. The American plane is cultivated sometimes for timber and investigations have been made into its use as a biomass crop. The oriental plane is widely used as an ornamental tree, and also has a number of minor medicinal uses.
Cultural history
File:Plane Tree bark at Tayac, Dordogne.jpg bark of London plane]]
Most significant aspects of cultural history apply to Platanus orientalis in the Old World. The tree is an important part of the literary scenery of Plato's dialogue Phaedrus. Because of Plato, the tree also played an important role in the scenery of Cicero's De Oratore. The trees also provided the shade under which Aristotle and Plato's famed philosophical schools were held.{{Cite web |title=Walking, talking and showing off – a history of Roman gardens |url=https://theconversation.com/amp/walking-talking-and-showing-off-a-history-of-roman-gardens-138902 |last=Marzano|first=Annalisa|date=May 20, 2020|website=The Conversation}} Handel's opera Serse has a famous aria, "Ombra mai fu", which the title character sings in praise of his favorite plane tree.
The plane tree has been a frequent motif featured in Classical Chinese poetry as an embodiment of sorrowful sentiments due to its autumnal shedding of leaves.{{Citation needed|date=April 2024}}
The legendary Dry Tree first recorded by Marco Polo was possibly a platanus. According to the legend, it marked the site of the battle between Alexander the Great and Darius III.
The German camouflage pattern Platanenmuster ("plane tree pattern"), designed in 1937–1942 by Johann Georg Otto Schick, was the first dotted camouflage pattern.{{cite book |first1=Michael D. |last1=Beaver |first2=J. F. |last2=Borsarello |title=Camouflage Uniforms of the Waffen-SS |publisher=Schiffer |date=1995 |isbn=978-1-84176-854-0 |page=202}}
Footnotes
References
;Books
- {{Cite book|first=Helmut |last=Naumann|chapter= Die Platane von Gortyna |title=Studien zu Ritual und Sozialgeschichte im Alten |trans-title=Orient / Studies on Ritual and Society in the Ancient Near East. Tartuer Symposien 1998–2004 |editor-first= Thomas Richard |editor-last=Kämmerer. |location=Berlin, de Gruyter |year=2007 |pages =207–226}}
- {{cite book|title=Sunset Western Garden Book|year= 1995|pages=606–607|ref={{sfnref|Sunset Western Garden Book|1995}} }}
;Journals
- {{cite journal|last1=Feng|first1= Y.|last2= Oh|first2= S.H.|last3= Manos|first3= P. S. |year=2005|title= Phylogeny and Historical Biogeography of the Genus Platanus as Inferred From Nuclear and Chloroplast DNA. |journal=Systematic Botany|volume= 30 |issue=4|pages= 786–799 |doi=10.1600/036364405775097851|s2cid= 86021109}}
- {{cite journal|last1=Nixon|first1= K. C. |last2=Poole|first2= J. M. |year=2003|title= Revision of the Mexican and Guatemalan species of Platanus (Platanaceae)|journal=Lundellia |volume=6|pages=103–137 |url=http://vivo.library.cornell.edu/entity?home=1&id=4558|doi= 10.25224/1097-993X-6.1.4 |doi-access=free}}{{dead link|date=February 2024|bot=medic}}
;Web
- {{citation | contribution-url = http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/sycamore | contribution = Sycamore | title = Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary | access-date = 2009-08-04 |ref={{sfnref|Merriam Webster}} }}
- {{cite web| url=http://www.forestry.gov.uk/pdf/pathology_note07.pdf/$FILE/pathology_note07.pdf|title=Pathology note 7|publisher=The Research Agency of the Forestry Commission|year=2008|ref={{sfnref|Pathology note 7|2008}} }}
External links
{{Wikispecies}}
{{Commons category|Platanus}}
- [http://www.aranya.co.uk/planes/text/botany.html Botany of plane trees]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20050123130552/http://www.botgard.ucla.edu/html/MEMBGNewsletter/Volume5number2/Speakingtheplanetruth.html A short informal account ] concentrating on the North American species
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20031120230212/http://www.amjbot.org/cgi/content/full/86/11/1523 A developmental and evolutionary analysis of embryology in Platanus (Platanaceae), a basal eudicot], abstract of article by Sandra K. Floyd et al. in American Journal of Botany, 1999;86:1523–1537.
- [http://www.monumentaltrees.com/en/photos-londonplane/ Photos, measurements, and location details of large plane trees worldwide]
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