daphne (plant)
{{Short description|Genus of flowering plants in the family Thymelaeaceae}}
{{About||other uses|Daphne (disambiguation)}}
{{Italic title}}
{{Automatic taxobox
|image = Daphne philippi1.jpg
|image_caption = Daphne pontica in flower
|taxon = Daphne
|authority = L.
|subdivision_ranks = Species
|subdivision = See text
|synonyms =
- Daphmanthus F.K.Ward
- Farreria Balf.f. & W.W.Sm. ex Farrer
- Laureola Hill
- Mezereum C.A.Mey.
- Mistralia Fourr.
- Nemoctis Raf.
- Pentathymelaea Lecomte
- Thymelaea All.
- Tumelaia Raf.
}}
Daphne {{IPAc-en|ˈ|d|æ|f|n|i}}{{citation |title=Sunset Western Garden Book |date=1995 |pages=606–607}} ({{Langx|el|δάφνη|translit=dafni}}, "laurel") is a genus of between 70 and 95 species of deciduous and evergreen shrubs in the family Thymelaeaceae, native to Asia, Europe and north Africa. They are noted for their scented flowers and often brightly coloured berries. Two species are used to make paper. Many species are grown in gardens as ornamental plants; the smaller species are often used in rock gardens. All parts of daphnes are poisonous, especially the berries.
Description
Daphne species are shrubs, with upright or prostrate stems. Upright species may grow to {{cvt|1.5|m|ft|0}}. Their leaves are undivided, mostly arranged alternately (although opposite in D. genkwa), and have short petioles (stalks). The leaves tend to be clustered towards the end of the stems and are of different shapes, although always longer than wide. The leaf surface may be smooth (glabrous) or hairy.
Many species flower in late winter or very early spring. The flowers are grouped into clusters (inflorescences), either in the leaf axils towards the end of the stems or forming terminal heads. The inflorescences lack bracts. Individual flowers completely lack petals and are formed by four (rarely five) petaloid sepals, tubular at the base with free lobes at the apex. They range in colour from white, greenish yellow or yellow to bright pink and purple. Most of the evergreen species have greenish flowers, while the deciduous species tend to have pink flowers. There are twice the number of stamens as sepals, usually eight, arranged in two series. Stamens either have short filaments or lack filaments altogether and are usually held inside the sepal tube. The style is short or absent, and the stigma is head-shaped (capitate).
The ovary has a single chamber (locule). The fruits are one-seeded, and are either fleshy berries or dry and leathery (drupaceous). When ripe the fruit is usually red or yellow, sometimes black.
Taxonomy
The genus Daphne was first described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 in Species Plantarum. Linnaeus recognized 10 species, including Daphne mezereum, Daphne laureola and Daphne cneorum. Some of his species are now placed in other related genera (e.g. Linnaeus's Daphne thymelaea is now Thymelaea sanamunda).{{citation |title=Thymelaea sanamunda |work=The Plant List |url=http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/kew-2518411 |access-date=2017-11-23}} The number of species in the genus varies considerably between different authorities. The Flora of China states there are about 95 species, 41 of which are endemic to China. Some of these species were reduced to subspecies or varieties by Josef Halda in a series of papers from 1997 onwards, culminating in a monograph on the genus.{{sfnp|Halda|Haldová|2001}} Version 1.1 of The Plant List accepts 83 species. The Flora of North America states there are 70 species.
=Phylogeny and generic limits=
A 2002 study based on chloroplast DNA placed Daphne in a group of related genera; however there was only one species representing each genus.
{{clade|style=line-height:100%
|1={{clade
|1=Edgeworthia
|2={{clade
|1={{clade
|1=Wikstroemia
|2=Stellera
}}
|2={{clade
|1=Diarthron
|2={{clade
|1=Thymelaea
|2=Daphne
}}
}}
}}
}}
}}
A further study published in 2009 included an extra species of Wikstroemia and suggested that this genus was paraphyletic with respect to Stellera, but otherwise agreed with the cladogram above. The distinction between Wikstroemia and Daphne is difficult to make; Halda included Wikstroemia within Daphne. The cladogram shown above suggests that other genera would need to be included as well to make Daphne monophyletic.
=Species=
{{As of|2023|January}}, Plants of the World Online accepts the following species:{{citation |title=Daphne Tourn. ex L. |work=Plants of the World Online |publisher=Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew|url=https://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:30024583-2 |access-date=2023-01-03 }}
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- Daphne acutiloba Rehder
- Daphne alpina L.
- Daphne altaica Pall.
- Daphne angustiloba Rehder
- Daphne arbuscula Čelak.
- Daphne arisanensis Hayata
- Daphne aurantiaca Diels
- Daphne axillaris (Merr. & Chun) Chun & C.F.Wei
- Daphne axilliflora (Keissl.) Pobed.
- Daphne baksanica Pobed.
- Daphne bholua Buch.-Ham. ex D.Don
- Daphne blagayana Freyer
- Daphne brevituba H.F.Zhou ex C.Y.Chang
- Daphne caucasica Pall.
- Daphne championii Benth.
- Daphne chingshuishaniana S.S.Ying
- Daphne cneorum L.
- Daphne depauperata H.F.Zhou ex C.Y.Chang
- Daphne domini Halda
- Daphne emeiensis C.Y.Chang
- Daphne erosiloba C.Y.Chang
- Daphne esquirolii H.Lév.
- Daphne feddei H.Lév.
- Daphne gaomushanensis Zi L.Chen, P.Wang & Y.F.Lu
- Daphne gemmata E.Pritz.
- Daphne genkwa Siebold & Zucc.
- Daphne giraldii Nitsche
- Daphne glomerata Lam.
- Daphne gnidioides Jaub. & Spach
- Daphne gnidium L.
- Daphne gracilis E.Pritz.
- Daphne grueningiana H.J.P.Winkl.
- Daphne hekouensis H.W.Li & Y.M.Shui
- Daphne holosericea (Diels) Hamaya
- Daphne jarmilae Halda
- Daphne jasminea Sm.
- Daphne jejudoensis M.Kim
- Daphne jezoensis Maxim.
- Daphne jinyunensis C.Yung Chang
- Daphne jinzhaiensis D.C.Zhang & J.Z.Shao
- Daphne kamtschatica Maxim.
- Daphne kingdon-wardii Halda
- Daphne kiusiana Miq.
- Daphne kosaninii (Stoj.) Stoj.
- Daphne kurdica (Bornm.) Bornm.
- Daphne laciniata Lecomte
- Daphne laureola L.
- Daphne leishanensis H.F.Zhou ex C.Y.Chang
- Daphne limprichtii H.J.P.Winkl.
- Daphne longilobata (Lecomte) Turrill
- Daphne longituba C.Yung Chang
- Daphne ludlowii D.G.Long & Rae
- Daphne luzonica C.B.Rob.
- Daphne macrantha Ludlow
- Daphne malyana Blečić
- Daphne mezereum L.
- Daphne miyabeana Makino
- Daphne modesta Rehder
- Daphne morrisonensis C.E.Chang
- Daphne mucronata Royle
- Daphne myrtilloides Nitsche
- Daphne nana Tagawa
- Daphne odora Thunb.
- Daphne ogisui C.D.Brickell, B.Mathew & Yin Z.Wang
- Daphne oleoides Schreb.
- Daphne pachyphylla D.Fang
- Daphne papyracea Wall. ex G.Don
- Daphne pedunculata H.F.Zhou ex C.Y.Chang
- Daphne penicillata Rehder
- Daphne petraea Leyb.
- Daphne pontica L.
- Daphne pseudomezereum A.Gray
- Daphne pseudosericea Pobed.
- Daphne purpurascens S.C.Huang
- Daphne retusa Hemsl.
- Daphne rhynchocarpa C.Y.Chang
- Daphne rodriguezii Texidor
- Daphne rosmarinifolia Rehder
- Daphne sericea Vahl
- Daphne sojakii Halda
- Daphne sophia Kolenicz.
- Daphne souliei (Lecomte) Aymonin
- Daphne stapfii Bornm. & Keissl.
- Daphne striata Tratt.
- Daphne sureil W.W.Sm. & Cave
- Daphne tangutica Maxim.
- Daphne taurica Kotov
- Daphne taylorii Halda
- Daphne tenuiflora Bureau & Franch.
- Daphne thanguensis J.Ghosh, Midday, S.K.Dey & D.Maity
- Daphne transcaucasica Pobed.
- Daphne tripartita H.F.Zhou ex C.Y.Chang
- Daphne velenovskyi Halda
- Daphne wangiana (Hamaya) Halda
- Daphne wolongensis C.D.Brickell & B.Mathew
- Daphne xichouensis H.F.Zhou ex C.Y.Chang
- Daphne yunnanensis H.F.Zhou ex C.Y.Chang
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=Hybrids=
Hybrids accepted by Plants of the World Online are:
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- Daphne × hauseri Halda
- Daphne × hendersonii Hodgkin ex C.D.Brickell & B.Mathew – natural hybrid D. petraea × D. cneorum
- Daphne × houtteana Lindl. & Paxton
- Daphne × juraseki Halda
- Daphne × neapolitana (Lindl.) Loudon
- Daphne × rossetii H.Correvon & Halda
- Daphne × savensis Daksk., Seliškar & Vreš
- Daphne × sillingeri Halda
- Daphne × thauma Farrer – natural hybrid D. petraea × D. striata
{{Div col end}}
Numerous artificial hybrids are cultivated as ornamental plants. These include:
- D. × burkwoodii{{citation |title=RHS Plant Selector – Daphne × burkwoodii|url=http://apps.rhs.org.uk/plantselector/plant?plantid=5677 |access-date=2013-06-14}} – D. cneorum × D. caucasica
- D. × napolitana Lodd. has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit{{citation |title=RHS Plant Selector - Daphne × napolitana |url=http://apps.rhs.org.uk/plantselector/plant?plantid=2472 |access-date=2013-06-14}} – origin not known
- D. × susannae C.D.Brickell – artificial hybrid D. arbuscula × D. sericea (syn. D. collina);{{IPNI |mode=cs2|taxon=Daphne × susannae |authority=C.D.Brickell |id=1013445-1 |accessdate=2019-05-09}} the correct name may be D. × medfordensis Halda{{Citation |last=Jockel |first=Dirk M. |title=Daphne x medfordensis |website=Daphne – Seidelbast |url=http://www.seidelbast.net/medfordensis.html |access-date=2020-07-06 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200706081426/http://www.seidelbast.net/medfordensis.html |archive-date=2020-07-06 }}
- D. × schlyteri – artificial hybrid D. cneorum × D. arbuscula{{Citation |title=Mail Order Daphne from Junker's Nursery (38a) |publisher=Junker's Nursery |url=http://www.junker.co.uk/daphne38a.htm |access-date=2012-01-29 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091004093544/http://www.junker.co.uk/daphne38a.htm |archive-date=2009-10-04 |url-status=dead }}
Distribution
Uses
Two species, Daphne bholua and Daphne papyracea, both called lokta, are sustainably harvested in Nepal and Bhutan for paper production.
Many species are cultivated as ornamental shrubs in gardens.{{Citation |last1=Phillips |first1=Roger |last2=Rix |first2=Martyn |year=1989 |title=Shrubs |location=London |publisher=Pan Books |isbn=978-0-330-30258-6 |name-list-style=amp }}, pp. 36–39 The smaller species are used as rock garden plants or, in the case of those more difficult to grow, as plants for the alpine house. It is recommended that they are grown in well drained but moisture-retentive soil, avoiding strongly acid conditions. Most species prefer a sunny position, although some are woodland plants (e.g. D. mezereum and D. pontica). Propagation is by seed, cuttings or layering.
=Award of garden merit=
The following species, hybrids and cultivars are recipients of the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit:
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- Daphne arbuscula{{cite web | url = https://www.rhs.org.uk/Plants/5309/Daphne-arbuscula/Details | title = Daphne arbuscula | publisher = RHS | access-date = 5 May 2020}}
- Daphne bholua 'Jacqueline Postill' {{cite web | url = https://www.rhs.org.uk/Plants/97343/Daphne-bholua-Jacqueline-Postill/Details | title = Daphne bholua 'Jacqueline Postill' | publisher = RHS | access-date = 5 May 2020}}
- Daphne bholua var. glacialis 'Gurkha' {{cite web | url = https://www.rhs.org.uk/Plants/93813/Daphne-bholua-var-glacialis-Gurkha/Details | title = Daphne bholua var. glacialis 'Gurkha' | publisher = RHS | access-date = 5 May 2020}}
- Daphne × burkwoodii 'Somerset' {{cite web | url = https://www.rhs.org.uk/Plants/99724/Daphne-x-burkwoodii-Somerset/Details | title = Daphne × burkwoodii 'Somerset' | publisher = RHS | access-date = 5 May 2020}}
- Daphne cneorum 'Eximia' {{cite web | url = https://www.rhs.org.uk/Plants/5316/Daphne-cneorum-Eximia/Details | title = Daphne cneorum 'Eximia' | publisher = RHS | access-date = 5 May 2020}}
- Daphne × rollsdorfii 'Wilhelm Schacht' {{cite web | url = https://www.rhs.org.uk/Plants/134950/Daphne-x-rollsdorfii-Wilhelm-Schacht/Details | title = Daphne × rollsdorfii 'Wilhelm Schacht' | publisher = RHS | access-date = 5 May 2020}}
- Daphne tangutica Retusa Group {{cite web | url = https://www.rhs.org.uk/Plants/101168/Daphne-tangutica-Retusa-Group/Details | title = Daphne tangutica Retusa Group | publisher = RHS | access-date = 5 May 2020}}
- Daphne × transatlantica {{tdes|Eternal Fragrance}} = 'Blafra' PBR{{cite web | url = https://www.rhs.org.uk/Plants/219931/Daphne-x-transatlantica-Eternal-Fragrance-Blafra-(PBR)/Details | title = Daphne × transatlantica Eternal Fragrance = 'Blafra' (PBR) | publisher = RHS | access-date = 5 May 2020}}
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Toxicity
All parts of daphnes are toxic, the berries being particularly so. One active compound is daphnin, a glycoside, combining glucose with daphnetin. Some species have been shown to contain a further toxin, mezerein. Symptoms of ingestion include burning sensations and lesions of the mouth and upper digestive tract, gastroenteritis and diarrhoea, and in severe cases, damage to the kidneys (nephritis), irregular heart rhythm, and coma.
Allergenicity
Daphnes have an OPALS allergy scale rating of 5 out of 10, indicating moderate potential to cause allergic reactions, exacerbated by over-use of the same plant throughout a garden.{{cite book |last=Ogren |first=Thomas Leo |title=Allergy-Free Gardening |date=2000 |publisher=Ten Speed Press |location=Berkeley, California |isbn=1580081665 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/allergyfreegarde00thom }} The sap and berry juice can cause dermatitis and the scent may affect the odor-sensitive.
Gallery
File:Daphne jezoensis 6.JPG|Daphne jezoensis
File:Daphne pseudomezereum (flower s2).JPG|Daphne pseudomezereum
File:Spurge Laurel (Daphne laureola) - Flickr - gailhampshire.jpg|Daphne laureola
File:Daphne blagayana (33946067631).jpg|Daphne blagayana
File:Daphne glomerata Lam.jpg|Daphne glomerata
File:Daphne odora-ja01.jpg|Daphne odora
File:Daphne petraea ENBLA02.JPG|Daphne petraea
File:Daphne mezereum0.jpg|Daphne mezereum – deciduous
File:Daphne giraldii 2015-06-20 3137.jpg|Daphne giraldii – unripe fruits
File:Daphne gnidium1.jpg|Daphne gnidium – ripe fruits
File:Daphne jezoensis 4.JPG|Daphne jezoensis – ripe fruits
File:Daphne × transatlantica Eternal Fragrance = 'Blafra'.png|alt=Daphne_transatlantica_EternalFragrance_Blafra|Daphne × transatlantica {{tdes|Eternal Fragrance}} = 'Blafra'
References
{{Reflist|refs=
{{citation |url=http://www.ansab.org/UserFiles/lokta.pdf |title=Lokta Daphne sp. |publisher=Asia Network for Sustainable Agriculture and Bioresources (ANSAB) |access-date=2014-03-01 |url-status=usurped |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070225221913/http://www.ansab.org/UserFiles/lokta.pdf |archive-date=2007-02-25 }}
{{citation |title=Plant Name Details for Daphne L. |work=The International Plant Names Index |url=http://www.ipni.org/ipni/idPlantNameSearch.do?id=30024583-2 |access-date=2017-11-23 }}
}}
Bibliography
- {{Citation |last1=Brickell |first1=C.D. |last2=Mathew |first2=B. |date=1976 |title=Daphne: The Genus in the Wild and in Cultivation |location=Woking |publisher=The Alpine Garden Society |oclc=832501497 |name-list-style=amp }}
- {{Citation |last1=Halda |first1=Josef J. |last2=Haldová |first2=Jarmila |date=2001 |title=The Genus Daphne |location=Dobré |publisher=SEN |isbn=978-80-86483-00-9 |name-list-style=amp }}
- {{Citation |last1=White |first1=Robin |date=2006 |title=Daphnes: A Practical Guide for Gardeners |location=Portland, UK |publisher=Timber Press |isbn=978-0-88192-752-8 }}
External links
{{Commons category|Daphne (Thymelaeaceae)|Daphne}}
- [http://rbg-web2.rbge.org.uk/cgi-bin/nph-readbtree.pl/feout?FAMILY_XREF=&GENUS_XREF=Daphne&SPECIES_XREF=&TAXON_NAME_XREF=&RANK= Flora Europaea: Daphne]
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