Overview
Interesting Facts
Common Names
Common Names in English:
Beaked Agrimony, Woodland Agrimony, Woodland Groovebur
Description
Family Rosaceae
Trees
, shrubs
, or herbs, deciduous or evergreen
. Stems erect
, scandent
, arching
, prostrate
, or creeping
, armed
or unarmed
. Buds usually with several exposed scales
, sometimes with only 2. Leaves alternate, rarely opposite, simple
or compound
; stipules paired
, free
or adnate
to petiole
, rarely absent, persistent
or deciduous; petiole usually 2-glandular apically; leaf blade
often serrate at margin
, rarely entire. Inflorescences various, from single flowers to umbellate
, corymbose
, racemose or cymose-paniculate. Flowers usually actinomorphic
, bisexual
, rarely unisexual
and then plants
dioecious. Hypanthium (formed from basal parts of sepals, petals, and stamens) free from or adnate to ovary, short or elongate
. Sepals usually 5, rarely fewer or more, imbricate; epicalyx
segments sometimes also present. Petals as many as sepals, inserted
below margin of disk, free, imbricate, sometimes absent. Disk lining hypanthium, usually entire, rarely lobed
. Stamens usually numerous
, rarely few, always in a complete
ring
at margin of or above disk; filaments
usually free, very rarely connate
; anthers
small, didymous
, rarely elongate, 2-locular. Carpels 1 to many, free, or ± connate and then adnate to inner surface of cupular receptacle; ovary inferior, semi-inferior, or superior; ovules usually 2 in each carpel, rarely 1 or several, anatropous
, superposed
. Styles as many as carpels, terminal
, lateral
, or basal, free or sometimes connate. Fruit a follicle, pome, achene, or drupe, rarely a capsule, naked or enclosed in persistent hypanthium and sometimes also by sepals. Seeds erect or pendulous, sometimes winged
, usually exalbuminous
, very rarely with thin endosperm; cotyledons mostly fleshy
and convex
abaxially, rarely folded or convolute.
Between 95 and 125 genera and 2825-3500 species: cosmopolitan
, mostly in N temperate
zone; 55 genera (two endemic) and 950 species (546 endemic) in China.
Many plants of this family
are of economic importance and contribute to people s livelihoods. The Rosaceae contain a great number of fruit trees of temperate regions
. The fruits contain vitamins, acids, and sugars
and can be used both raw and for making preserves, jam, jelly, candy, various drinks, wine, vinegar, etc.
The dried fruits of the genera
Amygdalus and Armeniaca are of high commercial
value. Some plants in the genus Rosa containing essential oils or with a high vitamin content are used in industry
. Rosaceae wood is used for making various articles, stems and roots
are used for making tannin extract, and young leaves are used as a substitute for tea. Numerous species are used for medical purposes or are cultivated as ornamentals
.
The Rosaceae are very well represented in China, with great economic and scientific importance. The Co-chairs of the Editorial Committee (Wu and Raven) here note
that the patterns
of relationship
are complex
and the group is taxonomically difficult. [1]
Genus Agrimonia
Herbs perennial
, tall, with creeping
rhizome. Leaves stipulate
, imparipinnate
. Flowers usually in terminal
, spikelike racemes
, bisexual
, rather small. Hypanthium turbinate
, sulcate
, with hooked
prickles or 5 teeth below limb abaxially, constricted
at throat
. Sepals 5, imbricate, persistent
. Petals 5, larger than sepals. Disk lining
hypanthium, margin
thickened, annular
, glandular
. Stamens 5-15 or more, inserted
at mouth
of hypanthium, 1-seriate. Carpels usually 2, included
in hypanthium, sessile; ovule pendulous; style terminal, exserted, filiform
; stigma dilated
. Achenes 1 or 2, included in closed
hypanthium, distally with hooked prickles. Seed pendulous; testa membranous. x
= 7.
About ten species: N temperate
zone, alpine
regions of tropics; four species in China.[2]
Physical Description
Habit: Forb/herb • Growth Form: Single Stem • Shape and Orientation: Erect
Flowers: Bloom Period: Summer • Flower Color: Yellow • Flower Conspicuous: No
Seeds: Seed per Pound: 250000 • Seed Spread Rate: Slow • Seedling Vigor: Medium • Fruit/Seed Abundance: Medium • Fruit/Seed Color: Brown • Fruit/Seed Conspicuous: No • Cold Stratification Required: No
Foliage: Foliage Color: Green • Foliage Porosity Summer: Porous • Foliage Porosity Winter: Porous • Foliage Texture: Medium • Fall Conspicuous: No • Leaf Retention: No
Size/Age/Growth
Active Growth Period: Spring • Growth Rate: Moderate • After Harvest Regrowth Rate: None • Mature Height (feet): 2.3 • Vegetative Spread Rate: None • Lifespan: Lifespan
Habitat
Typically found at an altitude of 0 to 3,303 meters (0 to 10,837 feet).[3]
Biology
Reproduction
Duration: Perennial • Coppice Potential: No • Progagated by Bulbs: No • Propagated by Bare Root: Yes • Propagated by Container: No • Propagated by Corms: No • Propagated by Cuttings: No • Propagated by Seed: Yes • Propagated by Sod: No • Propagated by Sprigs: No • Propagated by Tubers: No • Fruit/Seed Period Begin: Summer • Fruit/Seed Period End: Fall • Fruit/Seed Persistence: No
Growth
Soil: Adapted to Medium Textured: Adapted to Medium Textured Soils • Adapted to Coarse Textured Soils: Yes • Anaerobic Tolerance: High • Salinity Tolerance: None • CaCO3 Tolerance: Medium • Minimum pH: 4.5 • Maximum pH: 7.0 • Fertility Requirement: Low
Sunlight: Shade Tolerance: Intermediate
Moisture: Drought Tolerance: Low • Minimum Precipitation: 35 • Maximum Precipitation: 50 • Moisture Use: Medium
Temperature: Minimum Temperature (F): -33 • Minimum Frost Free Days: 120
Taxonomy
- Domain:
Eukaryota
(
)
- Whittaker & Margulis,1978
- eukaryotes
- Kingdom:
Plantae
(
)
- Haeckel, 1866
- Plants
- Subkingdom:
Viridaeplantae
(
)
- Cavalier-Smith, 1981
- Phylum:
Tracheophyta
(
)
- Sinnott, 1935 ex Cavalier-Smith, 1998
- Vascular Plants
- Subphylum:
Euphyllophytina
(
)
- Infraphylum:
Radiatopses
(
)
- Kenrick & Crane, 1997
- Class:
Spermatopsida
(
)
- Brongniart, 1843
- Subclass:
Rosidae
(
)
- Takhtajan, 1967
- Superorder:
Rosanae
(
)
- Takhtajan, 1967
- Order:
Rosales
(
)
- Perleb, 1826
- Family:
Rosaceae
(
)
- A.L. de Jussieu, 1789, nom. cons.
- Rose Family
- Tribe:
Sanguisorbeae
(
)
- Genus:
Agrimonia
(
)
- C. Linnaeus, 1753
- Agrimony
- Specific epithet:
rostellata
- Wallr.
- Botanical name: - Agrimonia rostellata Wallr.
- Specific epithet:
rostellata
- Wallr.
- Genus:
Agrimonia
(
- Tribe:
Sanguisorbeae
(
- Family:
Rosaceae
(
- Order:
Rosales
(
- Superorder:
Rosanae
(
- Subclass:
Rosidae
(
- Class:
Spermatopsida
(
- Infraphylum:
Radiatopses
(
- Subphylum:
Euphyllophytina
(
- Phylum:
Tracheophyta
(
- Subkingdom:
Viridaeplantae
(
- Kingdom:
Plantae
(
Synonyms
Agrimonia americana Lucae Ex Wallr. • Agrimonia eupatoria var. parviflora (Sol.) Hook. • Agrimonia parviflora Ser. • Agrimonia striata E. P. Bicknell • Eupatorium rostellatum (Wallr.) Nieuwl.
Notes
Publishing author : Wallr.
Similar Species
Members of the genus Agrimonia
ZipcodeZoo has pages for 15 species, subspecies, varieties, forms, and cultivars in this genus:
A. eupatoria (Agrimony) · A. eupatoria eupatoria (Churchsteeples) · A. eupatoria var. glabra (Agrimony) · A. eupatoria var. hirsuta (Agrimony) · A. eupatoria var. mollis (Agrimony) · A. eupatoria var. suaveolens (Agrimony) · A. gryposepala (Tall Hairy Groovebur) · A. incisa (Incised Agrimony) · A. microcarpa (Small-Fruited Agrimony) · A. parviflora (Harvestlice) · A. procera (Cocklebur) · A. pubescens (Bicknell's Grovebur) · A. repens (Creeping Agrimony) · A. rostellata (Beaked Agrimony) · A. striata (Roadside Agrimony)
More Info
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Further Reading
- An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British possessions: from Newfoundland to the parallel of the southern boundary of Virginia and from the Atlantic Ocean westward to the 102nd meridian / by Nathaniel Lord Britton and Hon. Addison Brown. New York: Scribner, 1913. url p. 267, p. 267.
- Annotated list of the ferns and flowering plants of New York state, by Homer D. House. Albany, The University of the state of New York, 1924. url p. 394.
- Annual report of the New Jersey State Museum. Trenton, N.J.: MacCrellish & Quigley, url p. 475, p. 483, p. 54.
- Annual report of the Secretary of the Connecticut Board of Agriculture. Hartford: The Board, 1867-1925. url p. 30.
- Bartonia;proceedings of the Philadelphia botanical club. .. 57 Supplement 1993-1996 Philadelphia, Philadelphia Botanical Club, Academy of Natural Sciences. url p. 24, p. 32, p. 39.
- Britton, N. L. (ed.). North American flora. 22 1913 [New York]New York Botanical Garden. url p. 392, p. 676.
- Bulletin / Illinois Natural History Survey. Urbana, State of Illinois, Dept. of Registration and Education, Natural History Survey Division, 1918-1985. url p. 505.
- Bulletin / Ohio Biological Survey. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University, 1913- url p. 185.
- Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. 28 1901 New York: Torrey Botanical Club, 1870-1996 url p. 107, p. 326, p. 328, p. 329.
- Catalog of Ohio vascular plants, arranged according to the phyletic classification; with notes on the geographical distribution in the state, based mainly on specimens in the State Herbarium, Botanical Laboratory, the Ohio State Univ Columbus, The Ohio State University, 1914. url .
- Catalog of Ohio vascular plants: arranged according to the phyletic classification: with notes on the geographical distribution in the state, based mainly on specimens in the State Herbarium, Botanical Laboratory, the Ohio State Uni by John H. Schaffner. Columbus: Ohio State University, 1914. url p. 185.
- Catalogue of the flowering plants and ferns of Connecticut growing without cultivation / by Charles Burr Graves. .. [et al.]; Committee of the Connecticut Botanical Society. Hartford: Printed for the State Geological and Natural History Survey, 1910. url p. 241.
- Contributions from the New York Botanical Garden. New York: The Garden, 1899- url p. 326, p. 328, p. 329.
- Contributions from the United States National Herbarium 21 1919 Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1890- url p. 176.
- Erigenia: journal of the Illinois Native Plant Society. Carbondale, Ill.: The Society, 1982- url p. 15, p. 16, p. 16, p. 19, p. 20.
- Flora of Delaware and the Eastern Shore: an annotated list of the ferns and flowering plants of the peninsula of Delaware, Maryland and Virginia. [Wilmington]: Society of Natural History of Delaware, 1946. url p. 145.
- Flora of Illinois, containing keys for identification of flowering plants and ferns. Notre Dame, Ind., University of Notre Dame Press, 1963. url p. 116.
- Flora of Indiana, by Charles C. Deam. Indianapolis, Wm. B. Burford printing co., contractor for state printing and binding, 1940. url p. 572, p. 573.
- Flora of Lancaster County: being descriptions of the seed-plants growing naturally in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania / by John Kunkel Small and Joel Jackson Carter. New York: The authors, 1913. url p. 151.
- Flora of Lancaster County; being descriptions of the seed- plants growing naturally in Lancaster County, Pennsylvanial. By John Kunkel Small and Joel Jackson Carter. New York, 1913. url p. 151.
- Flora of the District of Columbia and vicinity. By A.S. Hitchcock and Paul C. Standley, with the assistance of the botanists of Washington. WashingtonGovt. print. off.1919 url p. 176.
- Flora of the vicinity of New York; a contribution to plant geography. [New York]1915 url p. 16, p. 368.
- Harper's guide to wild flowers, by Mrs. Caroline A. Creevey. New York, Harper, 1912. url p. 176.
- Journal of the Kentucky Academy of Science. Lexington, KY: The Academy, 1998- url p. 125, p. 130, p. 146, p. 146, p. 147, p. 147, p. 150, p. 150, p. 157, p. 157, p. 174, p. 174, p. 49, p. 62, p. 81.
- Manual of the southeastern flora: being descriptions of the seed plants growing naturally in Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, eastern Louisiana, Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. 1933 New York: The author, 1933. url p. 615.
- Memoirs of the American Entomological Society. Philadelphia, American Entomological Society, 1916- url p. 55, p. 56.
- National Arboretum contribution. Washington, D.C.: The Arboretum: 1953- url p. 22.
- Phytologia. Bronx Park, New York, H.A. Gleason and H.N. Moldenke, url p. 115, p. 124, p. 129, p. 148, p. 218, p. 287, p. 366.
- Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science. Indianapolis, Ind.[s.n.] url p. 140.
- Studies of the vegetation of Missouri. .. / By Julian A. Steyermark. 9 1940 [Chicago, 1940- url p. 451.
- The American midland naturalist. Notre Dame, Ind., University of Notre Dame. url p. 71.
- The Ohio journal of science. Columbus, Ohio, The Ohio State University and the Ohio Academy of Science url p. 430.
- The native flora of the vicinity of Cold Spring Harbor, L.I., New York. n.p., 1925 url p. 166.
- The plants of Southern New Jersey with especial reference to the flora of the pine barrens and the geographic distribution of the species. Trenton, N. J., 1911. url , , .
- The plants of Southern New Jersey; with especial reference to the flora of the Pine Barrens and the geographic distribution of the species. Trenton, 1911. url p. 475.
- The plants of southern New Jersey; with especial reference to the flora of the pine barrens and the geographic distribution of the species. Trenton, 1911. url p. 475, p. 483.
- Torreya. Burlington, Vt., Torrey Botanical Club, 1901-1945. url p. 109, p. 30, p. 46.
- Transactions of the Kentucky Academy of Science. [Lexington, Ky.]Kentucky Academy of Science, 1923-1997. url p. 166, p. 196, p. 231, p. 30, p. 42, p. 47, p. 67, p. 81, p. 92.
- Vascular plants of the Sangamon River basin; annotated checklist and ecological summary [by] Almut G. Jones and David T. Bell. [Urbana], University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, College of Agriculture, [1974] url p. 63.
- Yü Te-tsun, Lu Ling-ti, Ku Tsue-chih, Li Chao-luan, Kuan Ke-chien & Chiang Wan-fu. 1974, 1985, 1986. Rosaceae. In: Yü Te-tsun, ed., Fl. Reipubl. Popularis Sin. 36: 1443; 37: 1516; 38: 1133.
- Yü Te-tsun, Lu Ling-ti, Ku Tsue-chih, Li Chao-luan, Kuan Ke-chien & Chiang Wan-fu. 1974, 1985, 1986. Rosaceae. In: Yü Te-tsun, ed., Fl. Reipubl. Popularis Sin. 36: 1443; 37: 1516; 38: 1133.
Notes
Contributors
- Bisby, F.A., Y.R. Roskov, M.A. Ruggiero, T.M. Orrell, L.E. Paglinawan, P.W. Brewer, N. Bailly, J. van Hertum, eds (2007). Species 2000 & ITIS Catalogue of Life: 2007 Annual Checklist. Species 2000: Reading, U.K.
- Brands, S.J. (comp.) 1989-present. The Taxonomicon. Universal Taxonomic Services, Zwaag, The Netherlands. Accessed January 10, 2012.
- Global Biodiversity Information Facility. Accessed November 15, 2007. http://www.gbif.org Mediated distribution data from 7 providers.
- IOPI Global Plant Checklist 2005.
- IOPI Global Plant Checklist. Release date: August 1, 2007
- Ruggiero M., Gordon D., Bailly N., Kirk P., Nicolson D. (2011). The Catalogue of Life Taxonomic Classification, Edition 2, Part A. In: Species 2000 & ITIS Catalogue of Life: 2011 Annual Checklist (Bisby F.A., Roskov Y.R., Orrell T.M., Nicolson D., Paglinawan L.E., Bailly N., Kirk P.M., Bourgoin T., Baillargeon G., Ouvrard D., eds). DVD; Species 2000: Reading, UK.
- The International Plant Names Index. Accessed Dec 27, 2011.
Data Sources
Accessed through GBIF Data Portal November 15, 2007:
- Missouri Botanical Garden, Missouri Botanical Garden
- USDA PLANTS, USDA PLANTS Database
- University of Alabama Biodiversity and Systematics, Herbarium
Identifiers
- Biodiversity Heritage Library NamebankID: 2650217
- Catalogue of Life Accepted Name Code: Ros-4741
- Global Biodiversity Information Facility Taxonkey: 13688318
- Globally Unique Identifier: urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:720312-1
- Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS) Taxonomic Serial Number (TSN): 25100
- International Plant Names Index (IPNI) ID: 7327-2
- Natural Heritage Network Species Identifier: PDROS03090
- U.S.D.A. Plant Symbol: AGRO3
- Zipcode Zoo Species Identifier: 20171
Footnotes
- Cuizhi Gu, Chaoluan Li, Lingdi Lu, Shunyuan Jiang, Crinan Alexander, Bruce Bartholomew, Anthony R. Brach, David E. Boufford, Hiroshi Ikeda, Hideaki Ohba, Kenneth R. Robertson & Steven A. Spongberg "Rosaceae". in Flora of China Vol. 9 Page 46. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org. [back]
- Li Chao-luang, Hiroshi Ikeda, Hideaki Ohba "Agrimonia". in Flora of China Vol. 9 Page 382. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org. [back]
- Mean = 227.350 meters (745.899 feet), Standard Deviation = 173.260 based on 1,351 observations. Altitude information for each observation from British Oceanographic Data Centre. [back]
