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Arenaria aegaea

Description

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Family Caryophyllaceae

Herbs annual or perennial , rarely subshrubs or shrubs . Stems and branches usually swollen at nodes. Leaves opposite, decussate, rarely alternate or verticillate , simple , entire , usually connate at base ; stipules scarious , bristly , or often absent. Inflorescence of cymes or cymose panicles, rarely flowers solitary or few in racemes , capitula, pseudoverticillasters, or umbels. Flowers actinomorphic , bisexual , rarely unisexual , occasionally cleistogamous . Sepals (4 or) 5, free , imbricate, or connate into a tube , leaflike or scarious, persistent , sometimes bracteate below calyx. Petals (4 or) 5, rarely absent, free, often comprising claw and limb; limb entire or split, usually with coronal scales at juncture of claw and limb. Stamens (2--) 5--10, in 1 or 2 series. Pistil 1; carpels 2--5, united into a compound ovary. Ovary superior, 1-loculed or basally imperfectly 2--5-loculed. Gynophore present or absent. Placentation free, central, rarely basal; ovules (1 or) few or numerous , campylotropous. Styles (1 or) 2--5, sometimes united at base. Fruit usually a capsule, with pericarp crustaceous , scarious, or papery , dehiscing by teeth or valves 1 or 2 × as many as styles, rarely berrylike with irregular dehiscence or an achene. Seeds 1 to numerous, reniform , ovoid , or rarely dorsiventrally compressed , abaxially grooved , blunt , or sharply pointed , rarely fimbriate-pectinate; testa granular , striate or tuberculate , rarely smooth or spongy ; embryo strongly curved and surrounding perisperm or straight but eccentric ; perisperm mealy.

Between 75 and 80 genera and ca. 2000 species: widespread but mainly of temperate or warm-temperate occurrence in the N hemisphere, with principal centers of distribution in the Mediterranean region and W Asia to W China and the Himalayas, fewer species in Africa S of the Sahara, America, and Oceania; 30 genera (two endemic) and 390 species (193 endemic) in China.

Arenaria, Silene, and Stellaria contain over half the species in the family in China. They are mostly concentrated in the Qinghai-Xizang plateau , and are especially rich from the Hengduan Mountains to the Himalayas. The main uses of this family are medicinal and ornamental . Dianthus superbus, Pseudostellaria heterophylla, Stellaria dichotoma var. lanceolata, and Vaccaria hispanica are commonly used in traditional Chinese medicine . Some species of Arenaria, Dianthus, Gypsophila, Psammosilene, and Silene are used as medicinal herbs among the people or are habitually used in local Chinese medicine. Many species of Dianthus, Gypsophila, Lychnis, Saponaria, and Silene are grown as ornamentals. Atocion armeria (Linnaeus) Rafinesque ( Silene armeria Linnaeus), native to Russia and Europe, is also cultivated in China. It differs from Silene in having a corymbose inflorescence and obscure calyx veins. Wu Cheng-yih, Ke Ping, Zhou Li-hua, Tang Chang-lin & Lu De-quan. 1996. Caryophyllaceae. In: Tang Chang-lin, ed., Fl. Reipubl. Popularis Sin. 26: 47–449.Dequan Lu, Zhengyi Wu, Lihua Zhou, Shilong Chen, Michael G. Gilbert, Magnus Lidén, John McNeill, John K. Morton, Bengt Oxelman, Richard K. Rabeler, Mats Thulin, Nicholas J. Turland & Warren L. Wagner "Caryophyllaceae". in Flora of China Vol. 6 Page 1. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.

Genus Arenaria

Herbs annual or perennial , rarely biennial. Stems erect or rarely creeping , often caespitose or pulvinate . Leaves opposite, rarely whorled ; leaf blade linear to elliptic , ovate , or orbicular , usually flat, margin entire . Flowers solitary or numerous in cymes, actinomorphic . Sepals 4 or 5, apex entire, rarely emarginate . Petals 4 or 5, sometimes absent, apex entire to toothed , 2-cleft, or fimbriate. Stamens (2--5 or 8 or) 10. Ovary 1-loculed; ovules numerous. Styles 2 or 3(--5) . Capsule ovoid , obovoid , or globose , usually shorter than persistent sepals, rarely equaling or longer than them, 3- or 6-valved. Seeds reniform or subovoid, flattened, smooth , tuberculate , or narrowly winged .

More than 300 species: N temperate to arctic regions; 102 species (79 endemic) in China.

Arenaria has been subdivided into ten subgenera , several of which were further divided into sections and series (McNeill, Notes Roy. Bot. Gard. Edinburgh 24: 79 155. 1962) . Six subgenera are represented in China, one of which ( A. subgen. Odontostemma ) contains more than half the species.

Dequan Lu, Zhengyi Wu, Lihua Zhou, Shilong Chen, Michael G. Gilbert, Magnus Lidén, John McNeill, John K. Morton, Bengt Oxelman, Richard K. Rabeler, Mats Thulin, Nicholas J. Turland & Warren L. Wagner "Arenaria". in Flora of China Vol. 6 Page 40. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org.

Taxonomy

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Notes

Publishing author : Rech.f. Publication : Repert. Spec. Nov. Regni Veg. 47: 50 1939

Similar Species

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Members of the genus Arenaria

There are approximately 1104 species in this genus. Here are just 100 of them:

A. aberrans · A. abietina · A. acerosa · A. acerosa var. glabra · A. achalensis · A. acicularis · A. aculeata (Needleleaf Sandwort) · A. acutisepala · A. adenotrichia · A. adonidis · A. aegaea · A. aequicaulis · A. affinis · A. africana · A. agglomerata · A. aggregata · A. aggregata cantabrica · A. aggregata cavanillesiana · A. aggregata favargeri · A. aggregata fontiqueri · A. aggregata oscensis · A. aggregata pseudoarmeriastrum · A. aggregata subsp. cantabrica · A. aggregata subsp. cavanillesiana · A. aggregata subsp. favargeri · A. aggregata subsp. fontiqueri · A. aggregata subsp. oscensis · A. aggregata subsp. pseudoarmeriastrum · A. airaefolia · A. airifolia · A. aizoides · A. aksayqingensis · A. alba · A. alba var. villosa · A. albo-villosa · A. alfacarensis · A. alfacariensis · A. algarbiensis · A. algarviensis · A. allionii · A. alpamarcae · A. alpicola · A. alpina · A. alsinoides · A. alsinoides var. ovatifolia · A. altaica · A. altorum · A. amabilis · A. amdoensis · A. anatolica · A. andicola · A. andicola var. caespitosa · A. andicola var. major · A. andina · A. androsacea · A. angolensis · A. angustifolia · A. angustifolioides · A. angustisepala · A. anodontoptera · A. anomala · A. antitaurica · A. apetala · A. aphanantha · A. aprica · A. arabica · A. araucana · A. arcauatociliata · A. arctica var. caespitosa · A. arctica var. grandiflora · A. arctica var. hondoensis · A. arctica var. minor · A. arctica var. rebunensis · A. arctica var. stenopetala · A. arcuatociliata · A. arduini · A. arenaria · A. arenarioides · A. aretioides · A. argaea · A. aristata · A. armeniaca · A. armeriastrum · A. armerina · A. armerina caesia · A. armerina echinosperma · A. armerina elongata · A. armerina frigida · A. armerina subsp. caesia · A. armerina subsp. echinosperma · A. armerina subsp. elongata · A. armerina subsp. frigida · A. arquatociliata · A. arundana · A. arvatica · A. arvensis · A. asiatica · A. attica · A. atuntziensis · A. atuntziensis var. stenopetala

More Info

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Notes

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Contributors

Data Sources

Accessed through GBIF Data Portal February 28, 2008:

Identifiers

Footnotes

Last Revised: 2008-10-01