font settings and languages

Font Size: Large | Normal | Small
Font Face: Verdana | Geneva | Georgia
Languages:

Parietaria polygonoides

Interesting Facts

[ Back to top ]
 

Description

[ Back to top ]

Family Urticaceae

Herbs, subshrubs , or shrubs , rarely trees , very rarely climbing , stems often fibrous , sometimes succulent. sometimes armed with stinging hairs ; epidermal cells of leaves, sometimes stems, perianths mostly with prominent cystoliths punctiform to linear ; Leaves alternate or opposite, stipules present, rarely absent; leaf blade simple . Inflorescences cymose , paniculate , racemose, spicate , or cluster-capitate, usually formed from glomerules , sometimes crowded on common enlarged cuplike or discoid receptacle, rarely reduced into a single flower. Flowers unisexual (plants monoecious or dioecious), rarely bisexual in partial flowers; actinomorphic , very small, (1-) 4- or 5-merous, rarely perianth absent in female flowers. Calyx absent. Perianth lobes imbricate or valvate . Male flowers: stamens as many as and opposite to perianth lobes, filaments inflexed in bud; anthers 2-locular, opening lengthwise, rudimentary ovary often present. Female flowers: perianth lobes free or connate , usually enlarged in fruit and persistent , occasionally absent; staminodes scarious , opposite to the perianth lobes, or absent. Ovary rudimentary in male flowers, sessile or shortly stipitate , free or adnate to the perianth; 1-locular, ovule solitary, erect from the base ; style simple, or absent; stigma diverse , capitate, penicillate-capitate (brushlike), subulate , filiform , ligulate , or peltate. Fruit usually a dry achene, sometimes a fleshy drupe, often enclosed by the persistent perianth. Seed solitary, endosperm usually present; embryo straight; cotyledons ovate elliptical or orbicular .

About 47 genera and 1300 species: most numerous in wet tropical regions , extending into temperate regions ; 25 genera and 341 species (163 endemic, one introduced ) in China.

Plants in this family have numerous uses. The stem fiber of some genera and species is of high quality and used to make cloth, fishing nets , and ropes and for some industrial materials . In central and southern China,

Boehmeria nivea is widely cultivated for ramie fiber and Girardinia diversifolia subsp. triloba is widely cultivated for  red huo ma  fiber. Boiled young shoots of Girardinia, Laportea, and Urtica are eaten as vegetables. Some species are used in local Chinese medicine. Pellionia repens, Pilea cadierei, P. microphylla, and P. peperomioides, among other species, are widely cultivated as ornamentals in China and elsewhere. Some genera, such as Elatostema, Pellionia, and Pilea, occur frequently in shady, moist habitats of subtropical forests and become dominant elements of the forest floor vegetation. Plants of the first five genera belong to tribe Urticeae, which is usually characterized by the distinctive stinging hairs.[1]

Genus Parietaria

Herbs, annual or perennial , sparsely to densely pubescent with hooked and straight, nonstinging hairs on all parts of plant, stinging hairs absent. Stems often branched from base , erect , ascending , or decumbent . Leaves alternate; stipules absent. Leaf blades deltate, orbiculate to narrowly elliptic , or lanceolate, margins entire; cystoliths rounded . Inflorescences axillary . Flowers bisexual , staminate , or pistillate , proximal flowers usually bisexual and staminate, distal flowers pistillate; involucral bracts linear to lanceolate, without hooked hairs; tepals 4, distinct , ascending, lacking hooked hairs; stamens 4; style persistent or not; stigma tufted , deciduous. Achenes stipitate , ovoid , acute or mucronate (style base sometimes persisting as apical or subapical mucro ), loosely enclosed by tepals. x =7, 8, 10, 13.

Species 20-30: primarily in temperate and subtropical regions.

Mature achenes are necessary for certain determination.[2]

Taxonomy

[ Back to top ]

Notes

Publishing author : Willd. Publication : Sp. Pl., ed. 4 [Willdenow] 4(2): 956 1806 [Apr 1806]

Similar Species

[ Back to top ]

Members of the genus Parietaria

ZipcodeZoo has pages for 12 species, subspecies, varieties, forms, and cultivars in this genus:

P. floridana (Florida Pellitory) · P. hespera (Rillita Pellitory) · P. hespera Hinton var. californica Hinton (California Pellitory) · P. hespera var. californica (California Pellitory) · P. hespera var. hespera (Rillita Pellitory) · P. judaica (Pellitory of the Wall) · P. judaica afghanica (Spreading Pellitory) · P. officinalis (Upright Pellitory) · P. pensylvanica (Egg-Leaf Pellitory) · P. pensylvanica var. pensylvanica (Pennsylvania Pellitory) · P. pensylvanica var. pensylvanica Muhl. ex Willd. (Pennsylvania Pellitory) · P. praetermissa (Clustered Pellitory)

More Info

[ Back to top ]

Further Reading

[ Back to top ]

Notes

[ Back to top ]

Contributors

Identifiers

Footnotes

  1. Jiarui Chen, Prof. Qi Lin, Ib Friis, C. Melanie Wilmot-Dear & Alex K. Monro "Urticaceae". in Flora of China Vol. 5 Page 76. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org. [back]
  2. "Parietaria". in Flora of North America Vol. 3. Oxford University Press. Online at EFloras.org. [back]
Last Revised: 7/22/2012