Cirsium vulgare

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Cirsium vulgare
File:Cirsium vulgare carriere-fossoy 02 23062008 02.jpg
Plant in flower, Fossoy, Aisne, France
Scientific classification
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C. vulgare
Binomial name
Cirsium vulgare
Synonyms[1]
Synonymy
  • Ascalea lanceata Hill
  • Ascalea lanceolata (L.) Hill
  • Carduus divaricatus Gllib.
  • Carduus firmus Steud.
  • Carduus lanceolatus L.
  • Carduus vulgaris Savi
  • Chamaepeuce firma DC.
  • Cirsium abyssinicum Sch.Bip. ex A.Rich.
  • Cirsium auriculatum Camus ex Beleze
  • Cirsium balearicum Willk.
  • Cirsium britannicum Scop.
  • Cirsium dubium Lojac.
  • Cirsium firmum (C.Presl) Arcang.
  • Cirsium fraternum DC.
  • Cirsium lanceolatum (L.) Scop.
  • Cirsium lanigerum Nägeli
  • Cirsium leucanicum Lojac.
  • Cirsium linkii Nyman
  • Cirsium longespinosum Tod. ex Nyman
  • Cirsium microcephalum Lange
  • Cirsium mielichhoferi Saut.
  • Cirsium misilmerense Ces., Pass. & Gibelli
  • Cirsium nemorale Rchb.
  • Cirsium spurium Delastre
  • Cirsium strigosum (Hoffmanns. & Link) Cout.
  • Cnicus firmus J.Presl & C.Presl
  • Cnicus lanceolatus (L.) Willd.
  • Cnicus misilmerensis Tineo ex Ces., Pass. & Gibelli
  • Cnicus strigosus Hoffmanns. & Link
  • Cynara lanceata Stokes
  • Eriolepis lanceolata (L.) Cass.
  • Lophiolepis dubia Cass.
  • Cirsium atticum Sch.Bip. ex Nyman
  • Cirsium balearicum (Willk.) Porta
  • Cirsium crinitum Boiss. ex DC.
  • Carduus nemoralis E.H.L.Krause
  • Cirsium silvaticum Tausch

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Cirsium vulgare (spear thistle) is a species of the genus Cirsium, native throughout most of Europe (north to 66°N, locally 68°N), Western Asia (east to the Yenisei Valley), and northwestern Africa (Atlas Mountains).[2][3][4][5][6] It is also naturalised in North America, Africa, and Australia and is as an invasive weed in some areas.[7][8][9] It is the national flower of Scotland.

Description

It is a tall biennial or short-lived monocarpic thistle, forming a rosette of leaves and a taproot up to 70 cm long in the first year, and a flowering stem 1–1.5 m tall in the second (rarely third or fourth) year. The stem is winged, with numerous longitudinal spine-tipped wings along its full length. The leaves are stoutly spined, grey-green, deeply lobed; the basal leaves up to 15–25 cm long, with smaller leaves on the upper part of the flower stem; the leaf lobes are spear-shaped (from which the English name derives). The inflorescence is 2.5–5 cm diameter, pink-purple, with all the florets of similar form (no division into disc and ray florets). The seeds are 5 mm long, with a downy pappus, which assists in wind dispersal. As in other species of Cirsium (but unlike species in the related genus Carduus), the pappus hairs are feathery with fine side hairs.[2][10][11]

Ecology

File:Cirsium vulgare Xylocopa virginica.jpg
C. vulgare being pollinated by a carpenter bee in Pennsylvania, where it is naturalised and considered a noxious weed

Spear thistle is often a ruderal species, colonising bare disturbed ground, but also persists well on heavily grazed land as it is unpalatable to most grazing animals.[11] Nitrogen-rich soils help increase its proliferation.[12] The flowers are a rich nectar source used by numerous pollinating insects, including honey bees, wool-carder bees, and many butterflies.[13] The seeds are eaten by goldfinches, linnets and greenfinches.[14] The seeds are dispersed by wind, mud, water, and possibly also by ants; they do not show significant long-term dormancy, most germinating soon after dispersal and only a few lasting up to four years in the soil seed bank.[15] Seed is also often spread by human activity such as hay bales.[11]

Cirsium vulgare as a weed

File:Cirsium vulgare flower.jpg
C. vulgare, growing on the bank of the Murrumbidgee River in Wagga Wagga, Australia

Spear thistle is designated an "injurious weed" under the UK Weeds Act 1959,[16] and a noxious weed in Australia[15][17][18] and in nine US states.[19] Spread is only by seed, not by root fragments as in the related creeping thistle C. arvense. It is best cleared from land by hoeing and deep cutting of the taproot before seeds mature; regular cultivation also prevents its establishment.[11]

Other names

Other English names include bull thistle,[11][20] Scots, Scottish, or Scotch thistle, and common thistle.[20]

Uses

The stems can be peeled and then steamed or boiled. The tap roots can be eaten raw or cooked, but only on young thistles that have not flowered yet.[21]

References

  1. The Plant List, Cirsium vulgare (Savi) Ten.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Interactive Flora of NW Europe: Cirsium vulgare
  3. Flora Europaea: Cirsium vulgare
  4. Den Virtuella Floran: Cirsium vulgare (in Swedish, with maps)
  5. Altervista Flora Italiana, Cardo asinino, Cirsium vulgare (Savi) Ten.
  6. Flora of China, 翼蓟 yi ji, Cirsium vulgare (Savi) Tenore
  7. Flora of North America, Bull or common or spear thistle, gros chardon, chardon vulgaire ou lancéolé, piqueux, Cirsium vulgare (Savi) Tenore
  8. Atlas of Living Australia, Cirsium vulgare (Savi) Ten., Black Thistle
  9. Conservatoire et Jardin botaniques & South African National Biodiversity Institute, African Plant Database, Cirsium vulgare (Savi) Ten.
  10. Blamey, M. & Grey-Wilson, C. (1989). Flora of Britain and Northern Europe. ISBN 0-340-40170-2
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 Bond, W., Davies, G., & Turner, R. J. (2007). The biology and non-chemical control Spear Thistle (Cirsium vulgare). 6pp. HDRA the organic organisation. Fulltext
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  16. Defra, UK - Farming - Wildlife and plants Ragwort and injurious weeds
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  20. 20.0 20.1 United States Department of Agriculture: Taxonomy for Plants
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