Cirsium heterophyllum

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Cirsium heterophyllum
File:Cirsium heterophyllum - villohakas.jpg
Cirsium heterophyllum
(melancholy thistle)
Scientific classification
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C. heterophyllum
Binomial name
Cirsium heterophyllum
(L.) Hill
Synonyms
Synonymy
  • Carduus ambiguus Pers.
  • Carduus autareticus Vill.
  • Carduus helenifolius Salisb.
  • Carduus heterophyllus L.
  • Carduus polymorphus Lapeyr.
  • Cirsium autareticum Mutel
  • Cirsium carolorum C.Jenner ex Nyman
  • Cirsium hastatum (Lam.) Thell. ex Schinz
  • Cirsium pauciflorum W.D.J.Koch
  • Cnicus ambiguus Loisel.
  • Cnicus heterophyllus (L.) Retz.
  • Cynara diversifolia Stokes

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Cirsium heterophyllum, also known as melancholy thistle, is an erect spineless herb in the sunflower family. It is native to Europe and western Asia, where it grows in upland meadows, grasslands, road verges and open woodland.[1]

Description

File:Cirsium heterophyllum Sturm4.jpg
Cirsium heterophyllum (Illustration)

Cirsium heterophyllum is a perennial herb. Unusually for a thistle, it lacks spines. The plant grows 45 to 120 cm tall, and forms creeping runners. The stem is grooved but unwinged, more-or-less branchless, and cottony. The leaves are green and hairless above, thick white-felted underneath. The basal leaves are lanceolate with petioles and softly prickly edges, and grow from 20 to 40 cm long, and from 4 to 8 cm wide. The upper leaves do not have petioles, clasping the stem with cordate (heart-shaped) bases. The flower heads are 3 to 5 cm long and wide, the flowers red-purple, and appear from July to August.[2][3][4]

Distribution

Cirsium heterophyllum is a species of Europe and Central Asia.[1] It is native in upland areas of Scotland and northern England and north Wales, but is rare in other parts of Great Britain and Ireland. It is present throughout Scandinavia except Denmark, in north central Europe and Russia to about 100 degrees East. It grows in upland grassland and scrub, open woodland and river valleys.[3]

Similar species

Cirsium dissectum (meadow thistle) is a more slender version.

Medical use

The plant was considered a possible cure for sadness. Nicholas Culpepper in 1669 said that it "makes a man as merry as a cricket".[5]

References

  1. Altervista Flora Italiana, Cardo con foglie variabili, Melancholy Thistle, Cirsium heterophyllum (L.) Hill includes photos and European distribution map
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  5. Wildflowers of the British Isles