- Lesser celandine
Taxobox
name = Lesser celandine
image_width = 240px
regnum =Plant ae
divisio =Magnoliophyta
classis =Magnoliopsida
ordo =Ranunculales
familia =Ranunculaceae
genus = "Ranunculus "
species = "R. ficaria"
binomial = "Ranunculus ficaria"
binomial_authority = L.Lesser celandine, ("Ranunculus ficaria", syn. "Ficaria grandiflora" Robert "Ficaria verna" Huds.) is a low-growing, hairless
perennial plant , with fleshy dark green, heart-shaped leaves. The plant is found throughoutEurope and westAsia and is now introduced inNorth America . It prefers bare, damp ground and in the UK it is often a persistent garden weed.Theflower s are yellow, turning white as they age."Ranunculus ficaria" exists in both
diploid (2n=16) andtetraploid (2n=32) forms which are very similar in appearance. However, the tetraploid type prefer more shady locations and frequently develops bulbils at the base of the stalk. These two variants are sometimes referred to as distinct sub-species,"R. ficaria ficaria" and "R. ficaria bulbifer" respectively.In Latin, 'celandine' can be translated as 'swallow', or 'when the swallows come home'. The flower is present when the swallows return in the spring.Fact|date=May 2008
Life cycle
According to
Gilbert White , a diarist writing around 1800 in the Hampshire village ofSelborne , the plants came out on February 21st, but it is more commonly reported to flower from March until May, and is sometimes called the "spring messenger" as a consequence.In non-native locations
In many parts of the northern
United States andCanada , lesser celandine is cited as aninvasive species . [cite web | url=http://www.nps.gov/plants/alien/pubs/midatlantic/rafi.htm | title=Lesser Celandine | work=Plant Invaders of Mid-Atlantic Natural Areas | author=Swearingen, J., K. Reshetiloff, B. Slattery, and S. Zwicker | year=2002 |publisher=National Park Service and U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, Washington, D.C.]Medicinal uses
The plant used to be known as Pilewort, as it was used to treat
haemorrhoids . Supposedly the knobblytuber s of the plant resemble piles, and according to theDoctrine of signatures this resemblance suggests that pilewort could be used to cure piles. The German vernacular Scharbockskraut (Scurvywort) derives from the use of the early leaves, which are high invitamin C , to preventscurvy . Fact|date=May 2008References in literature
The poet
William Wordsworth was very fond of the flower and it inspired him to write three poems including the following from his ode to the celandine::"I have seen thee, high and low,":"Thirty years or more, and yet":"T'was a face I did not know".
Upon Wordsworth's death it was proposed that a celandine be carved on his memorial plaque inside the church of Saint Oswald at
Grasmere , but unfortunately theGreater celandine "Chelidonium majus" was mistakenly used.C. S. Lewis mentions celandines in a key passage of "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe ", when Aslan comes to Narnia and the whole wood passes "in a few hours or so from January to May". The children notice "wonderful things happening. Coming suddenly round a corner into a glade ofsilver birch trees Edmund saw the ground covered in all directions with little yellow flowers - celandines" [cite book | title = The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe | author = C. S. Lewis | year = 1950 End of chapter 11, beginning of chapter 12] .Celandines are also mentioned in
J.R.R. Tolkien 's "The Lord of the Rings " and the "Silmarillion ". The characterGlorfindel was the lord of the house of the golden flower: a celandine.A reference appears in
Tony Hendra 's "The Messiah of Morris Avenue ": "He was kneeling on a carpet of violets and celandines." (p. 144)ee also
*
List of early spring flowers
*List of late spring flowers References
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