Lythrum calicaria

Lythrum salicaria

''Lythrum salicaria'' or purple-loosestrife is a flowering plant belonging to the family Lythraceae. It should not be confused with other plants sharing the name loosestrife that are members of the genus ''Lysimachia'' in the family Primulaceae. This herbaceous perennial plant is native to temperate regions of Europe, Asia, northern Africa, and eastern Australia.
Purple loosestrife noxious weed! Geotagged,Lythrum salicaria,Spiked loosestrife,Summer,United States

Appearance

''Lythrum salicaria'' can grow 1–2 m tall, forming extensive clonal colonies, with numerous erect stems growing from a single woody root mass. The stems are reddish-purple and square in cross-section. The leaves are lanceolate, 3–10 centimetres long and 5–15 millimetres broad, downy and sessile, and arranged opposite or in whorls of three.

The flowers are reddish purple, 10–20 millimetres in diameter, with six petals and 12 stamens, and are clustered tightly in verticillasters in the axils of bracts or leaves. There are three different flower types, with the stamens and style of different lengths, short, medium or long; each flower type can only be pollinated by one of the other types, not the same type, thus ensuring cross-pollination between different plants. For instance, if the pistil is medium length, then the stamens will be long and short, but not medium. The flowers are visited by many types of insects, and can be characterised by a generalised pollination syndrome.

The fruit is a small 3–4 millimetres capsule containing numerous minute seeds. Flowering lasts throughout the summer. When the seeds are mature, the leaves often turn bright red through dehydration in early autumn; the red autumn colour may last for almost two weeks. The dead stalks from previous growing seasons are brown.

''L. salicaria'' is very variable in leaf shape and degree of hairiness, and a number of subspecies and varieties have been described, but it is now generally regarded as monotypic with none of these variants being considered of botanical significance. The species ''Lythrum intermedium'' Ledeb. ex Colla has often been considered synonymous in the past, but is now treated as a separate species, from Central Asia, by the ''Plants of the World Online'' database.
Purple Loosestrife (Lythrum Salicaria) Dutch: Grote Kattenstaart
Frysk: Kattesturt
Français: Salicaire commune
Deutsch: Blut-Weiderich Geotagged,Lythrum salicaria,Purple loosestrife,The Netherlands

Naming

The generic name ''Lythrum'' is derived from the Greek 'lythron', meaning blood, in reference to the flower colour in some species. The specific epithet ''salicaria'' probably derives from the similarity of the leaves to those of willows or ''Salix'' species, though Linnaeus did not specify this in his choice of the name.

The English calque 'loosestrife' first appeared in written form in the 16th century. It was coined by English naturalist William Turner in his 1548 work ''A New Herball'', in which he states: "''Lycimachia purpurea'', … may in englishe be called red loosstryfe or purple losestryfe".Turner treated this species and yellow loosestrife in the same genus ''Lycimachia'' [sic]

Purple-loosestrife was referred to several times as 'long purples' by John Clare, such as in his 1821 poem ''The Wildflower Nosegay'':

"Where on the water op'd the lily buds

And fine long purples shadow'd in the lake..."

— Volume II of ''The Village Minstrel and Other Poems'', John Clare, pg. 133Purple-loosestrife has been introduced into temperate New Zealand and North America where it is now widely naturalised and officially listed in some controlling agents. Infestations may rarely result in dramatic disruption in water flow in rivers and canals, and the life cycles of organisms from waterfowl to amphibians to algae being affected.

A single plant may produce up to 2.7 million tiny seeds annually. Easily carried by wind and water, the seeds germinate in moist soils after overwintering. The plant can also sprout anew from pieces of root left in the soil or water. Once established, loosestrife stands are difficult and costly to remove by mechanical and chemical means.

However, research about how invasive plants are portrayed in media indicate that the threat from loosestrife and other infamous invasive plants is driven more by media attention than science. While the species does have negative impacts on the natural environment the scientific literature supports a much more modest assessment of how bad it is outside its native range and that resources would be better spent on preventing disturbance of wetlands than on the removal of purple-loosestrife.

Plants marketed under the name "European wand loosestrife" are the same species despite the different name. In some cases the plants sold are sterile.

In North America, purple-loosestrife may be distinguished from similar native plants by its angular stalks which are square in outline, as well as by its leaves, which are in pairs that alternate at right angle and are not serrated.
Purple Loosestrife - Lythrum salicaria Autumn colors are already starting to pop up on the lower trees.

Habitat: Litchfield hills Geotagged,Lythrum salicaria,Spiked loosestrife,Summer,United States

Distribution

''Lythrum salicaria'' is native to Europe, temperate Asia, northern Africa, and Australia. It is also naturalised in many temperate parts of the world, including parts of southern Africa, North America, and South America. The species was thought to be a recent introduction to Australia, but pre-colonial pollen samples have been found in New South Wales, indicating natural colonisation before modern human plant introductions; the question is considered unresolved by Australian authorities.
Purple loosestrife - Lythrum salicaria Vlasina lake, Serbia Eudicot,Europe,Flowering Plant,Geotagged,Lythrum salicaria,Magnoliophyta,Myrtaceae,Myrtales,Nature,Plantae,Purple loosestrife,Serbia,Summer,Vlasina lake,Wildlife,flower

Habitat

Found in ditches, wet meadows and marshes and along sides of lakes. In North America, purple-loosestrife can invade sedge meadows.
Lythrum Salicaria In Severn This is a picture of Lythrum Salicaria in the woods near Queenstown Park in Severn, Maryland. Geotagged,Lythrum salicaria,Spiked loosestrife,Summer,United States

Uses

It has been used as an astringent medicinal herb to treat diarrhea and dysentery; it is considered safe to use for all ages, including babies. It is also cultivated as an ornamental plant in gardens, and is particularly associated with damp, poorly drained locations such as marshes, bogs and watersides. However, it will tolerate drier conditions. The flowers are showy and bright, and a number of cultivars have been selected for variation in flower colour, including:
⤷  'Atropurpureum' with dark purple flowers
⤷  'Brightness' with deep pink flowers
⤷  'Happy' with red flowers on a short stem
⤷  'Purple Spires' with purple flowers on a tall stem
⤷  'Roseum Superbum' with large pink flowers.

The cultivars ‘Blush’ with blush-pink flowers, and 'Feuerkerze' with rose-red flowers have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

It has also been introduced in many areas of North America by bee keepers, due to its abundance of flowers which provide an important source of nectar.

References:

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