Primula

Genus of flowering plants in the family Primulaceae From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Primula

Primula (/ˈprɪmjʊlə/)[2] is a genus of herbaceous[3] flowering plants in the family Primulaceae. They include the primrose (P. vulgaris), a familiar wildflower of banks and verges. Other common species are P. auricula (auricula), P. veris (cowslip), and P. elatior (oxlip). These species and many others are valued for their ornamental flowers. They have been extensively cultivated and hybridised (in the case of the primrose, for many hundreds of years). Primula are native to the temperate Northern Hemisphere, south into tropical mountains in Ethiopia, Indonesia, and New Guinea, and in temperate southern South America. Almost half of the known species are from the Himalayas.[3]

Quick Facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Primula
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Primula vulgaris
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Ericales
Family: Primulaceae
Subfamily: Primuloideae
Genus: Primula
L. (1753)
Type species
Primula veris L.
Species[1]

528; see text

Synonyms
  • Aleuritia (Duby) Opiz
  • Aretia Link
  • Auganthus Link
  • Auricula Hill
  • Auricula-ursi Ség.
  • Cankrienia de Vriese
  • Carolinella Hemsl.
  • × Cortoprimula Zeman
  • Cortusa L.
  • Dodecatheon L.
  • Evotrochis Raf.
  • Exinia Raf.
  • Kablikia Opiz
  • Meadia Mill.
  • Oscaria Lilja
  • Paralysis Hill
  • Primulidium Spach
  • Sredinskya (Stein) Fed.
Close

Primula has over 500 species in traditional treatments, and more if certain related genera are included within its circumscription.[4]

Description

Primula is a complex and varied genus, with a range of habitats from alpine slopes to boggy meadows. Plants bloom mostly during the spring, with flowers often appearing in spherical umbels on stout stems arising from basal rosettes of leaves; their flowers can be purple, yellow, red, pink, blue, or white. Some species show a white mealy bloom (farina) on various parts of the plant.[3] Many species are adapted to alpine climates.

Taxonomy

Summarize
Perspective

Primula was known at least as early as the mediaeval herbalists, although first formally described as a genus by Linnaeus in 1753,[5] and later in 1754 in his Flora Anglica. Linnaeus described seven species of Primula. One of its earliest scientific treatments was that of Charles Darwin study of heterostyly in 1877 (The different forms of flowers on plants of the same species). Since then, heterostyly (and homostyly) have remained important considerations in the taxonomic classification of Primula.[6][7] Primula is a member of the Primulaceae family. The most complete treatment of the family, with nearly 1000 species arranged into 22 genera, was by Pax and Knuth in 1905.[8]

Phylogeny

Primula is the largest genus in the family Primulaceae, within which it is placed in the subfamily Primuloideae, being the nominative genus.[9]

The position of Primula within the family and its relationship to other genera is shown in this cladogram:

Primulaceae s.l.

Classification

The genus Dodecatheon originated from within Primula, its species are now included in Primula.[10]

Sections of genus Primula

The classification of the genus Primula has been investigated by botanists for over a century. As the genus is both large and diverse (with about 430–500 species), botanists have organized the species in various sub-generic groups. The most common is division into a series of thirty sections.[11][12] Some of these sections (e.g. Vernales, Auricula) contain many species; others contain only one.

  • Amethystina
  • Auricula
  • Bullatae
  • Candelabra
  • Capitatae
  • Carolinella
  • Cortusoides
  • Cuneifolia
  • Denticulata
  • Dryadifolia
  • Farinosae
  • Floribundae
  • Grandis
  • Malacoidea
  • Malvacea
  • Minutissimae
  • Muscaroides
  • Nivales
  • Obconica
  • Parryi
  • Petiolares
  • Pinnatae
  • Pycnoloba
  • Reinii
  • Rotundifolia
  • Sikkimensis
  • Sinenses
  • Soldanelloideae
  • Souliei
  • Vernales

Selected species

Species include:[13][14][15]

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Primula algida
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Primula auriantaca
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Primula beesiana
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Primula capitata ssp. mooreana
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Primula clarkei
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Primula denticulata
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Primula elatior (oxlip)
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Primula florindae
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Primula glutinosa
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Primula helodoxa
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Primula japonica
  • Primula gambeliana
  • Primula gemmifera
  • Primula geraniifolia
  • Primula giraldiana
  • Primula glabra
  • Primula glaucescens
  • Primula glomerata
  • Primula glutinosa
  • Primula gracilenta
  • Primula gracillipes
  • Primula griffithii
  • Primula halleri (long-flowered primrose, Haller's primrose)
  • Primula helodoxa
  • Primula hendersonii (broad-leaved shootingstar, Henderson's shootingstar, mosquito-bill, sailor caps)
  • Primula heucherifolia
  • Primula hirsuta (stinking primrose)
  • Primula hookeri
  • Primula incana (silvery primrose, mealy primrose)
  • Primula interjacens
  • Primula involucrata
  • Primula ioessa
  • Primula irregularis
  • Primula japonica (Japanese primrose, Japanese cowslip)
  • Primula jesoana
  • Primula jigmediana
  • Primula juliae (Julia's primrose, purple primrose)
  • Primula kingii
  • Primula kisoana
  • Primula kitaibeliana (Kitaibel's primrose)
  • Primula klattii
  • Primula laurentiana (birdseye primrose)
  • Primula lihengiana[21]
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Primula marginata
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Primula megaseifolia
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Primula prolifera
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Primula rosea
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Primula sieboldii
  • Primula munroi
  • Primula muscarioides
  • Primula nipponica
  • Primula nivalis (snowy primrose)
  • Primula obconica (poison primrose, German primrose)
  • Primula orbicularis
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Primula veris
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Primula vialii
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Primula × pubescens

Etymology

The word primula is the Latin feminine diminutive of primus, meaning first (prime), applied to flowers that are among the first to open in spring.[29]

Distribution and habitat

Although there are over 400 species of Primula, about 75% are found in the eastern Himalayan mountain chain and western China (Yunnan Province), constituting a centre of diversity. Other centres of diversity are a western Asian centre (Caucasus, European mountain ranges from the Pyrenees, through the Alps to the Carpathian Mountains), mountains of East Asia and those of western North America. Primula is found in mountainous or higher latitude zones of North America, Europe, and Asia, with extension into South America, Africa (mountains of Ethiopia) and tropical Asia (islands of Java and Sumatra).[6][9] About 25 species occur in North America (represented in five sections).[30]

Primula is found in the humid and moderate climate regions of the Northern Hemisphere, predominantly in the forest belt, plain meadows, Alpine lawns, and nival and meadow tundras.[9]

Ecology

Primulas are used as a food plant by the Duke of Burgundy butterfly.[31]

Cultivation

Summarize
Perspective

Primula species have been extensively cultivated and hybridised, mainly derived from P. elatior, P. juliae, P. veris and P. vulgaris. Polyanthus (Primula × polyantha) is one such group of plants, which has produced a large variety of strains in all colours, usually grown as annuals or biennials and available as seeds or young plants.[32]

Another huge range of cultivars, known as auriculas, are derived from crosses between P. auricula and P. hirsuta (among others). Specialist nurseries and auricula societies[33] support the growing and showing of these choice strains.

AGM cultivars

The following hybrid varieties and cultivars have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit:-[34]

  • 'Broadwell Milkmaid' (auri)[35]
  • Charisma series (prim)[36]
  • 'Clarence Elliott' (auri)[37]
  • Crescendo Series (poly)
    • 'Crescendo Blue Shades'[38]
    • 'Crescendo Bright Red'[39]
    • 'Crescendo Pink and Rose Shades'[40]
  • Danova Series (prim)[41]
  • 'Francisca' (poly)[43]
  • 'Guinevere' (poly)[44]
  • Primula × loiseleurii 'Aire Mist' (auri)[45]
  • Primula × pubescens (auri)[46]
  • 'Tony' (auri)[47]
  • 'Wanda' (prim)[48]

Hybrids

  • Primula × kewensis=P. floribunda × P. verticillata (Kew primrose)[28]
  • Primula × polyantha=P. veris × P. vulgaris (false oxlip, polyanthus primula)[49]
  • Primula × pubescens=P. hirsuta × P. auricula

References

Bibliography

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