Antirrhinum
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Antirrhinum is a genus of plants in the Plantaginaceae family, commonly known as dragon flowers or snapdragons because of the flowers' fancied resemblance to the face of a dragon that opens and closes its mouth when laterally squeezed. They are also sometimes called toadflax<ref name="toadflaxes"/> or dog flower.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> They are native to rocky areas of Europe, the United States, Canada, and North Africa. Antirrhinum species are widely used as ornamental plants in borders and as cut flowers.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Description
The Antirrhinum is morphologically diverse, particularly the New World group (Saerorhinum).<ref name=Oyama/> The genus is characterized by personate flowers with an inferior gibbous corolla.Template:Clarification needed
Taxonomy
Antirrhinum used to be treated within the family Scrophulariaceae, but studies of DNA sequences have led to its inclusion in a vastly enlarged family Plantaginaceae, within the tribe Antirrhineae.
Circumscription
The taxonomy of this genus is complex and not yet fully resolved at present. In particular the exact circumscription of the genus, especially the inclusion of the New World species (Saerorhinum), is contentious.<ref name=Oyama/> The situation is further complicated by the variety of terms in use for infrageneric ranks, especially of the Old World species, that is Antirrhinum, sensu stricto (e.g. Streptosepalum, Kicksiella, Meonantha).
The USDA Plants Database recognises only two species: A. majus (the garden snapdragon), the only species naturalised in North America, and A. bellidifolium (the lilac snapdragon), now considered to be Anarrhinum bellidifolium (L.) Willd.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> There are 23 accepted species.<ref name=POWO>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
A widely accepted scheme (Thompson 1988) placed 36 species in the genus in three sections. While many botanists accepted this broad circumscription (sensu lato), whose main departure from other classifications was the inclusion of the New World Saerorhinum,<ref name=Thompson/> others did not, restricting the genus to the Old World. (For a comparison of Thompson with earlier systems, see Oyama and Baum, Table 1.) New species also continue to be discovered (see e.g. Romo et al., 1995).
In 2004 research into the molecular systematics of this group and related species by Oyama and Baum confirmed that the genus sensu lato as described by Thompson is monophyletic, provided that one species (A. cyathiferum) is removed to the separate genus Pseudorontium, and the two species of Mohavea (Mohavea confertiflora and M. breviflora) are included. The species list given here follows these conclusions.<ref name=Oyama/>
This is the broad circumscription that includes the Old World Misopates and New World Sairocarpus. By contrast the narrow circumscription (sensu stricto) confines the genus to the monophyletic Old World perennial species with a diploid chromosome number of 16, distributed in the Mediterranean basin, approximately 25 species.,<ref name="Tolety-2011" /> following the phylogenetic analysis of Vargas et al. (2004) suggesting they are a distinct group. Both Misopates and Sairocarpus are accepted names in The Plant List, and many of the New World species now have Sairocarpus as their accepted name, rather than Antirrhinum. It has been proposed that many of the New World Antirrhinum be now considered under Sairocarpus, in the forthcoming Flora of North America.<ref name=Barringer/>
Infrageneric subdivision
It is widely agreed that this broad group should be subdivided into three or four subgroups, but the level at which this should be done, and exactly which species should be grouped together, remain unclear. Some authors continue to follow Thompson in using a large genus Antirrhinum, which is then divided into several sections; others treat Thompson's genus as a tribe or subtribe, and divide it into several genera. For a comparison of earlier schemes see Mateu-Andrés and de Paco, Table 1 (2005)<ref name=Mateu/>
If the broad circumscription is accepted, its three sections as described by Thompson are as follows (two Old World, one New):
- Section Antirrhinum: 19 Old World species of relatively large flowered perennial plants, including the type species Antirrhinum majus, mostly native to the western Mediterranean region with a focus on the Iberian Peninsula. Chromosomes n=8. (3 subsections: Majora, Sicula, Hispanica)
- Section Orontium: two species, also from the Mediterranean. Chromosome number=8. The species in this section, including the section type species Antirrhinum orontium (lesser snapdragon) are often treated in the genus Misopates.
- Section Saerorhinum: 15 small flowered New World species, mostly annual plants and mostly native to California, though species are found from Oregon to Baja California Sur and as far east as Utah. Tetraploid (n=15-16). Like other authors, Thompson placed A. cyathiferum in this section, but Oyama and Baum, following earlier authors, suggest that it should be reclassified in genus Pseudorontium, while Mohavea should be included. Vargas et al., strongly recommending segregation of the New World species suggest that the 14 species originally recognised by Sutton (1988) more properly belong to Sairocarpus (11 species), Howelliella (1 species), and Neogarrhinum (2 species). Other authors would also include Galvezia glabrata, Galvezia juncea, Galvezia rupicola and Galvezia speciosa.<ref name="toadflaxes">Template:Cite journal</ref> None of the names originally allocated to this section are now accepted.
Snapdragons
While Antirrhinum majus is the plant that is usually meant by the term of "snapdragon" if used on its own, many other species in the genus, and in the family Scrophulariaceae more widely, have common names that include the word "snapdragon". For example, Antirrhinum molle is known as "dwarf snapdragon" in the UK.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Species
The following species are recognised in the genus Antirrhinum:<ref name=POWO /> Template:Div col
- Antirrhinum australe Template:Small
- Antirrhinum barrelieri Template:Small
- Antirrhinum × bilbilitanum Template:Small
- Antirrhinum braun-blanquetii Template:Small
- Antirrhinum charidemi Template:Small
- Antirrhinum × chavannesii Template:Small
- Antirrhinum cirrhigerum Template:Small
- Antirrhinum controversum Template:Small
- Antirrhinum × ferrandopardoi Template:Small
- Antirrhinum graniticum Template:Small
- Antirrhinum grosii Template:Small
- Antirrhinum hispanicum Template:Small
- Antirrhinum × inexpectans Template:Small
- Antirrhinum × kretschmeri Template:Small
- Antirrhinum latifolium Template:Small
- Antirrhinum linkianum Template:Small
- Antirrhinum majus Template:Small
- Antirrhinum martenii Template:Small
- Antirrhinum meonanthum Template:Small
- Antirrhinum microphyllum Template:Small
- Antirrhinum molle Template:Small
- Antirrhinum × montserratii Template:Small
- Antirrhinum pertegasii Template:Small
- Antirrhinum pulverulentum Template:Small
- Antirrhinum rothmaleri Template:Small
- Antirrhinum sempervirens Template:Small
- Antirrhinum siculum Template:Small
- Antirrhinum tortuosum Template:Small
- Antirrhinum valentinum Template:Small
Etymology
The name "Antirrhinum" is derived from the Greek Template:Lang antirrhinon which in turn is derived from Template:Lang anti "opposite, counterfeiting", and Template:Lang rhis "nose" (GEN Template:Lang rhinos); from its resemblance to an animal's mouth.<ref>Template:Cite OED</ref>
Ecology
Snapdragons are short-lived perennial plants that survive well in cold seasons but are often replanted each spring and considered annual plants. They do best in full or partial sun, in well-drained soil since their roots are susceptible to rotting (although they do require regular watering<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>). They are classified commercially as a range of heights: midget or dwarf (Template:Convert), medium (Template:Convert) and tall (Template:Convert). Removing the dead flowers, referred to as deadheading, is important to help them to continuously produce beautiful flowers throughout their growing season. They are susceptible to ethylene gas, so removing dead flowers and keeping them away from ripe fruits or vegetables also helps them bloom longer.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> They grow during their peak seasons of April to June and August to October in the Northern Hemisphere<ref name=":0" /> and bloom in a variety of colors such as white, yellow, orange, red, purple, pink,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> including multicolored patterns.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
They are ecologically diverse, particularly the New World species (Saerorhinum).<ref name=Oyama/>
Cultivation
The snapdragon is an important garden plant, widely cultivated from tropical to temperate zones as a bedding, rockery, herbaceous border or container plant.<ref name="Tolety-2011" /> Cultivars have showy white, crimson, or yellow bilabiate flowers (with two lips). It is also important as a model organism in botanical research, and its genome has been studied in detail.
Genetic studies
Antirrhinum is a genus that has been used from the earliest genetic studies of Gregor Mendel and Charles Darwin and was used as a model by Erwin Baur.<ref name="Tolety-2011" /> Together with closely related genera, it has become a model organism for the investigation of the genetic basis of plant development, particularly floral development.<ref name=Oyama/><ref name=Wilson/> The genus is a typical example of incomplete dominance by the red allele with the anthocyanin pigment. Any cross between red-flowered and white-flowered snapdragons, give an intermediate and heterozygous phenotype with pink flowers, that carries both the dominant and recessive alleles.<ref name="incomplete dominance">Template:Cite book</ref>
Several species of Antirrhinum are self-incompatible, meaning that a plant cannot be fertilised by its own pollen.<ref name="Xue et al 1996">Template:Cite journal</ref> Self-incompatibility in the genus has been studied since the early 1900s.<ref name="Xue et al 1996"/> Self-incompatibility in Antirrhinum species is controlled gametophytically and shares many important features with self-incompatibility systems in Rosaceae and Solanaceae.<ref name="Takayama and Isogai 2005">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Uses
In addition to growing the plants for cut flowers, the seeds have been used to extract edible oils, particularly in Russia, while the leaves and flowers have been considered to possess antiphlogistic (anti-inflammatory) properties and have been used in poultices. A green dye has also been extracted from the flowers.<ref name="Tolety-2011">Template:Cite book</ref>
Gallery
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Yellow snapdragon flower
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Antirrhinum majus flower
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Pink snapdragon flower
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Antirrhinum majus flower
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Pink snapdragon flower
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White snapdragon flower
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Yellow snapdragon flower
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Antirrhinum majus flower
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Variety in Pakistan
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Variety in Pakistan
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Yellow snapdragon flower
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Pink snapdragon flower
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White snapdragon flower
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Yellow snapdragon flower
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Pink snapdragon flower
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White snapdragon flower
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Antirrhinum majus flower
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Variety in Pakistan
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Yellow snapdragon flower
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Variety in Pakistan
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Variety in Pakistan
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Yellow snapdragon flower
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Pink snapdragon flower
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White snapdragon flower
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Yellow snapdragon flower
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Pink snapdragon flower
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Antirrhinum in Pakistan
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Snapdragon cultivar in India
References
Sources
- Sutton, D.A. (1988) A Revision of the Tribe Antirrhineae. Oxford: OUP.
- Rothmaler W. 1956. Taxonomische Monographie der Gattung Antirrhinum. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin, Germany.
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