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Asclepias

Asclepias is a genus of herbaceous, perennial, flowering plants known as milkweeds, named for their latex, a milky substance containing cardiac glycosides termed cardenolides, exuded where cells are damaged.[4][5][6] Most species are toxic to humans and many other species, primarily due to the presence of cardenolides. However, as with many such plants, some species feed upon them (e.g. their leaves) or from them (e.g. their nectar). The most notable of them is the monarch butterfly, which uses and requires certain milkweeds as host plants for their larvae.

Asclepias
Asclepias incarnata (swamp milkweed) flowers and a monarch butterfly
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Gentianales
Family: Apocynaceae
Subfamily: Asclepiadoideae
Tribe: Asclepiadeae
Subtribe: Asclepiadinae
Genus: Asclepias
L.[1]
Type species
Asclepias syriaca
L.
Species[2]

See List of Asclepias species

Synonyms[3]
List
  • Acerates Elliott
  • Acerotis Raf.
  • Acerates Stopp
  • Anantherix Nutt.
  • Anthanotis Raf.
  • Asclepiodella Small
  • Asclepiodora A.Gray
  • Biventraria Small
  • Crassa Ruppius
  • Dassovia Neck.
  • Odontostelma Rendle
  • Oligoron Raf.
  • Onistis Raf.
  • Otanema Raf.
  • Otaria Kunth
  • Oxypteryx Greene
  • Podostemma Greene
  • Podostigma Elliott
  • Polyotus Nutt.
  • Schizonotus A.Gray
  • Solanoa Greene
  • Solanoana Kuntze
  • Stylandra Nutt.
  • Trachycalymma (K.Schum.) Bullock

The genus contains over 200 species distributed broadly across Africa, North America, and South America.[7] It previously belonged to the family Asclepiadaceae, which is now classified as the subfamily Asclepiadoideae of the dogbane family, Apocynaceae.

The genus was formally described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753,[8] who named it after Asclepius, the Greek god of healing.[9]

Flowers edit

 
A monarch butterfly on swamp milkweed
 
Asclepias syriaca seed pods, upper image from August and lower from December
 
Milkweed sprout, a few days after sowing
 
Chemical structure of oleandrin, one of the cardiac glycosides

Members of the genus produce some of the most complex flowers in the plant kingdom, comparable to orchids in complexity. Five petals reflex backwards revealing a gynostegium surrounded by a five-membrane corona. The corona is composed of a five-paired hood-and-horn structure with the hood acting as a sheath for the inner horn. Glands holding pollinia are found between the hoods. The size, shape and color of the horns and hoods are often important identifying characteristics for species in the genus Asclepias.[10]

Pollination in this genus is accomplished in an unusual manner. Pollen is grouped into complex structures called pollinia (or "pollen sacs"), rather than being individual grains or tetrads, as is typical for most plants. The feet or mouthparts of flower-visiting insects, such as bees, wasps, and butterflies, slip into one of the five slits in each flower formed by adjacent anthers. The bases of the pollinia then mechanically attach to the insect, so that a pair of pollen sacs can be pulled free when the pollinator flies off, assuming the insect is large enough to produce the necessary pulling force (if not, the insect may become trapped and die).[11] Pollination is effected by the reverse procedure, in which one of the pollinia becomes trapped within the anther slit. Large-bodied hymenopterans (bees, wasps) are the most common and best pollinators, accounting for over 50% of all Asclepias pollination,[12] whereas monarch butterflies are poor pollinators of milkweed.[5]

 
Male Pepsis grossa, a typical milkweed-pollinating wasp
 
Honeybee on antelope horn (Asclepias asperula) showing pollinia attached to legs

Asclepias species produce their seeds in pods termed follicles. The seeds, which are arranged in overlapping rows, bear a cluster of white, silky, filament-like hairs known as the coma[13] (often referred to by other names such as pappus, "floss", "plume", or "silk"). The follicles ripen and split open, and the seeds, each carried by its coma, are blown by the wind. Some, but not all, milkweeds also reproduce by clonal (or vegetative) reproduction.

Selected species edit

Image Scientific name Common name Distribution
  Asclepias albicans Whitestem milkweed Native to the Mojave and Sonoran deserts
  Asclepias amplexicaulis Blunt-leaved milkweed Native to central and eastern United States
  Asclepias asperula Antelope horns Native to American southwest and northern Mexico
  Asclepias californica California milkweed Native to central and southern California
  Asclepias cordifolia Heart-leaf milkweed Native to the Sierra Nevada and Cascade Range up to 2,000 m (6,600 ft).
  Asclepias cryptoceras Pallid milkweed Native to the western United States.
  Asclepias curassavica Scarlet milkweed, tropical milkweed, bloodflower, bastard ipecacuanha Native to the American tropics, introduced to other continents
  Asclepias curtissii Curtiss's milkweed Endemic to sandy areas of Florida
  Asclepias eriocarpa Woollypod milkweed Native to California, Baja California, and Nevada
  Asclepias erosa Desert milkweed Native to California, Arizona, and Baja California
  Asclepias exaltata Poke milkweed Native to eastern North America
  Asclepias fascicularis Narrow-leaf milkweed Native to Western United States
  Asclepias hirtella Tall green milkweed
  Asclepias humistrata Sandhill milkweed Native to southeastern United States
  Asclepias incarnata Swamp milkweed Native to wetlands of North America
  Asclepias lanceolata Lanceolate milkweed (Cedar Hill milkweed) Native to coastal plain of eastern United States from Texas to New Jersey
  Asclepias linaria Pine needle milkweed Native to Mojave and Sonoran deserts
  Asclepias meadii Mead's milkweed Native to midwestern United States
  Asclepias nyctaginifolia Mojave milkweed native to the American southwest
  Asclepias purpurascens Purple milkweed Native to eastern, southern, and midwestern United States
  Asclepias prostrata Prostrate milkweed Native to Texas and northern Mexico
  Asclepias quadrifolia Four-leaved milkweed Native to eastern United States and Canada
  Asclepias rubra Red milkweed
  Asclepias solanoana Serpentine milkweed Native to northern California
  Asclepias speciosa Showy milkweed Native to western United States and Canada
  Asclepias subulata Rush milkweed Native to southwestern North America
  Asclepias subverticillata Horsetail milkweed[14]
  Asclepias sullivantii Sullivant's milkweed
  Asclepias syriaca Common milkweed
  Asclepias texana Texas milkweed
  Asclepias tuberosa Butterfly weed, pleurisy root
  Asclepias uncialis Wheel milkweed
  Asclepias variegata White milkweed
  Asclepias verticillata Whorled milkweed
  Asclepias viridiflora Green milkweed
  Asclepias viridis Green antelopehorn, spider milkweed
  Asclepias welshii Welsh's milkweed

There are also 12 species of Asclepias in South America, among them: A. barjoniifolia, A. boliviensis, A. curassavica, A. mellodora, A. candida, A. flava, and A. pilgeriana.

Ecology edit

Milkweeds are an important nectar source for native bees, wasps, and other nectar-seeking insects, though non-native honey bees commonly get trapped in the stigmatic slits and die.[11][15] Milkweeds are also the larval food source for monarch butterflies and their relatives, as well as a variety of other herbivorous insects (including numerous beetles, moths, and true bugs) specialized to feed on the plants despite their chemical defenses.[5]

Milkweeds use three primary defenses to limit damage caused by caterpillars: hairs on the leaves (trichomes), cardenolide toxins, and latex fluids.[16] Data from a DNA study indicate that, generally, more recently evolved milkweed species ("derived" in botany parlance) use these preventive strategies less but grow faster than older species, potentially regrowing faster than caterpillars can consume them.[17][18][19]

Research indicates that the very high cardenolide content of Asclepias linaria reduces the impact of the Ophryocystis elektroscirrha (OE) parasite on the monarch butterfly, Danaus plexippus. The OE parasite causes holes to form in the wings of fully developed monarch butterflies. This causes weakened endurance and an inability to migrate. The parasite only infects monarchs when they are larvae and caterpillars, but the detriment is when they are in their butterfly form.[20] By contrast, some species of Asclepias are extremely poor sources of cardenolides, such as Asclepias fascicularis, Asclepias tuberosa, and Asclepias angustifolia.[citation needed]

Monarch butterfly conservation and milkweeds edit

The leaves of Asclepias species are a food source for monarch butterfly larvae and some other milkweed butterflies.[5] These plants are often used in butterfly gardening and monarch waystations in an effort to help increase the dwindling monarch population.[21]

However, some milkweed species are not suitable for butterfly gardens and monarch waystations. For example, A. curassavica, or tropical milkweed, is often planted as an ornamental in butterfly gardens outside of its native range of Mexico and Central America. Year-round plantings of this species in the United States are controversial and criticised, as they may lead to new overwintering sites along the U.S. Gulf Coast and the consequent year-round breeding of monarchs.[22] This is thought to adversely affect migration patterns, and to cause a dramatic build-up of the dangerous parasite, Ophryocystis elektroscirrha.[23] New research also has shown that monarch larvae reared on tropical milkweed show reduced migratory development (reproductive diapause), and when migratory adults are exposed to tropical milkweed, it stimulates reproductive tissue growth.[24]

Because of this, it is most often suggested to grow milkweeds that are native to the geographical area they are planted in to prevent negative impacts on monarch butterflies.[25][26]

Monarch caterpillars do not favor butterfly weed (A. tuberosa), perhaps because the leaves of that milkweed species contain very little cardenolide.[27] Some other milkweeds may have similar characteristics.

Uses edit

Milkweeds are not grown commercially in large scale, but the plants have had many uses throughout human history.[5] Milkweeds have a long history of medicinal, every day, and military use. The Omaha people from Nebraska, the Menomin from Wisconsin and upper Michigan, the Dakota from Minnesota, and the Ponca people from Nebraska, traditionally used common milkweed (A. syriaca) for medicinal purposes.[citation needed] The bast fibers of some species can be used for rope. The Miwok people of northern California used heart-leaf milkweed (A. cordifolia) for its stems, which they dried and used for cords, strings and ropes.[28]

The fine, silky fluff attached to milkweed seeds, which allows them to be distributed long distances on the wind, is known as floss. Milkweed floss is incredibly difficult to spin due to how short and smooth the filaments are, but blending it with as little as 25% wool or other fiber can produce workable yarn.[29]

A study of the insulative properties of various materials found that milkweed floss was outperformed by other materials in terms of insulation, loft, and lumpiness, but it scored well when mixed with down feathers.[30] The milkweed filaments from the coma (the "floss") are hollow and coated with wax, and have good insulation qualities. During World War II, more than 5,000 t (5,500 short tons) of milkweed floss was collected in the US as a substitute for kapok.[31][32] Milkweed is grown commercially as a hypoallergenic filling for pillows[33] and as insulation for winter coats.[34] Using milkweed floss for these purposes could provide a plant-based alternative to down and promote the growth of milkweed in areas where it has declined, though there is some concern that the environmental impacts could be negative if monoculture is used.[35]Asclepias is also known as "Silk of America"[36] which is a strand of common milkweed (A. syriaca) gathered mainly in the valley of the Saint Lawrence River in Canada. Milkweed floss can be used in thermal insulation and acoustic insulation. The floss is also highly buoyant and water-repellent, but absorbs oil readily.[37] Due to its oil-absorbing properties, it can be used for oil spill cleanup.[38][39][40]

 
Seeds of Asclepias syriaca (Common Milkweed)

Milkweed latex contains about two percent latex, and during World War II both Nazi Germany and the US attempted to use it as a source of natural rubber, although no record of large-scale success has been found.[41]

Many milkweed species also contain cardiac glycoside poisons that inhibit animal cells from maintaining a proper K+, Ca2+ concentration gradient.[6] As a result, many peoples of South America and Africa used arrows poisoned with these glycosides to fight and hunt more effectively. Some milkweeds are toxic enough to cause death when animals consume large quantities of the plant. Some milkweeds also cause mild dermatitis in some who come in contact with them. Nonetheless, some species can be made edible if properly processed.[5]

References edit

  1. ^ "Taxon: Asclepias L." Germplasm Resources Information Network. United States Department of Agriculture. 2003-03-13. Retrieved 2013-02-05.
  2. ^ "Asclepias". NCBI taxonomy. Bethesda, MD: National Center for Biotechnology Information. Retrieved 10 August 2018.
  3. ^ "Asclepias L. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science". Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 2024-02-12.
  4. ^ Singh, B.; Rastogi, R. P. (1970). "Cardenolides-glycosides and genins". Phytochemistry. 9 (2): 315–331. Bibcode:1970PChem...9..315S. doi:10.1016/s0031-9422(00)85141-9.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Agrawal, Anurag (2017-03-07). Monarchs and Milkweed: A Migrating Butterfly, a Poisonous Plant, and Their Remarkable Story of Coevolution. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9781400884766.
  6. ^ a b Agrawal, Anurag A.; Petschenka, Georg; Bingham, Robin A.; Weber, Marjorie G.; Rasmann, Sergio (2012-04-01). "Toxic cardenolides: chemical ecology and coevolution of specialized plant–herbivore interactions". New Phytologist. 194 (1): 28–45. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8137.2011.04049.x. ISSN 1469-8137. PMID 22292897.
  7. ^ "Asclepias L." Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 2018-11-23.
  8. ^ "Asclepias". ipni.org. International Plant Names Index. Retrieved 2018-11-23.
  9. ^ Quattrocchi, Umberto (29 November 1999). CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names: Common Names, Scientific Names, Eponyms, Synonyms, and Etymology. CRC Press. p. 211. ISBN 978-0-8493-2673-8. Latin asclepias and Greek asklepias for the common swallowwort; Asclepius, Greek god of medicine, the worship of Asclepius was centered in Epidaurus. See W.K.C. Guthrie, The Greeks and Their Gods, 1950; Carl Linnaeus, Species Plantarum. 214. 1753 and Genera Plantarum. Ed. 5. 102. 1754.
  10. ^ http://orbisec.com/milkweed-flower-morphology-and-terminology/ Milkweed Flower Morphology
  11. ^ a b Robertson, C. (1887) Insect relations of certain asclepiads. I. Botanical Gazette 12: 207–216
  12. ^ Ollerton, J. & S. Liede. 1997. Pollination systems in the Asclepiadaceae: a survey and preliminary analysis. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society (1997), 62: 593–610.
  13. ^ Sacchi, C.F. (1987) Variability in dispersal ability of Common Milkweed, Asclepias syriaca, seeds, Oikos Vol. 49, pp. 191–198
  14. ^ Asclepias subverticillata (A. Gray) Vail, USDA PLANTS
  15. ^ Frost, S.W. (1965). "Insects and pollinia". Ecology. 46 (4): 556–558. Bibcode:1965Ecol...46..556F. doi:10.2307/1934896. JSTOR 1934896.
  16. ^ Agrawal, Anurag A.; Ali, Jared G.; Rasmann, Sergio; Fishbein, Mark (2015). "4 - Macroevolutionary Trends in the Defense of Milkweeds against Monarchs - Latex, Cardenolides, and Tolerance of Herbivory". In Oberhauser, Karen (ed.). Monarchs in a changing world: biology and conservation of an iconic butterfly. Ithaca London: Comstock Publishing, a division of Cornell University Press. pp. 47–59. ISBN 978-0-8014-5560-5. OCLC 918150494.
  17. ^ Ramanujan, Krishna (Winter 2008). "Discoveries: Milkweed evolves to shrug off predation". Northern Woodlands. 15 (4): 56.
  18. ^ Agrawal, Anurag A.; Fishbein, Mark (2008-07-22). "Phylogenetic escalation and decline of plant defense strategies". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 105 (29): 10057–10060. Bibcode:2008PNAS..10510057A. doi:10.1073/pnas.0802368105. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 2481309. PMID 18645183.
  19. ^ Callis-Duehl, Kristine; Vittoz, Pascal; Defossez, Emmanuel; Rasmann, Sergio (2016-12-20). "Community-level relaxation of plant defenses against herbivores at high elevation". Plant Ecology. Springer. 218 (3): 291–304. doi:10.1007/s11258-016-0688-4. ISSN 1385-0237. S2CID 34282179.
  20. ^ . Animals. 2018-12-21. Archived from the original on February 24, 2021. Retrieved 2022-12-01.
  21. ^ (1) . University of Kansas: Monarch Watch. Archived from the original on 2 February 2020. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
    (2) . University of Kansas, Entomology Department. Archived from the original on 18 Nov 2019. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
    (3) (PDF). San Francisco, California: Pollinator Partnership. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 March 2020. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
  22. ^ Howard, Elizabeth; Aschen, Harlen; Davis, Andrew K. (2010). "Citizen Science Observations of Monarch Butterfly Overwintering in the Southern United States". Psyche: A Journal of Entomology. 2010: 1. doi:10.1155/2010/689301.
  23. ^ Satterfield, D. A.; Maerz, J. C.; Altizer, S (2015). "Loss of migratory behaviour increases infection risk for a butterfly host". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 282 (1801): 20141734. doi:10.1098/rspb.2014.1734. PMC 4308991. PMID 25589600.
  24. ^ Majewska, Ania A.; Altizer, Sonia (16 August 2019). "Exposure to Non-Native Tropical Milkweed Promotes Reproductive Development in Migratory Monarch Butterflies". Insects. 10 (8): 253. doi:10.3390/insects10080253. PMC 6724006. PMID 31426310.
  25. ^ "Milkweed for Monarchs". The National Wildlife Federation.
  26. ^ "Milkweed Map - discover native milkweed". GROW MILKWEED PLANTS. Retrieved 2022-04-10.
  27. ^ (1) Pocius, Victoria M.; Debinski, Diane M.; Pleasants, John M.; Bidne, Keith G.; Hellmich, Richard L. (January 8, 2018). "Monarch butterflies do not place all of their eggs in one basket: oviposition on nine Midwestern milkweed species". Ecosphere. Ecological Society of America (ESA). 9 (1): 1–13. Bibcode:2018Ecosp...9E2064P. doi:10.1002/ecs2.2064. In our study, the least preferred milkweed species A. tuberosa (no choice; Fig. 2) and A. verticillata (choice; Fig. 3A) both have low cardenolide levels recorded in the literature (Roeske et al. 1976, Agrawal et al. 2009, 2015, Rasmann and Agrawal 2011)
    (2) Abugattas, Alonzo (3 January 2017). "Monarch Way Stations". Capital Naturalist. from the original on 5 June 2017. Retrieved 5 June 2017 – via Blogger. It is the least favored by monarch caterpillars though because it has very little toxin (cardiac glycosides) in its leaves, but other butterflies and adult monarchs love it as a nectar source..
    (3) "Butterfly Weed: Asclepias tuberosa" (PDF). Becker County, Minnesota: Becker Soil and Water Conservation District. (PDF) from the original on September 11, 2020. Retrieved September 11, 2020. Unlike other milkweeds, this plant has a clear sap, and the level of toxic cardiac glycosides is consistently low (although other toxic compounds may be present)..
  28. ^ Johnson, Glen A (2019). Milkweed of the United States, including Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands. Amazon KDP. p. 7. ISBN 9781081170653.
  29. ^ Nehring, Julia. "The potential of milkweed floss as a natural fiber in the textile industry" (PDF). Center for Undergraduate Research.
  30. ^ McCullough, Elizabeth A. (April 1991). "Evaluation of Milkweed Floss as an Insulative Fill Material". Textile Research Journal. 61 (4): 203–210. doi:10.1177/004051759106100403. S2CID 17783131.
  31. ^ Hauswirth, Katherine (2008-10-26). "The Heroic Milkweed". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 2014-02-14.
  32. ^ Wykes, Gerald (2014-02-04). "A Weed Goes to War, and Michigan Provides the Ammunition". MLive Media Group. Michigan History Magazine. Retrieved 2014-02-14.
  33. ^ Evangelista, R.L. (2007). "Milkweed seed wing removal to improve oil extraction". Industrial Crops and Products. 25 (2): 210–217. doi:10.1016/j.indcrop.2006.10.002.
  34. ^ Bernstein, Jaela (2016-10-13). "How a Quebec company used a weed to create a one-of-a-kind winter coat". CBC News. Retrieved 2018-01-05.
  35. ^ Bauck, Whitney (23 January 2020). "THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE MATERIALS: MILKWEED FLOSS". Fashionista.com.
  36. ^ Charles Sigisbert, Sonnini (1810). Traité de l'asclépiade.
  37. ^ Augustine, Kathy. "Monarchs, Milkweed, and You". spinoffmagazine.com. Spin Off Magazine.
  38. ^ Choi, Hyung Min; Cloud, Rinn M. (1992). "Natural sorbents in oil spill clean-up". Environmental Science & Technology. 26 (4): 772. Bibcode:1992EnST...26..772C. doi:10.1021/es00028a016.
  39. ^ "La soie d'Amérique passe en production industrielle". Radio Canada. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
  40. ^ "Milkweed touted as oil-spill super-sucker — with butterfly benefits". cbc.ca. 2 December 2014.
  41. ^ Beckett, R. E.; Stitt, R. S. (May 1935). The desert milkweed (Asclepias subulata) as a possible source of rubber (Technical report). United States Department of Agriculture. 73.
  • Everitt, J.H.; Lonard, R.L.; Little, C.R. (2007). Weeds in South Texas and Northern Mexico. Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press. ISBN 0-89672-614-2

External links edit

  • Milkweed test-cultivated for the insulation value of floss
  • Milkweed in Handbook of Energy Crops
  • Common milkweed production research at Western Illinois University

asclepias, milkweed, redirects, here, other, uses, milkweed, disambiguation, confused, with, asclepius, genus, herbaceous, perennial, flowering, plants, known, milkweeds, named, their, latex, milky, substance, containing, cardiac, glycosides, termed, cardenoli. Milkweed redirects here For other uses see Milkweed disambiguation Not to be confused with Asclepius Asclepias is a genus of herbaceous perennial flowering plants known as milkweeds named for their latex a milky substance containing cardiac glycosides termed cardenolides exuded where cells are damaged 4 5 6 Most species are toxic to humans and many other species primarily due to the presence of cardenolides However as with many such plants some species feed upon them e g their leaves or from them e g their nectar The most notable of them is the monarch butterfly which uses and requires certain milkweeds as host plants for their larvae AsclepiasAsclepias incarnata swamp milkweed flowers and a monarch butterflyScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade AsteridsOrder GentianalesFamily ApocynaceaeSubfamily AsclepiadoideaeTribe AsclepiadeaeSubtribe AsclepiadinaeGenus AsclepiasL 1 Type speciesAsclepias syriacaL Species 2 See List of Asclepias speciesSynonyms 3 ListAcerates Elliott Acerotis Raf Acerates Stopp Anantherix Nutt Anthanotis Raf Asclepiodella Small Asclepiodora A Gray Biventraria Small Crassa Ruppius Dassovia Neck Odontostelma Rendle Oligoron Raf Onistis Raf Otanema Raf Otaria Kunth Oxypteryx Greene Podostemma Greene Podostigma Elliott Polyotus Nutt Schizonotus A Gray Solanoa Greene Solanoana Kuntze Stylandra Nutt Trachycalymma K Schum BullockThe genus contains over 200 species distributed broadly across Africa North America and South America 7 It previously belonged to the family Asclepiadaceae which is now classified as the subfamily Asclepiadoideae of the dogbane family Apocynaceae The genus was formally described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 8 who named it after Asclepius the Greek god of healing 9 Contents 1 Flowers 2 Selected species 3 Ecology 3 1 Monarch butterfly conservation and milkweeds 4 Uses 5 References 6 External linksFlowers edit nbsp A monarch butterfly on swamp milkweed nbsp Asclepias syriaca seed pods upper image from August and lower from December nbsp Milkweed sprout a few days after sowing nbsp Chemical structure of oleandrin one of the cardiac glycosidesMembers of the genus produce some of the most complex flowers in the plant kingdom comparable to orchids in complexity Five petals reflex backwards revealing a gynostegium surrounded by a five membrane corona The corona is composed of a five paired hood and horn structure with the hood acting as a sheath for the inner horn Glands holding pollinia are found between the hoods The size shape and color of the horns and hoods are often important identifying characteristics for species in the genus Asclepias 10 Pollination in this genus is accomplished in an unusual manner Pollen is grouped into complex structures called pollinia or pollen sacs rather than being individual grains or tetrads as is typical for most plants The feet or mouthparts of flower visiting insects such as bees wasps and butterflies slip into one of the five slits in each flower formed by adjacent anthers The bases of the pollinia then mechanically attach to the insect so that a pair of pollen sacs can be pulled free when the pollinator flies off assuming the insect is large enough to produce the necessary pulling force if not the insect may become trapped and die 11 Pollination is effected by the reverse procedure in which one of the pollinia becomes trapped within the anther slit Large bodied hymenopterans bees wasps are the most common and best pollinators accounting for over 50 of all Asclepias pollination 12 whereas monarch butterflies are poor pollinators of milkweed 5 nbsp Male Pepsis grossa a typical milkweed pollinating wasp nbsp Honeybee on antelope horn Asclepias asperula showing pollinia attached to legsAsclepias species produce their seeds in pods termed follicles The seeds which are arranged in overlapping rows bear a cluster of white silky filament like hairs known as the coma 13 often referred to by other names such as pappus floss plume or silk The follicles ripen and split open and the seeds each carried by its coma are blown by the wind Some but not all milkweeds also reproduce by clonal or vegetative reproduction Selected species editFor a complete list see List of Asclepias species Image Scientific name Common name Distribution nbsp Asclepias albicans Whitestem milkweed Native to the Mojave and Sonoran deserts nbsp Asclepias amplexicaulis Blunt leaved milkweed Native to central and eastern United States nbsp Asclepias asperula Antelope horns Native to American southwest and northern Mexico nbsp Asclepias californica California milkweed Native to central and southern California nbsp Asclepias cordifolia Heart leaf milkweed Native to the Sierra Nevada and Cascade Range up to 2 000 m 6 600 ft nbsp Asclepias cryptoceras Pallid milkweed Native to the western United States nbsp Asclepias curassavica Scarlet milkweed tropical milkweed bloodflower bastard ipecacuanha Native to the American tropics introduced to other continents nbsp Asclepias curtissii Curtiss s milkweed Endemic to sandy areas of Florida nbsp Asclepias eriocarpa Woollypod milkweed Native to California Baja California and Nevada nbsp Asclepias erosa Desert milkweed Native to California Arizona and Baja California nbsp Asclepias exaltata Poke milkweed Native to eastern North America nbsp Asclepias fascicularis Narrow leaf milkweed Native to Western United States nbsp Asclepias hirtella Tall green milkweed nbsp Asclepias humistrata Sandhill milkweed Native to southeastern United States nbsp Asclepias incarnata Swamp milkweed Native to wetlands of North America nbsp Asclepias lanceolata Lanceolate milkweed Cedar Hill milkweed Native to coastal plain of eastern United States from Texas to New Jersey nbsp Asclepias linaria Pine needle milkweed Native to Mojave and Sonoran deserts nbsp Asclepias meadii Mead s milkweed Native to midwestern United States nbsp Asclepias nyctaginifolia Mojave milkweed native to the American southwest nbsp Asclepias purpurascens Purple milkweed Native to eastern southern and midwestern United States nbsp Asclepias prostrata Prostrate milkweed Native to Texas and northern Mexico nbsp Asclepias quadrifolia Four leaved milkweed Native to eastern United States and Canada nbsp Asclepias rubra Red milkweed nbsp Asclepias solanoana Serpentine milkweed Native to northern California nbsp Asclepias speciosa Showy milkweed Native to western United States and Canada nbsp Asclepias subulata Rush milkweed Native to southwestern North America nbsp Asclepias subverticillata Horsetail milkweed 14 nbsp Asclepias sullivantii Sullivant s milkweed nbsp Asclepias syriaca Common milkweed nbsp Asclepias texana Texas milkweed nbsp Asclepias tuberosa Butterfly weed pleurisy root nbsp Asclepias uncialis Wheel milkweed nbsp Asclepias variegata White milkweed nbsp Asclepias verticillata Whorled milkweed nbsp Asclepias viridiflora Green milkweed nbsp Asclepias viridis Green antelopehorn spider milkweed nbsp Asclepias welshii Welsh s milkweedThere are also 12 species of Asclepias in South America among them A barjoniifolia A boliviensis A curassavica A mellodora A candida A flava and A pilgeriana Ecology editMilkweeds are an important nectar source for native bees wasps and other nectar seeking insects though non native honey bees commonly get trapped in the stigmatic slits and die 11 15 Milkweeds are also the larval food source for monarch butterflies and their relatives as well as a variety of other herbivorous insects including numerous beetles moths and true bugs specialized to feed on the plants despite their chemical defenses 5 Milkweeds use three primary defenses to limit damage caused by caterpillars hairs on the leaves trichomes cardenolide toxins and latex fluids 16 Data from a DNA study indicate that generally more recently evolved milkweed species derived in botany parlance use these preventive strategies less but grow faster than older species potentially regrowing faster than caterpillars can consume them 17 18 19 Research indicates that the very high cardenolide content of Asclepias linaria reduces the impact of the Ophryocystis elektroscirrha OE parasite on the monarch butterfly Danaus plexippus The OE parasite causes holes to form in the wings of fully developed monarch butterflies This causes weakened endurance and an inability to migrate The parasite only infects monarchs when they are larvae and caterpillars but the detriment is when they are in their butterfly form 20 By contrast some species of Asclepias are extremely poor sources of cardenolides such as Asclepias fascicularis Asclepias tuberosa and Asclepias angustifolia citation needed Monarch butterfly conservation and milkweeds edit The leaves of Asclepias species are a food source for monarch butterfly larvae and some other milkweed butterflies 5 These plants are often used in butterfly gardening and monarch waystations in an effort to help increase the dwindling monarch population 21 However some milkweed species are not suitable for butterfly gardens and monarch waystations For example A curassavica or tropical milkweed is often planted as an ornamental in butterfly gardens outside of its native range of Mexico and Central America Year round plantings of this species in the United States are controversial and criticised as they may lead to new overwintering sites along the U S Gulf Coast and the consequent year round breeding of monarchs 22 This is thought to adversely affect migration patterns and to cause a dramatic build up of the dangerous parasite Ophryocystis elektroscirrha 23 New research also has shown that monarch larvae reared on tropical milkweed show reduced migratory development reproductive diapause and when migratory adults are exposed to tropical milkweed it stimulates reproductive tissue growth 24 Because of this it is most often suggested to grow milkweeds that are native to the geographical area they are planted in to prevent negative impacts on monarch butterflies 25 26 Monarch caterpillars do not favor butterfly weed A tuberosa perhaps because the leaves of that milkweed species contain very little cardenolide 27 Some other milkweeds may have similar characteristics Uses editMilkweeds are not grown commercially in large scale but the plants have had many uses throughout human history 5 Milkweeds have a long history of medicinal every day and military use The Omaha people from Nebraska the Menomin from Wisconsin and upper Michigan the Dakota from Minnesota and the Ponca people from Nebraska traditionally used common milkweed A syriaca for medicinal purposes citation needed The bast fibers of some species can be used for rope The Miwok people of northern California used heart leaf milkweed A cordifolia for its stems which they dried and used for cords strings and ropes 28 The fine silky fluff attached to milkweed seeds which allows them to be distributed long distances on the wind is known as floss Milkweed floss is incredibly difficult to spin due to how short and smooth the filaments are but blending it with as little as 25 wool or other fiber can produce workable yarn 29 A study of the insulative properties of various materials found that milkweed floss was outperformed by other materials in terms of insulation loft and lumpiness but it scored well when mixed with down feathers 30 The milkweed filaments from the coma the floss are hollow and coated with wax and have good insulation qualities During World War II more than 5 000 t 5 500 short tons of milkweed floss was collected in the US as a substitute for kapok 31 32 Milkweed is grown commercially as a hypoallergenic filling for pillows 33 and as insulation for winter coats 34 Using milkweed floss for these purposes could provide a plant based alternative to down and promote the growth of milkweed in areas where it has declined though there is some concern that the environmental impacts could be negative if monoculture is used 35 Asclepias is also known as Silk of America 36 which is a strand of common milkweed A syriaca gathered mainly in the valley of the Saint Lawrence River in Canada Milkweed floss can be used in thermal insulation and acoustic insulation The floss is also highly buoyant and water repellent but absorbs oil readily 37 Due to its oil absorbing properties it can be used for oil spill cleanup 38 39 40 nbsp Seeds of Asclepias syriaca Common Milkweed Milkweed latex contains about two percent latex and during World War II both Nazi Germany and the US attempted to use it as a source of natural rubber although no record of large scale success has been found 41 Many milkweed species also contain cardiac glycoside poisons that inhibit animal cells from maintaining a proper K Ca2 concentration gradient 6 As a result many peoples of South America and Africa used arrows poisoned with these glycosides to fight and hunt more effectively Some milkweeds are toxic enough to cause death when animals consume large quantities of the plant Some milkweeds also cause mild dermatitis in some who come in contact with them Nonetheless some species can be made edible if properly processed 5 References edit Taxon Asclepias L Germplasm Resources Information Network United States Department of Agriculture 2003 03 13 Retrieved 2013 02 05 Asclepias NCBI taxonomy Bethesda MD National Center for Biotechnology Information Retrieved 10 August 2018 Asclepias L Plants of the World Online Kew Science Plants of the World Online Retrieved 2024 02 12 Singh B Rastogi R P 1970 Cardenolides glycosides and genins Phytochemistry 9 2 315 331 Bibcode 1970PChem 9 315S doi 10 1016 s0031 9422 00 85141 9 a b c d e f Agrawal Anurag 2017 03 07 Monarchs and Milkweed A Migrating Butterfly a Poisonous Plant and Their Remarkable Story of Coevolution Princeton University Press ISBN 9781400884766 a b Agrawal Anurag A Petschenka Georg Bingham Robin A Weber Marjorie G Rasmann Sergio 2012 04 01 Toxic cardenolides chemical ecology and coevolution of specialized plant herbivore interactions New Phytologist 194 1 28 45 doi 10 1111 j 1469 8137 2011 04049 x ISSN 1469 8137 PMID 22292897 Asclepias L Plants of the World Online Royal Botanical Gardens Kew Retrieved 2018 11 23 Asclepias ipni org International Plant Names Index Retrieved 2018 11 23 Quattrocchi Umberto 29 November 1999 CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names Common Names Scientific Names Eponyms Synonyms and Etymology CRC Press p 211 ISBN 978 0 8493 2673 8 Latin asclepias and Greek asklepias for the common swallowwort Asclepius Greek god of medicine the worship of Asclepius was centered in Epidaurus See W K C Guthrie The Greeks and Their Gods 1950 Carl Linnaeus Species Plantarum 214 1753 and Genera Plantarum Ed 5 102 1754 http orbisec com milkweed flower morphology and terminology Milkweed Flower Morphology a b Robertson C 1887 Insect relations of certain asclepiads I Botanical Gazette 12 207 216 Ollerton J amp S Liede 1997 Pollination systems in the Asclepiadaceae a survey and preliminary analysis Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 1997 62 593 610 Sacchi C F 1987 Variability in dispersal ability of Common Milkweed Asclepias syriaca seeds Oikos Vol 49 pp 191 198 Asclepias subverticillata A Gray Vail USDA PLANTS Frost S W 1965 Insects and pollinia Ecology 46 4 556 558 Bibcode 1965Ecol 46 556F doi 10 2307 1934896 JSTOR 1934896 Agrawal Anurag A Ali Jared G Rasmann Sergio Fishbein Mark 2015 4 Macroevolutionary Trends in the Defense of Milkweeds against Monarchs Latex Cardenolides and Tolerance of Herbivory In Oberhauser Karen ed Monarchs in a changing world biology and conservation of an iconic butterfly Ithaca London Comstock Publishing a division of Cornell University Press pp 47 59 ISBN 978 0 8014 5560 5 OCLC 918150494 Ramanujan Krishna Winter 2008 Discoveries Milkweed evolves to shrug off predation Northern Woodlands 15 4 56 Agrawal Anurag A Fishbein Mark 2008 07 22 Phylogenetic escalation and decline of plant defense strategies Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105 29 10057 10060 Bibcode 2008PNAS 10510057A doi 10 1073 pnas 0802368105 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 2481309 PMID 18645183 Callis Duehl Kristine Vittoz Pascal Defossez Emmanuel Rasmann Sergio 2016 12 20 Community level relaxation of plant defenses against herbivores at high elevation Plant Ecology Springer 218 3 291 304 doi 10 1007 s11258 016 0688 4 ISSN 1385 0237 S2CID 34282179 We re losing monarchs fast here s why Animals 2018 12 21 Archived from the original on February 24 2021 Retrieved 2022 12 01 1 Butterfly Gardening Introduction University of Kansas Monarch Watch Archived from the original on 2 February 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2020 2 Monarch Watch Monarch Waystation Program University of Kansas Entomology Department Archived from the original on 18 Nov 2019 Retrieved 26 February 2019 3 Monarch Garden Plants PDF San Francisco California Pollinator Partnership Archived from the original PDF on 9 March 2020 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Howard Elizabeth Aschen Harlen Davis Andrew K 2010 Citizen Science Observations of Monarch Butterfly Overwintering in the Southern United States Psyche A Journal of Entomology 2010 1 doi 10 1155 2010 689301 Satterfield D A Maerz J C Altizer S 2015 Loss of migratory behaviour increases infection risk for a butterfly host Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 282 1801 20141734 doi 10 1098 rspb 2014 1734 PMC 4308991 PMID 25589600 Majewska Ania A Altizer Sonia 16 August 2019 Exposure to Non Native Tropical Milkweed Promotes Reproductive Development in Migratory Monarch Butterflies Insects 10 8 253 doi 10 3390 insects10080253 PMC 6724006 PMID 31426310 Milkweed for Monarchs The National Wildlife Federation Milkweed Map discover native milkweed GROW MILKWEED PLANTS Retrieved 2022 04 10 1 Pocius Victoria M Debinski Diane M Pleasants John M Bidne Keith G Hellmich Richard L January 8 2018 Monarch butterflies do not place all of their eggs in one basket oviposition on nine Midwestern milkweed species Ecosphere Ecological Society of America ESA 9 1 1 13 Bibcode 2018Ecosp 9E2064P doi 10 1002 ecs2 2064 In our study the least preferred milkweed species A tuberosa no choice Fig 2 and A verticillata choice Fig 3A both have low cardenolide levels recorded in the literature Roeske et al 1976 Agrawal et al 2009 2015 Rasmann and Agrawal 2011 2 Abugattas Alonzo 3 January 2017 Monarch Way Stations Capital Naturalist Archived from the original on 5 June 2017 Retrieved 5 June 2017 via Blogger It is the least favored by monarch caterpillars though because it has very little toxin cardiac glycosides in its leaves but other butterflies and adult monarchs love it as a nectar source 3 Butterfly Weed Asclepias tuberosa PDF Becker County Minnesota Becker Soil and Water Conservation District Archived PDF from the original on September 11 2020 Retrieved September 11 2020 Unlike other milkweeds this plant has a clear sap and the level of toxic cardiac glycosides is consistently low although other toxic compounds may be present Johnson Glen A 2019 Milkweed of the United States including Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands Amazon KDP p 7 ISBN 9781081170653 Nehring Julia The potential of milkweed floss as a natural fiber in the textile industry PDF Center for Undergraduate Research McCullough Elizabeth A April 1991 Evaluation of Milkweed Floss as an Insulative Fill Material Textile Research Journal 61 4 203 210 doi 10 1177 004051759106100403 S2CID 17783131 Hauswirth Katherine 2008 10 26 The Heroic Milkweed The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved 2014 02 14 Wykes Gerald 2014 02 04 A Weed Goes to War and Michigan Provides the Ammunition MLive Media Group Michigan History Magazine Retrieved 2014 02 14 Evangelista R L 2007 Milkweed seed wing removal to improve oil extraction Industrial Crops and Products 25 2 210 217 doi 10 1016 j indcrop 2006 10 002 Bernstein Jaela 2016 10 13 How a Quebec company used a weed to create a one of a kind winter coat CBC News Retrieved 2018 01 05 Bauck Whitney 23 January 2020 THE FUTURE OF SUSTAINABLE MATERIALS MILKWEED FLOSS Fashionista com Charles Sigisbert Sonnini 1810 Traite de l asclepiade Augustine Kathy Monarchs Milkweed and You spinoffmagazine com Spin Off Magazine Choi Hyung Min Cloud Rinn M 1992 Natural sorbents in oil spill clean up Environmental Science amp Technology 26 4 772 Bibcode 1992EnST 26 772C doi 10 1021 es00028a016 La soie d Amerique passe en production industrielle Radio Canada Retrieved 20 December 2015 Milkweed touted as oil spill super sucker with butterfly benefits cbc ca 2 December 2014 Beckett R E Stitt R S May 1935 The desert milkweed Asclepias subulata as a possible source of rubber Technical report United States Department of Agriculture 73 Everitt J H Lonard R L Little C R 2007 Weeds in South Texas and Northern Mexico Lubbock Texas Tech University Press ISBN 0 89672 614 2External links editMilkweed test cultivated for the insulation value of floss Milkweed in Handbook of Energy Crops Common milkweed production research at Western Illinois University UVSC Herbarium Asclepias Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Asclepias amp oldid 1206728043, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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