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Chenopodium

Chenopodium is a genus of numerous species of perennial or annual herbaceous flowering plants known as the goosefoot, which occur almost anywhere in the world.[3] It is placed in the family Amaranthaceae in the APG II system; older classification systems, notably the widely used Cronquist system, separate it and its relatives as Chenopodiaceae,[4] but this leaves the rest of the Amaranthaceae polyphyletic. However, among the Amaranthaceae, the genus Chenopodium is the namesake member of the subfamily Chenopodioideae.[2]

Chenopodium
Chenopodium berlandieri
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Amaranthaceae
Subfamily: Chenopodioideae
Tribe: Atripliceae
Genus: Chenopodium
L. (1753)
Species[1]

132; see text

Synonyms[1][2]
  • Agatophyton Fourr. (1869)
  • Blitum Hill (1757), nom. illeg.
  • Botrys Rchb. ex Nieuwl. (1914)
  • Einadia Raf. (1838)
  • Rhagodia R.Br. (1810)
  • Vulvaria Bubani (1897), nom. illeg.
  • Chenopodium sect. Leprophyllum Dumort.
  • Chenopodium sect. Chenopodiastrum Moq.

Description edit

 
White goosefoot (Chenopodium album)

The species of Chenopodium (s.str., description according to Fuentes et al. 2012)[2] are annual or perennial herbs, shrubs or small trees.[5] They generally rely on alkaline soil.[5] They are nonaromatic, but sometimes fetid. The young stems and leaves are often densely covered by vesicular globose hairs, thus looking farinose. Characteristically, these trichomes persist, collapsing later and becoming cup-shaped. The branched stems grow erect, ascending, prostrate or scrambling. Lateral branches are alternate (the lowermost ones can be nearly opposite). The alternate or opposite leaves are petiolate. Their thin or slightly fleshy leaf blade is linear, rhombic or triangular-hastate, with entire or dentate or lobed margins.[2]

Inflorescences are standing terminal and lateral. They consist of spicately or paniculately arranged glomerules of flowers. Plants are monoecious (rarely dioecious). In monoecious plants flowers are dimorphic or pistillate. Flowers consist of (4–) 5 perianth segments connate, basally or close to the middle, usually membranous margined and with a roundish to keeled back; almost always 5 stamens, and one ovary with 2 stigmas.[2]

In fruit, perianth segments become sometimes coloured, but mostly keep unchanged, somewhat closing over or spreading from the fruit. The pericarp is membranous or sometimes succulent, adherent to or loosely covering the seed. The horizontally oriented seeds are depressed-globular to lenticular, with rounded to subacute margin. The black seed coat is almost smooth to finely striate, rugulose or pitted.[2]

Uses and human importance edit

 
Cooked quinoa (C. quinoa) seeds

The genus Chenopodium contains several plants of minor to moderate importance as food crops as leaf vegetables – used like the closely related spinach (Spinacia oleracea) and similar plants called quelite in Mexico – and pseudocereals.[citation needed] These include white goosefoot (C. album), kañiwa (C. pallidicaule) and quinoa (C. quinoa). On the Greek island of Crete, tender shoots and leaves of a species called krouvida (κρουβίδα) or psarovlito (ψαρόβλητο) are eaten by the locals, boiled or steamed.[citation needed] As studied by Bruce D. Smith, Kristen Gremillion and others, goosefoots have a history of culinary use dating back to 4000 BC or earlier, when pitseed goosefoot (C. berlandieri) was a staple crop in the Native American Eastern Agricultural Complex,[citation needed] and when white goosefoot was apparently used by the Ertebølle culture of Europe.[citation needed] Members of the eastern European Yamnaya culture also harvested white goosefoot as an apparent cereal substitute to round out an otherwise mostly meat and dairy diet c. 3500–2500 BC.[6]

There is increased interest in particular in goosefoot seeds today, which are suitable as part of a gluten-free diet.[citation needed] Quinoa oil, extracted from the seeds of C. quinoa, has similar properties, but is superior in quality, to corn oil.[citation needed] Oil of chenopodium is extracted from the seeds of epazote, which is not in this genus anymore.[citation needed] Shagreen leather was produced in the past using the small, hard goosefoot seeds.[citation needed] C. album was one of the main model organisms for the molecular biological study of chlorophyllase.[citation needed]

Goosefoot pollen, in particular of the widespread and usually abundant C. album, is an allergen to many people and a common cause of hay fever.[7] The same species, as well as some others, have seeds which are able to persist for years in the soil seed bank.[citation needed] Many goosefoot species are thus significant weeds, and some have become invasive species.[7]

In Australia, the larger Chenopodium species are among the plants called "bluebushes".[citation needed] According to the 1889 book The Useful Native Plants of Australia, Chenopodium auricomum "is another of the salt-bushes, which, besides being invaluable food for stock, can be eaten by man. All plants of the Natural Order Chenopodiaceae (Salsolacese) are more or less useful in this respect." The book goes on to give the following account from the Journal de la Ferme et des Maisons de campagne:[8]

We have recently gathered an abundant harvest of leaves from two or three plants growing in our garden. These leaves were put into boiling water to blanch them, and they were then cooked as an ordinary dish of spinach, with this difference in favour of the new plant, that there was no occasion to take away the threads which are so disagreeable in chicory, sorrel, and ordinary spinach. We partook of this dish with relish—the flavour—analogous to spinach, had something in it more refined, less grassy in taste. The cultivation is easy: sow the seed in April (October) in a well-manured bed, for the plant is greedy; water it. The leaves may be gathered from the time the plant attains 50 centimetres (say 20 inches) in height. They grow up again quickly. In less than eight days afterwards another gathering may take place, and so on to the end of the year.

Chualar, California is named after a Native American term for a goosefoot abundant in the region, probably the California goosefoot (Blitum californicum).[citation needed]

Ecology edit

Certain species grow in large thickets, providing cover for small animals. Goosefoot foliage is used as food by the caterpillars of certain Lepidoptera.[citation needed] The seeds are eaten by many birds, such as the yellowhammer (Emberiza citrinella) of Europe or the white-winged fairy-wren (Malurus leucopterus) of Australia.[citation needed] Goosefoot pathogens include the positive-sense ssRNA viruses – apple stem grooving virus, sowbane mosaic virus and tobacco necrosis virus.[citation needed]

Systematics edit

The genus Chenopodium was described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 (In: Species Plantarum, Vol. 1, p. 218–222). Type species is Chenopodium album. This generic name is derived from the particular shape of the leaf, which is similar to a goose's foot: from Greek χήν (chen), "goose" and πούς (pous), "foot" or ποδίον (podion), "little foot".

In its traditional circumscription, Chenopodium comprised about 170 species.[3] Phylogenetic research revealed, that the genus was highly polyphyletic and did not reflect how species were naturally related. Therefore, a new classification was necessary. Mosyakin & Clemants (2002, 2008) separated the glandular species as genus Dysphania (which includes epazote) and Teloxys in tribe Dysphanieae. Fuentes-Bazan et al. (2012) separated many species to genera Blitum (in tribe Anserineae), Chenopodiastrum, Lipandra, and Oxybasis (like Chenopodium in tribe Atripliceae). They included Rhagodia and Einadia in Chenopodium.[2]

Species edit

132 species are currently accepted.[1]

 
ʻĀheahea (Chenopodium oahuense)
 
Chenopodium candolleanum
 
Chenopodium ficifolium
 
Chenopodium giganteum
  • Chenopodium acerifolium Andrz.
  • Chenopodium aciculare (Paul G.Wilson) S.Fuentes & Borsch
  • Chenopodium acuminatum Willd.
  • Chenopodium adpressifolium Pandeya & A.Pandeya
  • Chenopodium albescens Small
  • Chenopodium album L. – white goosefoot, nickel greens, dungweed, bathua, chandali, chandaliya, fat hen, lamb's quarters, pigweed
  • Chenopodium allanii Aellen
  • Chenopodium atripliciforme Murr
  • Chenopodium atrovirens Rydb. – dark goosefoot, pinyon goosefoot
  • Chenopodium attenuatum Charit.
  • Chenopodium aureum Benet-Pierce – golden goosefoot
  • Chenopodium auricomiforme Murr & Thell.
  • Chenopodium auricomum Lindl. – Queensland bluebush
  • Chenopodium ayare Toro Torr.
  • Chenopodium baccatum Labill. (Syn. Rhagodia baccata)
  • Chenopodium benthamii Iamonico & Mosyakin (Syn.: Rhagodia latifolia)
  • Chenopodium berlandieri Moq. – pitseed goosefoot, southern huauzontle, lambsquarters
    • Chenopodium berlandieri var. berlandieri (synonym Chenopodium nuttalliae Saff.) – huauzontle, chia roja, quelit
  • Chenopodium betaceum Andrz.
  • Chenopodium × binzianum Aellen & Thell.
  • Chenopodium × bohemicum F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium × borbasii Murr
  • Chenopodium brandegeeae Benet-Pierce – Brandegee's goosefoot
  • Chenopodium bryoniifolium Bunge – Korean goosefoot[9]
  • Chenopodium candolleanum (Moq.) S.Fuentes & Borsch (Syn.: Rhagodia candolleana)
  • Chenopodium carnosulum Moq.
  • Chenopodium chaldoranicum Rahimin. & Ghaemm.
  • Chenopodium cordobense Aellen
  • Chenopodium cornutum (Torr.) Benth. & Hook.f. ex S.Watson
  • Chenopodium × covillei Aellen
  • Chenopodium crusoeanum Skottsb.
  • Chenopodium cuneifolium Vahl
  • Chenopodium curvispicatum Paul G.Wilson
  • Chenopodium cyanifolium Pandeya, Singhal & A.K.Bhatn.
  • Chenopodium cycloides A.Nelson – sandhill goosefoot
  • Chenopodium × dadakovae F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium desertorum (J.M.Black) J.M.Black – desert goosefoot
  • Chenopodium desiccatum A.Nelson – narrowleaf goosefoot
  • Chenopodium detestans Kirk – New Zealand fish-guts plant
  • Chenopodium diversifolium (Aellen) F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium drummondii (Moq.) S.Fuentes & Borsch (Syn.: Rhagodia drummondii)
  • Chenopodium eastwoodiae Benet-Pierce – Eastwood's goosefoot
  • Chenopodium eremaeum (Paul G.Wilson) S.Fuentes & Borsch (Syn.: Rhagodia eremaea)
  • Chenopodium erosum R.Br.
  • Chenopodium eustriatum F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium × fallax (Aellen) F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium ficifoliiforme F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium ficifolium Sm. – fig-leaved goosefoot, small goosefoot
  • Chenopodium flabellifolium Standl. – San Martin Island goosefoot, flabelliform goosefoot
  • Chenopodium foggii Wahl – Fogg's goosefoot
  • Chenopodium fremontii S.Watson – Fremont's goosefoot
  • Chenopodium frutescens C.A.Mey.
  • Chenopodium × fursajevii Aellen & Iljin
  • Chenopodium gaudichaudianum (Moq.) Paul G.Wilson
  • Chenopodium giganteum D.Don (synonym Chenopodium formosanum Koidz.) – tree spinach, red quinoa, djulis
  • Chenopodium griseochlorinum F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium grubovii Lomon. & Uotila
  • Chenopodium × gruellii Aellen
  • Chenopodium harae Sukhor.
  • Chenopodium hastatifolium Pandeya & A.Pandeya
  • Chenopodium × haywardiae Murr
  • Chenopodium hederiforme (Murr) Aellen
  • Chenopodium hians Standl.
  • Chenopodium hircinum Schrad.
  • Chenopodium hoggarense Uotila & C.Chatel.
  • Chenopodium howellii Benet-Pierce – Howell's goosefoot
  • Chenopodium hubbardii Aellen
  • Chenopodium × humiliforme (Murr) F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium iljinii Golosk.
  • Chenopodium incanum (S.Watson) A.Heller – mealy goosefoot
  • Chenopodium incognitum Wahl
  • Chenopodium indicum T.K.Paul
  • Chenopodium iranicum (Aellen) Hamdi & Malekloo
  • Chenopodium × jedlickae F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium × jehlikii F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium karoi (Murr) Aellen
  • Chenopodium khorasanica Hamdi & Malekloo
  • Chenopodium lenticulare Aellen
  • Chenopodium × leptophylliforme Aellen
  • Chenopodium leptophyllum (Moq.) Nutt. ex S.Watson – narrowleaf goosefoot
  • Chenopodium × linciense Murr
  • Chenopodium lineatum Benet-Pierce – Mono goosefoot
  • Chenopodium littoreum Benet-Pierce & M.G.Simpson – coastal goosefoot
  • Chenopodium lobodontum H.Scholz
  • Chenopodium loureiroi Steud.
  • Chenopodium luteorubrum Mandák & Lomon.
  • Chenopodium luteum Benet-Pierce – yellow goosefoot
  • Chenopodium × mendelii F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium moquinianum Aellen
  • Chenopodium mucronatum Thunb.
  • Chenopodium neomexicanum Standl. – New Mexico goosefoot
  • Chenopodium nesodendron Skottsb.
  • Chenopodium nevadense Standl. – Nevada goosefoot
  • Chenopodium nitens Benet-Pierce & M.G.Simpson
  • Chenopodium nitrariaceum (F.Muell.) F.Muell. ex Benth. – nitre goosefoot
  • Chenopodium nitens Benet-Pierce & M.G.Simpson – shiny goosefoot
  • Chenopodium novopokrovskyanum (Aellen) Uotila
  • Chenopodium nutans (R.Br.) S.Fuentes & Borsch (Syn.: Rhagodia nutans)
  • Chenopodium oahuense (Meyen) AellenʻĀheahea (Hawaiʻi)
  • Chenopodium obscurum Aellen
  • Chenopodium opulifolium Schrad. ex W.D.J.Koch & Ziz – grey goosefoot
  • Chenopodium pallescens Standl. – pallid goosefoot
  • Chenopodium pallidicaule Aellenkañiwa, "cañahua"
  • Chenopodium palmeri Standl. – Palmer's goosefoot
  • Chenopodium pamiricum Iljin
  • Chenopodium parabolicum (R.Br.) S.Fuentes & Borsch (Syn.: Rhagodia parabolica)
  • Chenopodium × paradoxum Mandák
  • Chenopodium parryi Standl. – Parry's goosefoot
  • Chenopodium perttii Sukhor.
  • Chenopodium petiolare Kunth
  • Chenopodium philippianum Aellen
  • Chenopodium phillipsianum Aellen
  • Chenopodium pilcomayense Aellen
  • Chenopodium × podperae F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium polygonoides (Murr) Aellen
  • Chenopodium × praeacutum Murr
  • Chenopodium pratericola Rydb. – pale goosefoot, desert goosefoot, narrowleaf goosefoot
  • Chenopodium preissii (Moq.) Diels (Syn. Rhagodia preissii)
  • Chenopodium × preissmannii Murr
  • Chenopodium × pseudoleptophyllum Aellen
  • Chenopodium × pseudostriatum (Zschacke) Druce
  • Chenopodium pueblense H.S.Reed
  • Chenopodium quinoa Willd. – quinoa
  • Chenopodium × reynieri Ludw. & Aellen
  • Chenopodium robertianum Iamonico & Mosyakin (Syn.: Rhagodia hastata)
  • Chenopodium ruiz-lealii Aellen
  • Chenopodium sanctae-clarae Johow
  • Chenopodium sancti-ambrosii Skottsb.
  • Chenopodium sandersii Benet-Pierce – Sander's goosefoot
  • Chenopodium santoshei Pandeya, Singhal & A.K.Bhatn.
  • Chenopodium scabricaule Speg.
  • Chenopodium simpsonii Benet-Pierce – Simpson's goosefoot
  • Chenopodium × smardae F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium sonorense Benet-Pierce & M.G.Simpson – Sonoran goosefoot
  • Chenopodium sosnowskyi Kapeller
  • Chenopodium spegazzinii F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium spinescens (R.Br.) S.Fuentes & Borsch (Syn. Rhagodia spinescens)
  • Chenopodium standleyanum Aellen – Standley's goosefoot
  • Chenopodium stenophyllum (Makino) Koidz.
  • Chenopodium striatiforme Murr
  • Chenopodium subficifolium (Murr) Druce
  • Chenopodium subglabrum (S.Watson) A.Nelson – smooth arid goosefoot, smooth goosefoot
  • Chenopodium suecicum Murr – green goosefoot
  • Chenopodium × thellungii Murr
  • Chenopodium tonkinense Courchet
  • Chenopodium triandrum G.Forst. (Syn.: Rhagodia triandra)
  • Chenopodium × tridentinum Murr
  • Chenopodium × trigonocarpum Aellen
  • Chenopodium trigonon Schult. (Syn.: Einadia trigonos)
  • Chenopodium twisselmannii Benet-Pierce – Twisselmann's goosefoot, high meadow goosefoot
  • Chenopodium ulbrichii Aellen
  • Chenopodium ulicinum Gand.
  • Chenopodium × unarii F.Dvořák
  • Chenopodium × variabile Aellen (C. album × C. berlandieri)
  • Chenopodium vulvaria L. – stinking goosefoot, notchweed
  • Chenopodium wahlii Benet-Pierce – Wahl's goosefoot
  • Chenopodium watsonii A.Nelson – Watson's goosefoot
  • Chenopodium wilsonii S.Fuentes, Borsch & Uotila (Syn.: Rhagodia crassifolia)
  • Chenopodium × zahnii Murr
  • Chenopodium zerovii Iljin
  • Chenopodium zoellneri Aellen

Excluded species edit

Fossil record edit

Chenopodium wetzleri fossil seeds of the Chattian stage, Oligocene, are known from the Oberleichtersbach Formation in the Rhön Mountains, central Germany.[10]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Chenopodium L. Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 4 April 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Susy Fuentes-Bazan, Pertti Uotila, Thomas Borsch: A novel phylogeny-based generic classification for Chenopodium sensu lato, and a tribal rearrangement of Chenopodioideae (Chenopodiaceae). In: Willdenowia. Vol. 42, No. 1, 2012, p. 5-24.
  3. ^ a b Gelin Zhu, Sergei L. Mosyakin & Steven E. Clemants: Chenopodium - In: Wu Zhengyi, Peter H. Raven, Deyuan Hong (Hrsg.): Flora of China. Volume 5: Ulmaceae through Basellaceae. Science Press/Missouri Botanical Garden Press, Beijing/St. Louis 2003, ISBN 1-930723-27-X, p. 378-.
  4. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Chenopodium" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 80.
  5. ^ a b Taylor, Ronald J. (1994) [1992]. Sagebrush Country: A Wildflower Sanctuary (rev. ed.). Missoula, MT: Mountain Press Pub. Co. p. 64. ISBN 0-87842-280-3. OCLC 25708726.
  6. ^ Anthony, David (2007). The horse, the wheel, and language. Princeton university press. pp. 302–303.
  7. ^ a b "Amaranthus and Chenopodium". alabamaallergy.com. 2017-10-13. Retrieved 2021-03-03.
  8. ^ J. H. Maiden (1889). The useful native plants of Australia : Including Tasmania. Turner and Henderson, Sydney. pp. 15–16.
  9. ^ (PDF). Pocheon: Korea National Arboretum. 2015. p. 407. ISBN 978-89-97450-98-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 May 2017. Retrieved 24 December 2016 – via Korea Forest Service.
  10. ^ The floral change in the tertiary of the Rhön mountains (Germany) by Dieter Hans Mai - Acta Paleobotanica 47(1): 135-143, 2007.

Further reading edit

  • Sukhorukov, Alexander P.; Zhang, Mingli (2013). "Fruit and Seed Anatomy of Chenopodium and Related Genera (Chenopodioideae, Chenopodiaceae/Amaranthaceae): Implications for Evolution and Taxonomy". PLOS ONE. 8 (4): e61906. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...861906S. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0061906. PMC 3633980. PMID 23626750.

chenopodium, goosefoot, redirects, here, other, uses, goosefoot, disambiguation, rhagodia, redirects, here, arachnid, genus, rhagodia, arachnid, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations,. Goosefoot redirects here For other uses see Goosefoot disambiguation Rhagodia redirects here For the arachnid genus see Rhagodia arachnid This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Chenopodium news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Chenopodium is a genus of numerous species of perennial or annual herbaceous flowering plants known as the goosefoot which occur almost anywhere in the world 3 It is placed in the family Amaranthaceae in the APG II system older classification systems notably the widely used Cronquist system separate it and its relatives as Chenopodiaceae 4 but this leaves the rest of the Amaranthaceae polyphyletic However among the Amaranthaceae the genus Chenopodium is the namesake member of the subfamily Chenopodioideae 2 Chenopodium Chenopodium berlandieri Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Eudicots Order Caryophyllales Family Amaranthaceae Subfamily Chenopodioideae Tribe Atripliceae Genus ChenopodiumL 1753 Species 1 132 see text Synonyms 1 2 Agatophyton Fourr 1869 Blitum Hill 1757 nom illeg Botrys Rchb ex Nieuwl 1914 Einadia Raf 1838 Rhagodia R Br 1810 Vulvaria Bubani 1897 nom illeg Chenopodium sect Leprophyllum Dumort Chenopodium sect Chenopodiastrum Moq Contents 1 Description 2 Uses and human importance 3 Ecology 4 Systematics 4 1 Species 4 2 Excluded species 5 Fossil record 6 References 7 Further readingDescription edit nbsp White goosefoot Chenopodium album The species of Chenopodium s str description according to Fuentes et al 2012 2 are annual or perennial herbs shrubs or small trees 5 They generally rely on alkaline soil 5 They are nonaromatic but sometimes fetid The young stems and leaves are often densely covered by vesicular globose hairs thus looking farinose Characteristically these trichomes persist collapsing later and becoming cup shaped The branched stems grow erect ascending prostrate or scrambling Lateral branches are alternate the lowermost ones can be nearly opposite The alternate or opposite leaves are petiolate Their thin or slightly fleshy leaf blade is linear rhombic or triangular hastate with entire or dentate or lobed margins 2 Inflorescences are standing terminal and lateral They consist of spicately or paniculately arranged glomerules of flowers Plants are monoecious rarely dioecious In monoecious plants flowers are dimorphic or pistillate Flowers consist of 4 5 perianth segments connate basally or close to the middle usually membranous margined and with a roundish to keeled back almost always 5 stamens and one ovary with 2 stigmas 2 In fruit perianth segments become sometimes coloured but mostly keep unchanged somewhat closing over or spreading from the fruit The pericarp is membranous or sometimes succulent adherent to or loosely covering the seed The horizontally oriented seeds are depressed globular to lenticular with rounded to subacute margin The black seed coat is almost smooth to finely striate rugulose or pitted 2 Uses and human importance edit nbsp Cooked quinoa C quinoa seeds The genus Chenopodium contains several plants of minor to moderate importance as food crops as leaf vegetables used like the closely related spinach Spinacia oleracea and similar plants called quelite in Mexico and pseudocereals citation needed These include white goosefoot C album kaniwa C pallidicaule and quinoa C quinoa On the Greek island of Crete tender shoots and leaves of a species called krouvida kroybida or psarovlito psaroblhto are eaten by the locals boiled or steamed citation needed As studied by Bruce D Smith Kristen Gremillion and others goosefoots have a history of culinary use dating back to 4000 BC or earlier when pitseed goosefoot C berlandieri was a staple crop in the Native American Eastern Agricultural Complex citation needed and when white goosefoot was apparently used by the Ertebolle culture of Europe citation needed Members of the eastern European Yamnaya culture also harvested white goosefoot as an apparent cereal substitute to round out an otherwise mostly meat and dairy diet c 3500 2500 BC 6 There is increased interest in particular in goosefoot seeds today which are suitable as part of a gluten free diet citation needed Quinoa oil extracted from the seeds of C quinoa has similar properties but is superior in quality to corn oil citation needed Oil of chenopodium is extracted from the seeds of epazote which is not in this genus anymore citation needed Shagreen leather was produced in the past using the small hard goosefoot seeds citation needed C album was one of the main model organisms for the molecular biological study of chlorophyllase citation needed Goosefoot pollen in particular of the widespread and usually abundant C album is an allergen to many people and a common cause of hay fever 7 The same species as well as some others have seeds which are able to persist for years in the soil seed bank citation needed Many goosefoot species are thus significant weeds and some have become invasive species 7 In Australia the larger Chenopodium species are among the plants called bluebushes citation needed According to the 1889 book The Useful Native Plants of Australia Chenopodium auricomum is another of the salt bushes which besides being invaluable food for stock can be eaten by man All plants of the Natural Order Chenopodiaceae Salsolacese are more or less useful in this respect The book goes on to give the following account from the Journal de la Ferme et des Maisons de campagne 8 We have recently gathered an abundant harvest of leaves from two or three plants growing in our garden These leaves were put into boiling water to blanch them and they were then cooked as an ordinary dish of spinach with this difference in favour of the new plant that there was no occasion to take away the threads which are so disagreeable in chicory sorrel and ordinary spinach We partook of this dish with relish the flavour analogous to spinach had something in it more refined less grassy in taste The cultivation is easy sow the seed in April October in a well manured bed for the plant is greedy water it The leaves may be gathered from the time the plant attains 50 centimetres say 20 inches in height They grow up again quickly In less than eight days afterwards another gathering may take place and so on to the end of the year Chualar California is named after a Native American term for a goosefoot abundant in the region probably the California goosefoot Blitum californicum citation needed Ecology editCertain species grow in large thickets providing cover for small animals Goosefoot foliage is used as food by the caterpillars of certain Lepidoptera citation needed The seeds are eaten by many birds such as the yellowhammer Emberiza citrinella of Europe or the white winged fairy wren Malurus leucopterus of Australia citation needed Goosefoot pathogens include the positive sense ssRNA viruses apple stem grooving virus sowbane mosaic virus and tobacco necrosis virus citation needed Systematics editThe genus Chenopodium was described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753 In Species Plantarum Vol 1 p 218 222 Type species is Chenopodium album This generic name is derived from the particular shape of the leaf which is similar to a goose s foot from Greek xhn chen goose and poys pous foot or podion podion little foot In its traditional circumscription Chenopodium comprised about 170 species 3 Phylogenetic research revealed that the genus was highly polyphyletic and did not reflect how species were naturally related Therefore a new classification was necessary Mosyakin amp Clemants 2002 2008 separated the glandular species as genus Dysphania which includes epazote and Teloxys in tribe Dysphanieae Fuentes Bazan et al 2012 separated many species to genera Blitum in tribe Anserineae Chenopodiastrum Lipandra and Oxybasis like Chenopodium in tribe Atripliceae They included Rhagodia and Einadia in Chenopodium 2 Species edit 132 species are currently accepted 1 nbsp ʻAheahea Chenopodium oahuense nbsp Chenopodium candolleanum nbsp Chenopodium ficifolium nbsp Chenopodium giganteum Chenopodium acerifolium Andrz Chenopodium aciculare Paul G Wilson S Fuentes amp Borsch Chenopodium acuminatum Willd Chenopodium adpressifolium Pandeya amp A Pandeya Chenopodium albescens Small Chenopodium album L white goosefoot nickel greens dungweed bathua chandali chandaliya fat hen lamb s quarters pigweed Chenopodium album var album synonym Chenopodium strictum Roth Chenopodium allanii Aellen Chenopodium atripliciforme Murr Chenopodium atrovirens Rydb dark goosefoot pinyon goosefoot Chenopodium attenuatum Charit Chenopodium aureum Benet Pierce golden goosefoot Chenopodium auricomiforme Murr amp Thell Chenopodium auricomum Lindl Queensland bluebush Chenopodium ayare Toro Torr Chenopodium baccatum Labill Syn Rhagodia baccata Chenopodium benthamii Iamonico amp Mosyakin Syn Rhagodia latifolia Chenopodium berlandieri Moq pitseed goosefoot southern huauzontle lambsquarters Chenopodium berlandieri var berlandieri synonym Chenopodium nuttalliae Saff huauzontle chia roja quelit Chenopodium betaceum Andrz Chenopodium binzianum Aellen amp Thell Chenopodium bohemicum F Dvorak Chenopodium borbasii Murr Chenopodium brandegeeae Benet Pierce Brandegee s goosefoot Chenopodium bryoniifolium Bunge Korean goosefoot 9 Chenopodium candolleanum Moq S Fuentes amp Borsch Syn Rhagodia candolleana Chenopodium carnosulum Moq Chenopodium chaldoranicum Rahimin amp Ghaemm Chenopodium cordobense Aellen Chenopodium cornutum Torr Benth amp Hook f ex S Watson Chenopodium covillei Aellen Chenopodium crusoeanum Skottsb Chenopodium cuneifolium Vahl Chenopodium curvispicatum Paul G Wilson Chenopodium cyanifolium Pandeya Singhal amp A K Bhatn Chenopodium cycloides A Nelson sandhill goosefoot Chenopodium dadakovae F Dvorak Chenopodium desertorum J M Black J M Black desert goosefoot Chenopodium desiccatum A Nelson narrowleaf goosefoot Chenopodium detestans Kirk New Zealand fish guts plant Chenopodium diversifolium Aellen F Dvorak Chenopodium drummondii Moq S Fuentes amp Borsch Syn Rhagodia drummondii Chenopodium eastwoodiae Benet Pierce Eastwood s goosefoot Chenopodium eremaeum Paul G Wilson S Fuentes amp Borsch Syn Rhagodia eremaea Chenopodium erosum R Br Chenopodium eustriatum F Dvorak Chenopodium fallax Aellen F Dvorak Chenopodium ficifoliiforme F Dvorak Chenopodium ficifolium Sm fig leaved goosefoot small goosefoot Chenopodium flabellifolium Standl San Martin Island goosefoot flabelliform goosefoot Chenopodium foggii Wahl Fogg s goosefoot Chenopodium fremontii S Watson Fremont s goosefoot Chenopodium frutescens C A Mey Chenopodium fursajevii Aellen amp Iljin Chenopodium gaudichaudianum Moq Paul G Wilson Chenopodium giganteum D Don synonym Chenopodium formosanum Koidz tree spinach red quinoa djulis Chenopodium griseochlorinum F Dvorak Chenopodium grubovii Lomon amp Uotila Chenopodium gruellii Aellen Chenopodium harae Sukhor Chenopodium hastatifolium Pandeya amp A Pandeya Chenopodium haywardiae Murr Chenopodium hederiforme Murr Aellen Chenopodium hians Standl Chenopodium hircinum Schrad Chenopodium hoggarense Uotila amp C Chatel Chenopodium howellii Benet Pierce Howell s goosefoot Chenopodium hubbardii Aellen Chenopodium humiliforme Murr F Dvorak Chenopodium iljinii Golosk Chenopodium incanum S Watson A Heller mealy goosefoot Chenopodium incognitum Wahl Chenopodium indicum T K Paul Chenopodium iranicum Aellen Hamdi amp Malekloo Chenopodium jedlickae F Dvorak Chenopodium jehlikii F Dvorak Chenopodium karoi Murr Aellen Chenopodium khorasanica Hamdi amp Malekloo Chenopodium lenticulare Aellen Chenopodium leptophylliforme Aellen Chenopodium leptophyllum Moq Nutt ex S Watson narrowleaf goosefoot Chenopodium linciense Murr Chenopodium lineatum Benet Pierce Mono goosefoot Chenopodium littoreum Benet Pierce amp M G Simpson coastal goosefoot Chenopodium lobodontum H Scholz Chenopodium loureiroi Steud Chenopodium luteorubrum Mandak amp Lomon Chenopodium luteum Benet Pierce yellow goosefoot Chenopodium mendelii F Dvorak Chenopodium moquinianum Aellen Chenopodium mucronatum Thunb Chenopodium neomexicanum Standl New Mexico goosefoot Chenopodium nesodendron Skottsb Chenopodium nevadense Standl Nevada goosefoot Chenopodium nitens Benet Pierce amp M G Simpson Chenopodium nitrariaceum F Muell F Muell ex Benth nitre goosefoot Chenopodium nitens Benet Pierce amp M G Simpson shiny goosefoot Chenopodium novopokrovskyanum Aellen Uotila Chenopodium nutans R Br S Fuentes amp Borsch Syn Rhagodia nutans Chenopodium oahuense Meyen Aellen ʻAheahea Hawaiʻi Chenopodium obscurum Aellen Chenopodium opulifolium Schrad ex W D J Koch amp Ziz grey goosefoot Chenopodium pallescens Standl pallid goosefoot Chenopodium pallidicaule Aellen kaniwa canahua Chenopodium palmeri Standl Palmer s goosefoot Chenopodium pamiricum Iljin Chenopodium parabolicum R Br S Fuentes amp Borsch Syn Rhagodia parabolica Chenopodium paradoxum Mandak Chenopodium parryi Standl Parry s goosefoot Chenopodium perttii Sukhor Chenopodium petiolare Kunth Chenopodium philippianum Aellen Chenopodium phillipsianum Aellen Chenopodium pilcomayense Aellen Chenopodium podperae F Dvorak Chenopodium polygonoides Murr Aellen Chenopodium praeacutum Murr Chenopodium pratericola Rydb pale goosefoot desert goosefoot narrowleaf goosefoot Chenopodium preissii Moq Diels Syn Rhagodia preissii Chenopodium preissmannii Murr Chenopodium pseudoleptophyllum Aellen Chenopodium pseudostriatum Zschacke Druce Chenopodium pueblense H S Reed Chenopodium quinoa Willd quinoa Chenopodium reynieri Ludw amp Aellen Chenopodium robertianum Iamonico amp Mosyakin Syn Rhagodia hastata Chenopodium ruiz lealii Aellen Chenopodium sanctae clarae Johow Chenopodium sancti ambrosii Skottsb Chenopodium sandersii Benet Pierce Sander s goosefoot Chenopodium santoshei Pandeya Singhal amp A K Bhatn Chenopodium scabricaule Speg Chenopodium simpsonii Benet Pierce Simpson s goosefoot Chenopodium smardae F Dvorak Chenopodium sonorense Benet Pierce amp M G Simpson Sonoran goosefoot Chenopodium sosnowskyi Kapeller Chenopodium spegazzinii F Dvorak Chenopodium spinescens R Br S Fuentes amp Borsch Syn Rhagodia spinescens Chenopodium standleyanum Aellen Standley s goosefoot Chenopodium stenophyllum Makino Koidz Chenopodium striatiforme Murr Chenopodium subficifolium Murr Druce Chenopodium subglabrum S Watson A Nelson smooth arid goosefoot smooth goosefoot Chenopodium suecicum Murr green goosefoot Chenopodium thellungii Murr Chenopodium tonkinense Courchet Chenopodium triandrum G Forst Syn Rhagodia triandra Chenopodium tridentinum Murr Chenopodium trigonocarpum Aellen Chenopodium trigonon Schult Syn Einadia trigonos Chenopodium twisselmannii Benet Pierce Twisselmann s goosefoot high meadow goosefoot Chenopodium ulbrichii Aellen Chenopodium ulicinum Gand Chenopodium unarii F Dvorak Chenopodium variabile Aellen C album C berlandieri Chenopodium vulvaria L stinking goosefoot notchweed Chenopodium wahlii Benet Pierce Wahl s goosefoot Chenopodium watsonii A Nelson Watson s goosefoot Chenopodium wilsonii S Fuentes Borsch amp Uotila Syn Rhagodia crassifolia Chenopodium zahnii Murr Chenopodium zerovii Iljin Chenopodium zoellneri Aellen Excluded species edit Blitum 12 species 2 Blitum bonus henricus Good King Henry perennial goosefoot poor man s asparagus Lincolnshire spinach markery Blitum californicum California goosefoot Indian lettuce Blitum capitatum strawberry blite blite goosefoot strawberry goosefoot strawberry spinach Indian paint Indian ink Blitum virgatum Syn Chenopodium foliosum leafy goosefoot Chenopodiastrum 5 species 2 Chenopodiastrum murale nettle leaved goosefoot Chenopodiastrum simplex giantseed goosefoot Dysphania about 43 glandular species as C botrys C carinatum C cristatum C melanocarpum C multifidium C pumilio and more Lipandra one species 2 Lipandra polysperma many seeded goosefoot Oxybasis 5 species 2 Oxybasis chenopodioides small red goosefoot saltmarsh goosefoot Oxybasis glauca oak leaved goosefoot Oxybasis rubra red goosefoot coastblite goosefoot Oxybasis urbica upright goosefoot Teloxys one species Teloxys aristata Suaeda australis austral seablite as C australe C insulare Fossil record edit Chenopodium wetzleri fossil seeds of the Chattian stage Oligocene are known from the Oberleichtersbach Formation in the Rhon Mountains central Germany 10 References edit a b c Chenopodium L Plants of the World Online Retrieved 4 April 2024 a b c d e f g h i j k Susy Fuentes Bazan Pertti Uotila Thomas Borsch A novel phylogeny based generic classification for Chenopodium sensu lato and a tribal rearrangement of Chenopodioideae Chenopodiaceae In Willdenowia Vol 42 No 1 2012 p 5 24 a b Gelin Zhu Sergei L Mosyakin amp Steven E Clemants Chenopodium In Wu Zhengyi Peter H Raven Deyuan Hong Hrsg Flora of China Volume 5 Ulmaceae through Basellaceae Science Press Missouri Botanical Garden Press Beijing St Louis 2003 ISBN 1 930723 27 X p 378 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Chenopodium Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 80 a b Taylor Ronald J 1994 1992 Sagebrush Country A Wildflower Sanctuary rev ed Missoula MT Mountain Press Pub Co p 64 ISBN 0 87842 280 3 OCLC 25708726 Anthony David 2007 The horse the wheel and language Princeton university press pp 302 303 a b Amaranthus and Chenopodium alabamaallergy com 2017 10 13 Retrieved 2021 03 03 J H Maiden 1889 The useful native plants of Australia Including Tasmania Turner and Henderson Sydney pp 15 16 English Names for Korean Native Plants PDF Pocheon Korea National Arboretum 2015 p 407 ISBN 978 89 97450 98 5 Archived from the original PDF on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 24 December 2016 via Korea Forest Service The floral change in the tertiary of the Rhon mountains Germany by Dieter Hans Mai Acta Paleobotanica 47 1 135 143 2007 Further reading editSukhorukov Alexander P Zhang Mingli 2013 Fruit and Seed Anatomy of Chenopodium and Related Genera Chenopodioideae Chenopodiaceae Amaranthaceae Implications for Evolution and Taxonomy PLOS ONE 8 4 e61906 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 861906S doi 10 1371 journal pone 0061906 PMC 3633980 PMID 23626750 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chenopodium amp oldid 1217390196, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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