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Verbascum thapsus

Verbascum thapsus, the great mullein, greater mullein or common mullein, is a species of mullein native to Europe, northern Africa, and Asia, and introduced in the Americas and Australia.[1]

Verbascum thapsus
Second-year plant starting to flower, with a dead stem of the previous year, behind left
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Scrophulariaceae
Genus: Verbascum
Species:
V. thapsus
Binomial name
Verbascum thapsus

It is a hairy biennial plant that can grow to 2 m tall or more. Its small, yellow flowers are densely grouped on a tall stem, which grows from a large rosette of leaves. It grows in a wide variety of habitats, but prefers well-lit, disturbed soils, where it can appear soon after the ground receives light, from long-lived seeds that persist in the soil seed bank. It is a common weedy plant that spreads by prolifically producing seeds, and has become invasive in temperate world regions.[1] It is a minor problem for most agricultural crops, since it is not a competitive species, being intolerant of shade from other plants and unable to survive tilling. It also hosts many insects, some of which can be harmful to other plants. Although individuals are easy to remove by hand, populations are difficult to eliminate permanently.

Although commonly used in traditional medicine, no approved drugs are made from this plant.[2] It has been used to make dyes and torches.[1]

Description edit

 
A stemless rosette in Hawaii

V. thapsus is a dicotyledonous plant that produces a rosette of leaves in its first year of growth.[3][4] The leaves are large, up to 50 cm long. The second-year plants normally produce a single unbranched stem, usually 1–2 m tall. In the eastern part of its range in China, it is, however, only reported to grow up to 1.5 m tall.[5] The tall, pole-like stems end in a dense spike of flowers[3] that can occupy up to half the stem length. All parts of the plants are covered with star-shaped trichomes.[5][6] This cover is particularly thick on the leaves, giving them a silvery appearance. The species' chromosome number is 2n = 36.[7]

On flowering plants, the leaves are alternately arranged up the stem. They are thick and decurrent, with much variation in leaf shape between the upper and lower leaves on the stem, ranging from oblong to oblanceolate, and reaching sizes up to 50 cm long and 14 cm across (19 inches long and 5 inches wide).[8][9] They become smaller higher up the stem,[3][4] and less strongly decurrent down the stem.[3] The flowering stem is solid and 2–2.5 cm (nearly an inch) across, and occasionally branched just below the inflorescence,[4] usually following damage.[10] After flowering and seed release, the stem and fruits usually persist in winter,[11] drying into dark brown, stiff structures of densely packed, ovoid-shaped, and dry seed capsules. The dried stems may persist into the following spring or even the next summer. The plant produces a shallow taproot.[9]

 
A closeup of the flowers

Flowers are pentamerous with (usually) five stamen, a five-lobed calyx tube, and a five-petalled corolla, the latter bright yellow and an 1.5–3 cm (0.59–1.18 in) wide. The flowers are almost sessile, with very short pedicels (2 mm, 0.08 in). The five stamens are of two types, with the three upper stamens being shorter, their filaments covered by yellow or whitish hairs, and having smaller anthers, while the lower two stamens have glabrous filaments and larger anthers.[6][note 1] The plant produces small, ovoid (6 mm, 0.24 in) capsules that split open by way of two valves, each capsule containing large numbers of minute, brown seeds less than 1 mm (0.04 in)[12] in size, marked with longitudinal ridges. A white-flowered form, V. thapsus f. candicans, is known to occur.[13] Flowering lasts up to three months from early to late summer (June to August in northern Europe),[4] with flowering starting at the bottom of the spike and progressing irregularly upward; each flower opens for part of a day and only a few open at the same time around the stem.[11]

Taxonomy edit

For the purpose of botanical nomenclature, Verbascum thapsus was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1753 Species Plantarum. The specific epithet thapsus had been first used by Theophrastus (as Θάψος, Thapsos)[14] for an unspecified herb from the Ancient Greek settlement of Thapsos, near modern Syracuse, Sicily,[14][15] though it is often assimilated to the ancient Tunisian city of Thapsus.[16]

At the time, no type specimen was specified, as the practice only arose later, in the 19th century. When a lectotype (type selected amongst original material) was designated, it was assigned to specimen 242.1 of Linnaeus' herbarium, the only V. thapsus specimen.[note 2] The species had previously been designated as type species for Verbascum.[18] European plants exhibit considerable phenotypical variation,[19] which has led to the plant acquiring many synonyms over the years.[17][20] Introduced American populations show much less variation.[19]

The taxonomy of Verbascum has not undergone any significant revision since Svanve Mürbeck's monographs in the 1930s, with the exception of the work of Arthur Huber-Morath, who used informal grouping in organizing the genus for the florae of Iran and Turkey to account for many intermediate species. Since Huber-Morath's groups are not taxonomical, Mürbeck's treatment is the most current one available, as no study has yet sought to apply genetic or molecular data extensively to the genus. In Mürbeck's classification, V. thapsus is placed in sect. Bothrospermae subsect. Fasciculata alongside species such as Verbascum nigrum (black or dark mullein), Verbascum lychnitis (white mullein), and Verbascum sinuatum (wavy-leaved mullein).[21][22][23][24]. As Verbascum thapsus is the type species of the genus the application of article 22 of the ICNafp gives sect. Verbascum subsect. Verbascum as the correct nomenclature for this placement.

Subspecies and hybrids edit

Hybrids of Verbascum thapsus[7][25]
Hybrid name Other
parent species
Notes
V. × duernsteinense Teyber V. speciosum
V. × godronii Boreau V. pulverulentum
V. × kerneri Fritsch V. phlomoides
V. × lemaitrei Boreau V. virgatum
V. × pterocaulon Franch. V. blattaria
V. × thapsi L. V. lychnitis syn. V. × spurium
W.D.J.Koch, may be a
nomen ambiguum[26]
V. × semialbum Chaub. V. nigrum
none V. pyramidatum

The three usually recognized subspecies are:

  • V. t. thapsus; type, widespread.
  • V. t. crassifolium (Lam.) Murb.; Mediterranean region and to 2000 metres in southwestern Austria.[27] (syn. subsp. montanum (Scrad.) Bonnier & Layens)
  • V. t. giganteum (Willk.) Nyman; Spain, endemic.

In all subspecies but the type, the lower stamens are also hairy.[28] In V. t. crassifolium, the hairiness is less dense and often absent from the upper part of the anthers, while lower leaves are hardly decurrent and have longer petioles.[27] In V. t. giganteum, the hairs are densely white tomentose, and lower leaves are strongly decurrent. V. t. crassifolium also differs from the type in having slightly larger flowers, which measure 15–30 mm wide, whereas in the type, they are 12–20 mm in diameter.[27] Both V. t. giganteum and V. t. crassifolium were originally described as species.[3] Due to its morphological variation, V. thapsus has had a great many subspecies described. A recent revision led its author to maintain V. giganteum but sink V. crassifolium into synonymy.[24]

The plant is also parent to several hybrids (see table). Of these, the most common is V. × semialbum Chaub. (× V. nigrum).[7] All occur in Eurasia,[7] and three, V. × kerneri Fritsch, V. × pterocaulon Franch. and V. × thapsi L. (syn. V. × spurium W.D.J.Koch), have also been reported in North America.[25][29]

Common names edit

V. thapsus is known by a variety of names. European reference books call it "great mullein".[30][31][32] In North America, "common mullein" is used[33][34] while western United States residents commonly refer to mullein as "cowboy toilet paper".[35][36]

In the 19th century, it had well over 40 different common names in English alone. Some of the more whimsical ones included "hig candlewick", "Indian rag weed", "bullicks lungwort", "Adams-rod", "hare's-beard", and "ice-leaf".[37] Vernacular names include innumerable references to the plant's hairiness: "woolly mullein", "velvet mullein", or "blanket mullein",[32][38] "beggar's blanket", "Moses' blanket", "poor man's blanket", "Our Lady's blanket", or "old man's blanket",[31][34][39] and "feltwort", and so on ("flannel" is another common generic name). "Mullein" itself derives from the French word for "soft".[40]

Some names refer to the plant's size and shape: "shepherd's club(s)" or "staff", "Aaron's rod"[41] (a name it shares with a number of other plants with tall, yellow inflorescences), and a plethora of other "X's staff" and "X's rod".[31][34][42] The name "velvet dock" or "mullein dock" is also recorded, where "dock" is a British name applied to any broad-leaved plant.[43]

Distribution and habitat edit

V. thapsus has a wide native range including Europe, northern Africa, and Asia, from the Azores and Canary Islands east to western China, north to the British Isles, Scandinavia, and Siberia, and south to the Himalayas.[5][44][45] In northern Europe, it grows from sea level up to 1,850 m altitude,[4] while in China it grows at 1,400–3,200 m altitude.[5]

It has been introduced throughout the temperate world, and is established as a weed in Australia, New Zealand, tropical Asia, La Réunion, North America, Hawaii, Chile, Hispaniola, and Argentina.[45][46][47][48] It has also been reported in Japan.[49]

In the United States, it was imported very early in the 18th[note 3] century and cultivated for its medicinal and piscicide properties. By 1818, it had begun spreading so much that Amos Eaton thought it was a native plant.[note 4][9][50] In 1839, it was already reported in Michigan and in 1876, in California.[9] It is now found commonly in all the states.[51] In Canada, it is most common in the Maritime Provinces and southern Quebec, Ontario, and British Columbia, with scattered populations in between.[19][52]

Great mullein most frequently grows as a colonist of bare and disturbed soil, usually on sandy or chalky ones.[7] It grows best in dry, sandy, or gravelly soils, although it can grow in a variety of habitats, including banksides, meadows, roadsides, forest clearings, and pastures. This ability to grow in a wide range of habitats has been linked to strong phenotype variation rather than adaptation capacities.[53]

Ecology edit

 
V. thapsus grows best with little competition.

Great mullein is a biennial and generally requires winter dormancy before it can flower.[10] This dormancy is linked to starch degradation activated by low temperatures in the root, and gibberellin application bypasses this requirement.[54] Seeds germinate almost solely in bare soil, at temperatures between 10 and 40 °C.[10] While they can germinate in total darkness if proper conditions are present (tests give a 35% germination rate under ideal conditions), in the wild, they in practice only do so when exposed to light, or very close to the soil surface, which explains the plant's habitat preferences. While it can also grow in areas where some vegetation already exists, growth of the rosettes on bare soil is four to seven times more rapid.[10]

Seeds germinate in spring and summer. Those that germinate in autumn produce plants that overwinter if they are large enough, while rosettes less than 15 cm (6 in) across die in winter. After flowering, the entire plant usually dies at the end of its second year,[10] but some individuals, especially in the northern parts of the range, require a longer growth period and flower in their third year. Under better growing conditions, some individuals flower in the first year.[55] Triennial individuals have been found to produce fewer seeds than biennial and annual ones. While year of flowering and size are linked to the environment, most other characteristics appear to be genetic.[56]

A given flower is open only for a single day, opening before dawn and closing in the afternoon.[19] Flowers are self-fecundating and protogynous (with female parts maturing first),[19] and will self-pollinate if they have not been pollinated by insects during the day. While many insects visit the flowers, only some bees actually accomplish pollination. The flowering period of V. thapsus lasts from June to August in most of its range, extending to September or October in warmer climates.[9][10][12] Visitors include halictid bees and hoverflies.[11] The hair on lower stamens may serve to provide footholds for visitors.[19]

 
The fruit of great mullein contains large numbers of minute seed.

The seeds maintain their germinative powers for decades, up to 100 years, according to some studies.[57] Because of this, and because the plant is an extremely prolific seed bearer (each plant produces hundreds of capsules, each containing up to 700 seeds,[19] with a total up to 180,000[9][10] or 240,000[12] seeds), it remains in the soil seed bank for extended periods of time, and can sprout from apparently bare ground,[10] or shortly after forest fires long after previous plants have died.[12] Its population pattern typically consists of an ephemeral adult population followed by a long period of dormancy as seeds.[19] Great mullein rarely establishes on new grounds without human intervention because its seeds do not disperse very far. Seed dispersion requires the stem to be moved by wind or animal movement; 75% of the seeds fall within 1 m of the parent plant, and 93% fall within 5 m.[10]

Megachilid bees of the genus Anthidium use the hair (amongst that of various woolly plants) in making their nests.[58] The seeds are generally too small for birds to feed on,[11] although the American goldfinch has been reported to consume them.[59] Other bird species have been reported to consume the leaves (Hawaiian goose)[60] or flowers (palila),[61] or to use the plant as a source when foraging for insects (white-headed woodpecker).[62] Additionally, deer and elk eat the leaves.[63]

Fossil record edit

Seeds of V. thapsus have been recorded from part of the Cromer Forest Bed series and at West Wittering in Sussex from some parts of the Ipswichian interglacial layers.[64]

Agricultural impacts and control edit

Because it cannot compete with established plants, great mullein is no longer considered a serious agricultural weed and is easily crowded out in cultivation,[19] except in areas where vegetation is sparse to begin with, such as Californian semidesertic areas of the eastern Sierra Nevada in the USA. In such ecological contexts, it crowds out native herbs and grasses; its tendency to appear after forest fires also disturbs the normal ecological succession.[10][12] Although not an agricultural threat, its presence can be very difficult to eradicate and is especially problematic in overgrazed pastures.[9][10][12] The species is legally listed as a noxious weed in the US state of Colorado (class C)[65] and Hawaii,[66] and the Australian state of Victoria (regionally prohibited in the West Gippsland region, and regionally controlled in several others).[67]

Despite not being an agricultural weed in itself, it hosts a number of insects and diseases, including both pests and beneficial insects.[68] It is also a potential reservoir of the cucumber mosaic virus, Erysiphum cichoraceum (the cucurbit powdery mildew) and Texas root rot.[19][69] A study found V. thapsus hosts insects from 29 different families. Most of the pests found were western flower thrips (Frankliniella occidentalis), Lygus species such as the tarnished plant bug (L. lineolaris), and various spider mites from the family Tetranychidae. These make the plant a potential reservoir for overwintering pests.[68]

Other insects commonly found on great mullein feed exclusively on Verbascum species in general or V. thapsus in particular. They include mullein thrips (Haplothrips verbasci),[68] Gymnaetron tetrum (whose larva consume the seeds), and the mullein moth (Cucullia verbasci).[9] Useful insects are also hosted by great mullein, including predatory mites of the genera Galendromus, Typhlodromus, and Amblyseius, the minute pirate bug Orius tristicolor,[68] and the mullein plant bug (Campylomma verbasci).[70] The plant's ability to host both pests and beneficials makes it potentially useful to maintain stable populations of insects used for biological control in other cultures, like Campylomma verbasci and Dicyphus hesperus (Miridae), a predator of whiteflies.[71][72] A number of pest Lepidoptera species, including the stalk borer (Papaipema nebris) and gray hairstreak (Strymon melinus), also use V. thapsus as a host plant.[73]

 
Because of ample irritating hair, V. thapsus is resistant to grazing and contact herbicides.

Control of the plant, when desired, is best managed via mechanical means, such as hand pulling and hoeing, preferably followed by sowing of native plants. Animals rarely graze it because of its irritating hairs, and liquid herbicides require surfactants to be effective, as the hair causes water to roll off the plant, much like the lotus effect. Burning is ineffective, as it only creates new bare areas for seedlings to occupy.[9][10][12] G. tetrum and Cucullia verbasci usually have little effect on V. thapsus populations as a whole.[12] Goats and chickens have also been proposed to control mullein.[10] Effective (when used with a surfactant) contact herbicides include glyphosate,[9][12] triclopyr[9] and sulfurometuron-methyl.[12] Ground herbicides, like tebuthiuron, are also effective, but recreate bare ground and require repeated application to prevent regrowth.[10]

Uses edit

Phytochemicals edit

Phytochemicals in V. thapsus flowers and leaves include saponins, polysaccharides, mucilage, flavonoids, tannins, iridoid and lignin glycosides, and essential oils.[2] The plant's leaves, in addition to the seeds, have been reported to contain rotenone, although quantities are unknown.[74]

Traditional medicine edit

 
"Verbasci flos": dried flowers of V. thapsus as used in herbal tea

Although long used in herbal medicine, no drugs are manufactured from its components.[2] Dioscorides first recommended the plant 2000 years ago, considering it useful as a folk medicine for pulmonary diseases.[75] Leaves were smoked to attempt to treat lung ailments, a tradition that in America was rapidly transmitted to Native American peoples.[31][76] The Zuni people, however, use the plant in poultices of powdered root applied to sores, rashes, and skin infections. An infusion of the root is also used to treat athlete's foot.[77] All preparations meant to be drunk have to be finely filtered to eliminate the irritating hairs.[54]

Oil from the flowers was used against catarrhs, colics, earaches, frostbite, eczema, and other external conditions.[31] Topical application of various V. thapsus-based preparations was recommended for the treatment of warts,[78] boils, carbuncles, hemorrhoids, and chilblains, amongst others.[31][76] Glycyrrhizin compounds with bactericide effects in vitro were isolated from flowers.[79] The German Commission E describes uses of the plant for respiratory infections.[80] It was also part of the National Formulary in the United States[76] and United Kingdom.[31]

The plant has been used in an attempt to treat colds, croup, sunburn, and other skin irritations.[81]

Other uses edit

Roman soldiers are said to have dipped the plant stalks in grease for use as torches. Other cultures use the leaves as wicks.[81] Native Americans and American colonists lined their shoes with leaves from the plant to keep out the cold.[81][31][76]

Mullein may be cultivated as an ornamental plant.[1] As for many plants, (Pliny the Elder described it in his Naturalis Historia),[note 5] great mullein was linked to witches,[31] although the relationship remained generally ambiguous, and the plant was also widely held to ward off curses and evil spirits.[31][54][75][76] The seeds contain several compounds (saponins, glycosides, coumarin, rotenone) that are toxic to fish, and have been widely used as piscicide for fishing.[9][83]

Due to its weedy capacities, the plant, unlike other species of the genus (such as V. phoeniceum), is not often cultivated.[1]

Notes edit

  1. ^ They are all hairy in subspecies V. crassifolium and V. giganteum.
  2. ^ The lectotypification is usually attributed to Arthur Huber-Morath (1971) Denkschriften der Schweizerischen Naturforschenden Gesellschaft 87:43. Some disagree since Huber-Morath did not specifically cite sheet 242.1, and credit instead L. H. Cramer, in Dassanayake & Fosberg (1981) A Revised Handbook to the Flora of Ceylon 3:389.[17]
  3. ^ The 1630 number in Mitch may be a typo: the beginning of the 18th century is cited in other sources.[9][19]
  4. ^ Eaton went so far as to write: "When botanists are so infatuated with wild speculation, as to tell us the mullein was introduced, they give our youngest pupils occasion to sneer at their teachers."[13]
  5. ^ In book 25, Pliny describes "two principal kinds [of verbascum]" thought to be V. thapsus and V. sinuatum. The precise attribution of a third kind is unclear.[82]

References edit

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  39. ^ Watts (2000), pp. 108, 369.
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  41. ^ Coutts, J; Osborn, A; Edwards, A (1954). Preston, G.H. (ed.). The Complete Book of Gardening. Great Britain: Ward, Lock & Co., Limited. p. 255.
  42. ^ Watts (2000), pp. 774–775, 819–820. p. 866: "A tall plant like Mullein attracts 'staff' and 'rod' names."
  43. ^ Watts (2000), pp. 302, 634.
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Further reading edit

  • Watts, Donald (2000). Elsevier's Dictionary of Plant Names and their Origin. Amsterdam: Elsevier Science. ISBN 0-444-50356-0.

External links edit

  • Verbascum.org
  • The type specimen of Verbascum thapsus
  • Microphotographies of great mullein
  • from the UBC collection
  • JLindquist.com: webpage with pictures of tall specimens

verbascum, thapsus, great, mullein, greater, mullein, common, mullein, species, mullein, native, europe, northern, africa, asia, introduced, americas, australia, second, year, plant, starting, flower, with, dead, stem, previous, year, behind, leftscientific, c. Verbascum thapsus the great mullein greater mullein or common mullein is a species of mullein native to Europe northern Africa and Asia and introduced in the Americas and Australia 1 Verbascum thapsusSecond year plant starting to flower with a dead stem of the previous year behind leftScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade AsteridsOrder LamialesFamily ScrophulariaceaeGenus VerbascumSpecies V thapsusBinomial nameVerbascum thapsusLinnaeusIt is a hairy biennial plant that can grow to 2 m tall or more Its small yellow flowers are densely grouped on a tall stem which grows from a large rosette of leaves It grows in a wide variety of habitats but prefers well lit disturbed soils where it can appear soon after the ground receives light from long lived seeds that persist in the soil seed bank It is a common weedy plant that spreads by prolifically producing seeds and has become invasive in temperate world regions 1 It is a minor problem for most agricultural crops since it is not a competitive species being intolerant of shade from other plants and unable to survive tilling It also hosts many insects some of which can be harmful to other plants Although individuals are easy to remove by hand populations are difficult to eliminate permanently Although commonly used in traditional medicine no approved drugs are made from this plant 2 It has been used to make dyes and torches 1 Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Subspecies and hybrids 2 2 Common names 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Ecology 5 Fossil record 6 Agricultural impacts and control 7 Uses 7 1 Phytochemicals 7 2 Traditional medicine 7 3 Other uses 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Further reading 10 External linksDescription edit nbsp A stemless rosette in HawaiiV thapsus is a dicotyledonous plant that produces a rosette of leaves in its first year of growth 3 4 The leaves are large up to 50 cm long The second year plants normally produce a single unbranched stem usually 1 2 m tall In the eastern part of its range in China it is however only reported to grow up to 1 5 m tall 5 The tall pole like stems end in a dense spike of flowers 3 that can occupy up to half the stem length All parts of the plants are covered with star shaped trichomes 5 6 This cover is particularly thick on the leaves giving them a silvery appearance The species chromosome number is 2n 36 7 On flowering plants the leaves are alternately arranged up the stem They are thick and decurrent with much variation in leaf shape between the upper and lower leaves on the stem ranging from oblong to oblanceolate and reaching sizes up to 50 cm long and 14 cm across 19 inches long and 5 inches wide 8 9 They become smaller higher up the stem 3 4 and less strongly decurrent down the stem 3 The flowering stem is solid and 2 2 5 cm nearly an inch across and occasionally branched just below the inflorescence 4 usually following damage 10 After flowering and seed release the stem and fruits usually persist in winter 11 drying into dark brown stiff structures of densely packed ovoid shaped and dry seed capsules The dried stems may persist into the following spring or even the next summer The plant produces a shallow taproot 9 nbsp A closeup of the flowersFlowers are pentamerous with usually five stamen a five lobed calyx tube and a five petalled corolla the latter bright yellow and an 1 5 3 cm 0 59 1 18 in wide The flowers are almost sessile with very short pedicels 2 mm 0 08 in The five stamens are of two types with the three upper stamens being shorter their filaments covered by yellow or whitish hairs and having smaller anthers while the lower two stamens have glabrous filaments and larger anthers 6 note 1 The plant produces small ovoid 6 mm 0 24 in capsules that split open by way of two valves each capsule containing large numbers of minute brown seeds less than 1 mm 0 04 in 12 in size marked with longitudinal ridges A white flowered form V thapsus f candicans is known to occur 13 Flowering lasts up to three months from early to late summer June to August in northern Europe 4 with flowering starting at the bottom of the spike and progressing irregularly upward each flower opens for part of a day and only a few open at the same time around the stem 11 Taxonomy editFor the purpose of botanical nomenclature Verbascum thapsus was first described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1753 Species Plantarum The specific epithet thapsus had been first used by Theophrastus as 8apsos Thapsos 14 for an unspecified herb from the Ancient Greek settlement of Thapsos near modern Syracuse Sicily 14 15 though it is often assimilated to the ancient Tunisian city of Thapsus 16 At the time no type specimen was specified as the practice only arose later in the 19th century When a lectotype type selected amongst original material was designated it was assigned to specimen 242 1 of Linnaeus herbarium the only V thapsus specimen note 2 The species had previously been designated as type species for Verbascum 18 European plants exhibit considerable phenotypical variation 19 which has led to the plant acquiring many synonyms over the years 17 20 Introduced American populations show much less variation 19 The taxonomy of Verbascum has not undergone any significant revision since Svanve Murbeck s monographs in the 1930s with the exception of the work of Arthur Huber Morath who used informal grouping in organizing the genus for the florae of Iran and Turkey to account for many intermediate species Since Huber Morath s groups are not taxonomical Murbeck s treatment is the most current one available as no study has yet sought to apply genetic or molecular data extensively to the genus In Murbeck s classification V thapsus is placed in sect Bothrospermae subsect Fasciculata alongside species such as Verbascum nigrum black or dark mullein Verbascum lychnitis white mullein and Verbascum sinuatum wavy leaved mullein 21 22 23 24 As Verbascum thapsus is the type species of the genus the application of article 22 of the ICNafp gives sect Verbascum subsect Verbascum as the correct nomenclature for this placement Subspecies and hybrids edit Hybrids of Verbascum thapsus 7 25 Hybrid name Otherparent species NotesV duernsteinense Teyber V speciosumV godronii Boreau V pulverulentumV kerneri Fritsch V phlomoidesV lemaitrei Boreau V virgatumV pterocaulon Franch V blattariaV thapsi L V lychnitis syn V spurium W D J Koch may be anomen ambiguum 26 V semialbum Chaub V nigrumnone V pyramidatumThe three usually recognized subspecies are V t thapsus type widespread V t crassifolium Lam Murb Mediterranean region and to 2000 metres in southwestern Austria 27 syn subsp montanum Scrad Bonnier amp Layens V t giganteum Willk Nyman Spain endemic In all subspecies but the type the lower stamens are also hairy 28 In V t crassifolium the hairiness is less dense and often absent from the upper part of the anthers while lower leaves are hardly decurrent and have longer petioles 27 In V t giganteum the hairs are densely white tomentose and lower leaves are strongly decurrent V t crassifolium also differs from the type in having slightly larger flowers which measure 15 30 mm wide whereas in the type they are 12 20 mm in diameter 27 Both V t giganteum and V t crassifolium were originally described as species 3 Due to its morphological variation V thapsus has had a great many subspecies described A recent revision led its author to maintain V giganteum but sink V crassifolium into synonymy 24 The plant is also parent to several hybrids see table Of these the most common is V semialbum Chaub V nigrum 7 All occur in Eurasia 7 and three V kerneri Fritsch V pterocaulon Franch and V thapsi L syn V spurium W D J Koch have also been reported in North America 25 29 Common names edit V thapsus is known by a variety of names European reference books call it great mullein 30 31 32 In North America common mullein is used 33 34 while western United States residents commonly refer to mullein as cowboy toilet paper 35 36 In the 19th century it had well over 40 different common names in English alone Some of the more whimsical ones included hig candlewick Indian rag weed bullicks lungwort Adams rod hare s beard and ice leaf 37 Vernacular names include innumerable references to the plant s hairiness woolly mullein velvet mullein or blanket mullein 32 38 beggar s blanket Moses blanket poor man s blanket Our Lady s blanket or old man s blanket 31 34 39 and feltwort and so on flannel is another common generic name Mullein itself derives from the French word for soft 40 Some names refer to the plant s size and shape shepherd s club s or staff Aaron s rod 41 a name it shares with a number of other plants with tall yellow inflorescences and a plethora of other X s staff and X s rod 31 34 42 The name velvet dock or mullein dock is also recorded where dock is a British name applied to any broad leaved plant 43 Distribution and habitat editV thapsus has a wide native range including Europe northern Africa and Asia from the Azores and Canary Islands east to western China north to the British Isles Scandinavia and Siberia and south to the Himalayas 5 44 45 In northern Europe it grows from sea level up to 1 850 m altitude 4 while in China it grows at 1 400 3 200 m altitude 5 It has been introduced throughout the temperate world and is established as a weed in Australia New Zealand tropical Asia La Reunion North America Hawaii Chile Hispaniola and Argentina 45 46 47 48 It has also been reported in Japan 49 In the United States it was imported very early in the 18th note 3 century and cultivated for its medicinal and piscicide properties By 1818 it had begun spreading so much that Amos Eaton thought it was a native plant note 4 9 50 In 1839 it was already reported in Michigan and in 1876 in California 9 It is now found commonly in all the states 51 In Canada it is most common in the Maritime Provinces and southern Quebec Ontario and British Columbia with scattered populations in between 19 52 Great mullein most frequently grows as a colonist of bare and disturbed soil usually on sandy or chalky ones 7 It grows best in dry sandy or gravelly soils although it can grow in a variety of habitats including banksides meadows roadsides forest clearings and pastures This ability to grow in a wide range of habitats has been linked to strong phenotype variation rather than adaptation capacities 53 Ecology edit nbsp V thapsus grows best with little competition Great mullein is a biennial and generally requires winter dormancy before it can flower 10 This dormancy is linked to starch degradation activated by low temperatures in the root and gibberellin application bypasses this requirement 54 Seeds germinate almost solely in bare soil at temperatures between 10 and 40 C 10 While they can germinate in total darkness if proper conditions are present tests give a 35 germination rate under ideal conditions in the wild they in practice only do so when exposed to light or very close to the soil surface which explains the plant s habitat preferences While it can also grow in areas where some vegetation already exists growth of the rosettes on bare soil is four to seven times more rapid 10 Seeds germinate in spring and summer Those that germinate in autumn produce plants that overwinter if they are large enough while rosettes less than 15 cm 6 in across die in winter After flowering the entire plant usually dies at the end of its second year 10 but some individuals especially in the northern parts of the range require a longer growth period and flower in their third year Under better growing conditions some individuals flower in the first year 55 Triennial individuals have been found to produce fewer seeds than biennial and annual ones While year of flowering and size are linked to the environment most other characteristics appear to be genetic 56 A given flower is open only for a single day opening before dawn and closing in the afternoon 19 Flowers are self fecundating and protogynous with female parts maturing first 19 and will self pollinate if they have not been pollinated by insects during the day While many insects visit the flowers only some bees actually accomplish pollination The flowering period of V thapsus lasts from June to August in most of its range extending to September or October in warmer climates 9 10 12 Visitors include halictid bees and hoverflies 11 The hair on lower stamens may serve to provide footholds for visitors 19 nbsp The fruit of great mullein contains large numbers of minute seed The seeds maintain their germinative powers for decades up to 100 years according to some studies 57 Because of this and because the plant is an extremely prolific seed bearer each plant produces hundreds of capsules each containing up to 700 seeds 19 with a total up to 180 000 9 10 or 240 000 12 seeds it remains in the soil seed bank for extended periods of time and can sprout from apparently bare ground 10 or shortly after forest fires long after previous plants have died 12 Its population pattern typically consists of an ephemeral adult population followed by a long period of dormancy as seeds 19 Great mullein rarely establishes on new grounds without human intervention because its seeds do not disperse very far Seed dispersion requires the stem to be moved by wind or animal movement 75 of the seeds fall within 1 m of the parent plant and 93 fall within 5 m 10 Megachilid bees of the genus Anthidium use the hair amongst that of various woolly plants in making their nests 58 The seeds are generally too small for birds to feed on 11 although the American goldfinch has been reported to consume them 59 Other bird species have been reported to consume the leaves Hawaiian goose 60 or flowers palila 61 or to use the plant as a source when foraging for insects white headed woodpecker 62 Additionally deer and elk eat the leaves 63 Fossil record editSeeds of V thapsus have been recorded from part of the Cromer Forest Bed series and at West Wittering in Sussex from some parts of the Ipswichian interglacial layers 64 Agricultural impacts and control editBecause it cannot compete with established plants great mullein is no longer considered a serious agricultural weed and is easily crowded out in cultivation 19 except in areas where vegetation is sparse to begin with such as Californian semidesertic areas of the eastern Sierra Nevada in the USA In such ecological contexts it crowds out native herbs and grasses its tendency to appear after forest fires also disturbs the normal ecological succession 10 12 Although not an agricultural threat its presence can be very difficult to eradicate and is especially problematic in overgrazed pastures 9 10 12 The species is legally listed as a noxious weed in the US state of Colorado class C 65 and Hawaii 66 and the Australian state of Victoria regionally prohibited in the West Gippsland region and regionally controlled in several others 67 Despite not being an agricultural weed in itself it hosts a number of insects and diseases including both pests and beneficial insects 68 It is also a potential reservoir of the cucumber mosaic virus Erysiphum cichoraceum the cucurbit powdery mildew and Texas root rot 19 69 A study found V thapsus hosts insects from 29 different families Most of the pests found were western flower thrips Frankliniella occidentalis Lygus species such as the tarnished plant bug L lineolaris and various spider mites from the family Tetranychidae These make the plant a potential reservoir for overwintering pests 68 Other insects commonly found on great mullein feed exclusively on Verbascum species in general or V thapsus in particular They include mullein thrips Haplothrips verbasci 68 Gymnaetron tetrum whose larva consume the seeds and the mullein moth Cucullia verbasci 9 Useful insects are also hosted by great mullein including predatory mites of the genera Galendromus Typhlodromus and Amblyseius the minute pirate bug Orius tristicolor 68 and the mullein plant bug Campylomma verbasci 70 The plant s ability to host both pests and beneficials makes it potentially useful to maintain stable populations of insects used for biological control in other cultures like Campylomma verbasci and Dicyphus hesperus Miridae a predator of whiteflies 71 72 A number of pest Lepidoptera species including the stalk borer Papaipema nebris and gray hairstreak Strymon melinus also use V thapsus as a host plant 73 nbsp Because of ample irritating hair V thapsus is resistant to grazing and contact herbicides Control of the plant when desired is best managed via mechanical means such as hand pulling and hoeing preferably followed by sowing of native plants Animals rarely graze it because of its irritating hairs and liquid herbicides require surfactants to be effective as the hair causes water to roll off the plant much like the lotus effect Burning is ineffective as it only creates new bare areas for seedlings to occupy 9 10 12 G tetrum and Cucullia verbasci usually have little effect on V thapsus populations as a whole 12 Goats and chickens have also been proposed to control mullein 10 Effective when used with a surfactant contact herbicides include glyphosate 9 12 triclopyr 9 and sulfurometuron methyl 12 Ground herbicides like tebuthiuron are also effective but recreate bare ground and require repeated application to prevent regrowth 10 Uses editPhytochemicals edit Phytochemicals in V thapsus flowers and leaves include saponins polysaccharides mucilage flavonoids tannins iridoid and lignin glycosides and essential oils 2 The plant s leaves in addition to the seeds have been reported to contain rotenone although quantities are unknown 74 Traditional medicine edit nbsp Verbasci flos dried flowers of V thapsus as used in herbal teaAlthough long used in herbal medicine no drugs are manufactured from its components 2 Dioscorides first recommended the plant 2000 years ago considering it useful as a folk medicine for pulmonary diseases 75 Leaves were smoked to attempt to treat lung ailments a tradition that in America was rapidly transmitted to Native American peoples 31 76 The Zuni people however use the plant in poultices of powdered root applied to sores rashes and skin infections An infusion of the root is also used to treat athlete s foot 77 All preparations meant to be drunk have to be finely filtered to eliminate the irritating hairs 54 Oil from the flowers was used against catarrhs colics earaches frostbite eczema and other external conditions 31 Topical application of various V thapsus based preparations was recommended for the treatment of warts 78 boils carbuncles hemorrhoids and chilblains amongst others 31 76 Glycyrrhizin compounds with bactericide effects in vitro were isolated from flowers 79 The German Commission E describes uses of the plant for respiratory infections 80 It was also part of the National Formulary in the United States 76 and United Kingdom 31 The plant has been used in an attempt to treat colds croup sunburn and other skin irritations 81 Other uses edit Roman soldiers are said to have dipped the plant stalks in grease for use as torches Other cultures use the leaves as wicks 81 Native Americans and American colonists lined their shoes with leaves from the plant to keep out the cold 81 31 76 Mullein may be cultivated as an ornamental plant 1 As for many plants Pliny the Elder described it in his Naturalis Historia note 5 great mullein was linked to witches 31 although the relationship remained generally ambiguous and the plant was also widely held to ward off curses and evil spirits 31 54 75 76 The seeds contain several compounds saponins glycosides coumarin rotenone that are toxic to fish and have been widely used as piscicide for fishing 9 83 Due to its weedy capacities the plant unlike other species of the genus such as V phoeniceum is not often cultivated 1 Notes edit They are all hairy in subspecies V crassifolium and V giganteum The lectotypification is usually attributed to Arthur Huber Morath 1971 Denkschriften der Schweizerischen Naturforschenden Gesellschaft 87 43 Some disagree since Huber Morath did not specifically cite sheet 242 1 and credit instead L H Cramer in Dassanayake amp Fosberg 1981 A Revised Handbook to the Flora of Ceylon 3 389 17 The 1630 number in Mitch may be a typo the beginning of the 18th century is cited in other sources 9 19 Eaton went so far as to write When botanists are so infatuated with wild speculation as to tell us the mullein was introduced they give our youngest pupils occasion to sneer at their teachers 13 In book 25 Pliny describes two principal kinds of verbascum thought to be V thapsus and V sinuatum The precise attribution of a third kind is unclear 82 References edit a b c d e Verbascum thapsus common mullein CABI 20 November 2018 Retrieved 13 July 2019 a b c Mullein Drugs com 23 November 2020 Retrieved 7 February 2021 a b c d e Ferguson Ian Keith 1972 V thapsus In Tutin Thomas Gaskell et al eds Flora Europaea Vol 3 Diapensiaceae to Myoporaceae Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 211 ISBN 0 521 08489 X a b c d e Blamey M amp Grey Wilson C 1989 Flora of Britain and Northern Europe Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 340 40170 2 a b c d Verbascum thapsus Flora of China eFloras org Retrieved 2009 11 06 a b Wetherwax M 1993 Verbascum thapsus L Jepson Manual online University of California at Berkeley Retrieved 2009 11 06 a b c d e Stace C van der Meijden R de Kort I eds Verbascum thapsus Mullein Great Interactive Flora of NW Europe World Biodiversity Database Archived from the original on 2012 06 06 Retrieved 2011 11 20 Huxley A ed 1992 New RHS Dictionary of Gardening Macmillan ISBN 0 333 47494 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Remaley Tom 1998 Verbascum thapsus Plant Conservation Alliance s Alien Plant Working Group Retrieved 2009 11 06 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Hoshovsky Marc C August 2001 Element Stewardship Abstract for Verbascum thapsus PDF The Global Invasive Species Initiative Retrieved 2009 11 06 a b c d Hilty John Great Mullein Weedy Wildflowers of Illinois Illinois Wildflowers Retrieved 2009 11 06 a b c d e f g h i j Pitcairn Michael Verbascum thapsus Invasive Plants of California s Wildland California Invasive Plant Council Archived from the original on 2011 03 12 Retrieved 2009 11 06 a b Pennel Francis Whittier 1935 The Scrophulariaceae of eastern temperate North America Philadelphia George W Carpenter Fund pp 173 174 OCLC 852625 a b Carnoy A 1959 Dictionnaire etymologique des noms grecs de plantes in French Louvain Publications Universitaires OCLC 3284108 in Swedish Den virtuella Floran Verbascum thapsus retrieved on November 6 2009 Charters Michael L Plant name T California Plant Names Latin and Greek Meanings and Derivations Calflora net Retrieved 2009 11 06 a b Verbascum thapsus citation Atlas of Florida vascular Plants Institute for Systematic Botany Retrieved 2009 11 06 Natural 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Dicyphus hesperus Heteroptera Miridae in tomato greenhouses Biological Control 28 3 313 319 Bibcode 2003BiolC 28 313S doi 10 1016 S1049 9644 03 00116 6 HOSTS a Database of the World s Lepidopteran Hostplants The Natural History Museum Archived from the original on June 27 2008 Retrieved 2009 11 06 Verbascum thapsus Plants For A Future Retrieved 2011 03 16 a b Silverman Maida 1977 Mullein A City Herbal Lore Legend amp Uses of Common Weeds Ash Tree Publishing pp 99 104 ISBN 1 888123 00 1 a b c d e Hanrahan Claire Rebecca J Frey 2005 Mullein In Jacqueline L Longe ed The Gale encyclopedia of alternative medicine Vol 3 L R 2nd ed Detroit Thomson Gale ISBN 0 7876 7427 3 Archived from the original on July 15 2009 Retrieved 2006 11 30 Camzine Scott Bye Robert A 1980 A Study Of The Medical Ethnobotany Of The Zuni Indians of New Mexico Journal of Ethnopharmacology 2 4 365 388 378 doi 10 1016 S0378 8741 80 81017 8 PMID 6893476 Drury Susan 1991 Plants and Wart Cures in England from the Seventeenth to the Nineteenth Century Some Examples Folklore 102 1 97 100 doi 10 1080 0015587X 1991 9715809 JSTOR 1260360 Turker Arzu Ucar N D Camper October 2002 Biological activity of common mullein a medicinal plant Journal of Ethnopharmacology 82 2 3 117 125 doi 10 1016 S0378 8741 02 00186 1 PMID 12241986 Mullein flower The Commission E Monographs American Botanical Council February 1 1990 Archived from the original on 2006 05 11 Retrieved 2009 11 06 a b c Niering William A Olmstead Nancy C 1985 1979 The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Wildflowers Eastern Region Knopf p 653 ISBN 0 394 50432 1 Latin English Wilhelm Gene April 1974 The mullein Plant piscicide of the mountain folk culture Geographical Review 64 2 235 252 Bibcode 1974GeoRv 64 235W doi 10 2307 213812 JSTOR 213812 Further reading edit Watts Donald 2000 Elsevier s Dictionary of Plant Names and their Origin Amsterdam Elsevier Science ISBN 0 444 50356 0 External links edit nbsp Wikiversity has bloom time data for Verbascum thapsus on the Bloom Clock nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Verbascum thapsus Verbascum org The type specimen of Verbascum thapsus Microphotographies of great mullein Seeds picture from the UBC collection JLindquist com webpage with pictures of tall specimens Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Verbascum thapsus amp oldid 1208626212, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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