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Nymphaea

Nymphaea (/nɪmˈfə/) is a genus of hardy and tender aquatic plants in the family Nymphaeaceae. The genus has a cosmopolitan distribution. Many species are cultivated as ornamental plants, and many cultivars have been bred. Some taxa occur as introduced species where they are not native,[3] and some are weeds.[4] Plants of the genus are known commonly as water lilies,[3][5] or waterlilies in the United Kingdom. The genus name is from the Greek νυμφαία, nymphaia and the Latin nymphaea, which mean "water lily" and were inspired by the nymphs of Greek and Latin mythology.[3]

Nymphaea
Nymphaea alba L., the type species of the genus[2]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Order: Nymphaeales
Family: Nymphaeaceae
Genus: Nymphaea
L.
Type species
Nymphaea alba L.[2]
Species

65 species, see text[1]

Synonyms[1]
  • Castalia Salisb., Parad. Lond. 1: t. 14 (1805)
  • Leuconymphaea Kuntze, Revis. Gen. Pl. 1: 11 (1891)
  • Ondinea Hartog, Blumea 18: 413 (1970)

Description Edit

 
A bright-field micrograph of a cross-section of a floating leaf of Nymphaea alba.
  • E1: upper epiderm
  • E2: lower epiderm
  • P: palisade mesophyll
  • M: spongy mesophyll
  • B: vascular bundle
  • I: intercellular gap
  • S: sclerenchyma

Water lilies are aquatic rhizomatous herbaceous perennials, sometimes with stolons as well. The stem is angular and erect. The leaves grow from the rhizome on long petioles (stalk that attaches the leaf blade to the stem). Floating round leaves of waterlily grow up to 30 centimetres (12 inches) across. The disc-shaped leaf blades are notched and split to the stem in a V-shape at the centre, and are often purple underneath. Most of them float on the surface of the water. The leaves have smooth or spine-toothed edges, and they can be rounded or pointed.

The flowers rise out of the water or float on the surface, opening during the day or at night.[3] Many species of Nymphaea display protogynous flowering. The temporal separation of these female and male phases is physically reinforced by flower opening and closing, so the first flower opening displays female pistil and then closes at the end of the female phase, and reopens with male stamens.[6] Each has at least eight petals in shades of white, pink, blue, or yellow. Many stamens are at the center.[3] Water lily flowers are entomophilous, meaning they are pollinated by insects, often beetles.[3] The fruit is berry-like and borne on a curving or coiling peduncle.[3] The plant reproduces by root tubers and seeds.

Taxonomy Edit

 
Nymphaea stellata

This is one of several genera of plants known commonly as lotuses. It is not related to the legume genus Lotus or the East Asian and South Asian lotuses of genus Nelumbo. It is closely related to Nuphar lotuses, however. In Nymphaea, the petals are much larger than the sepals, whereas in Nuphar, the petals are much smaller. The process of fruit maturation also differs, with Nymphaea fruit sinking below the water level immediately after the flower closes, and Nuphar fruit remaining above the surface.[citation needed]

Subgenera Edit

  • Anecphya
  • Brachyceras
  • Hydrocallis
  • Lotos
  • Nymphaea:
    • section Chamaenymphaea
    • section Nymphaea
    • section Xanthantha [7]

Species Edit

As of June 2023, there are 65 accepted species by Plants of the World Online:[1]

  • Nymphaea abhayana A.Chowdhury & M.Chowdhury
  • Nymphaea alba L.
  • Nymphaea alexii S.W.L.Jacobs & Hellq.
  • Nymphaea amazonum Mart. & Zucc.
  • Nymphaea ampla (Salisb.) DC.
  • Nymphaea atrans S.W.L.Jacobs
  • Nymphaea belophylla Trickett
  • Nymphaea × borealis E.G.Camus
  • Nymphaea caatingae C.T.Lima & Giul.
  • Nymphaea candida C.Presl
  • Nymphaea carpentariae S.W.L.Jacobs & Hellq.
  • Nymphaea conardii Wiersema
  • Nymphaea × daubenyana W.T.Baxter ex Daubeny
  • Nymphaea dimorpha I.M.Turner
  • Nymphaea divaricata Hutch.
  • Nymphaea elegans Hook.
  • Nymphaea elleniae S.W.L.Jacobs
  • Nymphaea francae C.T.Lima & Giul.
  • Nymphaea gardneriana Planch.
  • Nymphaea georginae S.W.L.Jacobs & Hellq.
  • Nymphaea gigantea Hook.
  • Nymphaea glandulifera Rodschied
  • Nymphaea gracilis Zucc.
  • Nymphaea guineensis Schumach. & Thonn.
  • Nymphaea harleyi C.T.Lima & Giul.
  • Nymphaea hastifolia Domin
  • Nymphaea heudelotii Planch.
  • Nymphaea immutabilis S.W.L.Jacobs
  • Nymphaea jacobsii Hellq.
  • Nymphaea jamesoniana Planch.
  • Nymphaea kakaduensis Hellq., A.Leu & M.L.Moody
  • Nymphaea kimberleyensis (S.W.L.Jacobs) S.W.L.Jacobs & Hellq.
  • Nymphaea lasiophylla Mart. & Zucc.
  • Nymphaea leibergii (Morong) Rydb.
  • Nymphaea lingulata Wiersema
  • Nymphaea loriana Wiersema, Hellq. & Borsch
  • Nymphaea lotus L.
  • Nymphaea lukei S.W.L.Jacobs & Hellq.
  • Nymphaea macrosperma Merr. & L.M.Perry
  • Nymphaea maculata Schumach. & Thonn.
  • Nymphaea manipurensis Asharani & Biseshwori
  • Nymphaea mexicana Zucc.
  • Nymphaea micrantha Guill. & Perr.
  • Nymphaea noelae S.W.L.Jacobs & Hellq.
  • Nymphaea nouchali Burm.f.
  • Nymphaea novogranatensis Wiersema
  • Nymphaea odorata Aiton
  • Nymphaea ondinea Löhne, Wiersema & Borsch
  • Nymphaea oxypetala Planch.
  • Nymphaea paganuccii C.T.Lima & Giul.
  • Nymphaea pedersenii (Wiersema) C.T.Lima & Giul.
  • Nymphaea potamophila Wiersema
  • Nymphaea prolifera Wiersema
  • Nymphaea pubescens Willd.
  • Nymphaea pulchella DC.
  • Nymphaea rapinii C.T.Lima & Giul.
  • Nymphaea × rosea (Sims) Sweet
  • Nymphaea rubra Roxb. ex Andrews
  • Nymphaea rudgeana G.Mey.
  • Nymphaea siamensis Puripany.
  • Nymphaea stuhlmannii (Engl.) Schweinf. & Gilg
  • Nymphaea sulphurea Gilg
  • Nymphaea × sundvikii Hiitonen
  • Nymphaea tenuinervia Casp.
  • Nymphaea tetragona Georgi
  • Nymphaea thermarum Eb.Fisch.
  • Nymphaea × thiona D.B.Ward
  • Nymphaea vanildae C.T.Lima & Giul.
  • Nymphaea vaporalis S.W.L.Jacobs & Hellq.
  • Nymphaea violacea Lehm.

Cultivation Edit

Water lilies are not only decorative, but also provide useful shade which helps reduce the growth of algae in ponds and lakes.[8] Many of the water lilies familiar in water gardening are hybrids and cultivars. These cultivars have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit:

 
'Escarboucle'
  • 'Escarboucle'[9] (orange-red)
  • 'Gladstoniana'[10] (double white flowers with prominent yellow stamens)
  • 'Gonnère'[11] (double white scented flowers)
  • 'James Brydon;'[12] (cupped rose-red flowers)
  • 'Marliacea Chromatella'[13] (pale yellow flowers)
  • 'Pygmaea Helvola'[14] (miniature, with cupped fragrant yellow flowers)

Uses Edit

All water lilies are poisonous and contain an alkaloid called nupharin in almost all of their parts,[15] with the exception of the seeds and in some species, the tubers.

The European species contain large amounts of nupharin, and are considered inedible. The amount of nupharin in the leaves and stalks appears to vary seasonally in European species.

In some species, the rhizomes and tubers are eaten after boiling has neutralised the nupharin.

The tubers of a number of Australian, Asian and African species are completely edible, during the dry season some consist almost entirely of starch.

The Ancient Egyptians ate them boiled.

In India, it has mostly been eaten as a famine food or as a medicinal (both cooked),[16] but in one area the dried rhizomes were pounded into a sort of bread, and the tubers are often eaten in the floodplains.

In Vietnam, the rhizomes were eaten roasted.

In Sri Lanka it was formerly eaten as a type of medicine and its price was too high to serve as a normal meal, but in the 1940s or earlier some villagers began to grow water lilies in the paddy fields left uncultivated during the monsoon season (Yala season), and the price dropped. The tubers are called manel here and eaten boiled and in curries.[16]

The tubers of all occurring species were eaten in West Africa and Madagascar (where they are called tantamon for blue and laze-laze for white), usually boiled or roasted.

In West Africa, usage varied between cultures, in the Upper Guinea the rhizomes were only considered famine foods - here the tubers were either roasted in ashes, or dried and ground into a flour. The Buduma people ate the seeds and rhizomes. Some tribes ate the rhizomes raw. The Hausa people of Ghana, Nigeria and the people of Southern Sudan used the tubers of Nymphaea lotus, the seeds (inside the tubers) are locally referred to as ‘gunsi’ in Ghana. They are ground into flour.[17]

In China the tubers were eaten cooked.

The plants were also said to be eaten in the Philippines. In the 1950s there were no records of leaves or flowers being eaten.[18]

In a North American species, the boiled young leaves and unopened flower buds are said to be edible. The seeds, high in starch, protein, and oil, may be popped, parched, or ground into flour. Potato-like tubers can be collected from the species N. tuberosa (=N. odorata).[19]

The tubers of Nymphaea gigantea of Australia were roasted by certain tribes, these turn the colour blue when boiled, the tubers of other species were also roasted elsewhere on that continent.

Water lilies were said to have been a major food source for a certain tribe of indigenous Australians in 1930, with the flowers and stems eaten raw, while the "roots and seedpods" were cooked either on an open fire or in a ground oven.[20]

 
Blue lotus (Nymphaea caerulea) on an 18th Dynasty jar found at Amarna

Culture Edit

 
Water Lilies by Claude Monet, 1906
 
A nymphaea in the coat of arms of Pälkäne
 
Lotus symbol of the Sasanian Empire flag

The Ancient Egyptians used the water lilies of the Nile as cultural symbols.[21] Since 1580 it has become popular in the English language to apply the Latin word lotus, originally used to designate a tree, to the water lilies growing in Egypt, and much later the word was used to translate words in Indian texts.[22] The lotus motif is a frequent feature of temple column architecture. In Egypt, the lotus, rising from the bottom mud to unfold its petals to the sun, suggested the glory of the sun's own emergence from the primaeval slime. It was a metaphor of creation. It was a symbol of the fertility gods and goddesses as well as a symbol of the upper Nile as the giver of life.[21]

The flowers of the blue Egyptian water lily (N. caerulea) open in the morning and close at dusk, while those of the white water lily (N. lotus) open at night and close in the morning. Egyptians found this symbolic of the separation of deities and of death and the afterlife. Remains of both flowers have been found in the burial tomb of Ramesses II.[citation needed]

A Roman belief existed that drinking a liquid of crushed Nymphaea in vinegar for 10 consecutive days turned a boy into a eunuch.[23]

The Nymphaea, which is also called Nilufar in Persian, can be seen in many reliefs of the Achaemenid period (552 BC) such as the statue of Anahita in the Persepolis. Lotus flower was included in Kaveh the blacksmith's Derafsh and later as the flag of the Sasanian Empire Derafsh Kaviani. Today, it is known as the symbol of Iranians Solar Hijri Calendar.[citation needed]

A Syrian terra-cotta plaque from the 14th–13th centuries BC shows the goddess Asherah holding two lotus blossoms. An ivory panel from the 9th-8th centuries BC shows the god Horus seated on a lotus blossom, flanked by two cherubs.[24]

There is a Polish poem by 19th-century poet Juliusz Słowacki in which the rhizomes are eaten.

The French Impressionist painter Claude Monet is known for his many paintings of water lilies in the pond in his garden at Giverny.[25]

N. nouchali is the national flower of Bangladesh[26] and Sri Lanka.[27]

Water lilies are also used as ritual narcotics. According to one source, this topic "was the subject of a lecture by William Emboden given at Nash Hall of the Harvard Botanical Museum on the morning of April 6, 1979".[28]

Examples Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c "Nymphaea L." Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 29 June 2023.
  2. ^ a b Nymphaea | International Plant Names Index. (n.d.). Retrieved June 26, 2023, from https://www.ipni.org/n/330032-2
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Nymphaea. Flora of North America.
  4. ^ Nymphaea. The Jepson eFlora 2013.
  5. ^ Nymphaea. Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS).
  6. ^ Povilus, R. A.; Losada, J. M.; Friedman, W. E. (2015). "Floral biology and ovule and seed ontogeny of Nymphaea thermarum, a water lily at the brink of extinction with potential as a model system for basal angiosperms". Annals of Botany. 115 (2): 211–226. doi:10.1093/aob/mcu235. PMC 4551091. PMID 25497514.
  7. ^ "USDA GRIN Taxonomy. Nymphaea L."
  8. ^ RHS A-Z Encyclopedia of Garden Plants. United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. 2008. p. 1136. ISBN 978-1405332965.
  9. ^ "RHS Plant Selector - Nymphaea 'Escarboucle'". Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  10. ^ "RHS Plant Selector - Nymphaea 'Gladstoniana'". Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  11. ^ "RHS Plant Selector - Nymphaea 'Gonnere'". Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  12. ^ "RHS Plant Selector - Nymphaea 'James Brydon'". Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  13. ^ "RHS Plant Selector - Nymphaea 'Marliacea Chromatella'". Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  14. ^ "RHS Plant Selector - Nymphaea 'Pygmaea Helvola'". Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  15. ^ Chapter 10 Nuphar Alkaloids. J.T. Wróbel, The Alkaloids: Chemistry and Physiology, 1967, Volume 9, Pages 441–465, doi:10.1016/S1876-0813(08)60206-7
  16. ^ a b Tiwari, Ashok (September 2019). "Nutritional composition and antioxidative stress properties in boiled tuberous rhizome of Neel Kamal (Nymphaea nouchali Burm. f.)". Indian Journal of Natural Products and Resources. 10 (1): 59–67.
  17. ^ Adanse, John; Bigson, Kate; Dare, Nyefene Joe; Glago, Patricia (2021). "Proximate and Functional Properties of Water Lily (Nymphaea Lotus),Coconut (Cocos Nicifera) and Wheat (Titricum Aestivum) Flour Blends". J Food Tech Food Chem. 3: 104.
  18. ^ FR Irvine, RS Trickett - Water lilies as Food - Kew Bulletin, 1953
  19. ^ Peterson, L. A. (1977). A Field Guide to the Wild Edible Plants of Eastern and Central North America. New York, New York: Houghton Mifflin. p. 22.
  20. ^ McConnel, U. H. 1930. ‘The Wik-Munkan Tribe of Cape York Peninsula’. Oceania 1: 97–108
  21. ^ a b Tresidder, Jack (1997). The Hutchinson Dictionary of Symbols. London: Duncan Baird Publishers. p. 126. ISBN 1-85986-059-1.
  22. ^ Harper, Douglas. "The Origin and Meaning of the word 'Lotus'". Etymology Online. Douglas Harper. Retrieved 1 April 2021.
  23. ^ Marcellus Empiricus, De medicamentis 33.64; compare Pliny the Elder, Natural History 25.75 (37). "There is an herb called nymphaea in Greek, 'Hercules’ club' in Latin, and baditis in Gaulish. Its root, pounded to a paste and drunk in vinegar for ten consecutive days, has the astonishing effect of turning a boy into a eunuch."
  24. ^ Dever, W. G. Did God have a Wife? Archeology and Folk Religion in Ancient Israel. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. 2008. pp 221, 279.
  25. ^ "Water Lilies: Claude Monet (French, 1840–1926)". Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. Metropolitan Museum of Art. December 2008. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  26. ^ "Bangladesh Constitution. Part I, The Republic, 4(3)".
  27. ^ Jayasuriya, M. Our national flower may soon be a thing of the past. The Sunday Times April 17, 2011.
  28. ^ "The Ethnopharmacology Society Newsletter". Vol. 2, no. 4. Spring 1979.

External links Edit

  • Knotts, K. The first hybrid waterlilies.

Further reading Edit

  • Slocum, P. D. Waterlilies and Lotuses. Timber Press. 2005. ISBN 0-88192-684-1 (restricted online version at Google Books)

nymphaea, genus, hardy, tender, aquatic, plants, family, ceae, genus, cosmopolitan, distribution, many, species, cultivated, ornamental, plants, many, cultivars, have, been, bred, some, taxa, occur, introduced, species, where, they, native, some, weeds, plants. Nymphaea n ɪ m ˈ f iː e is a genus of hardy and tender aquatic plants in the family Nymphaeaceae The genus has a cosmopolitan distribution Many species are cultivated as ornamental plants and many cultivars have been bred Some taxa occur as introduced species where they are not native 3 and some are weeds 4 Plants of the genus are known commonly as water lilies 3 5 or waterlilies in the United Kingdom The genus name is from the Greek nymfaia nymphaia and the Latin nymphaea which mean water lily and were inspired by the nymphs of Greek and Latin mythology 3 NymphaeaNymphaea alba L the type species of the genus 2 Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsOrder NymphaealesFamily NymphaeaceaeGenus NymphaeaL Type speciesNymphaea alba L 2 Species65 species see text 1 Synonyms 1 Castalia Salisb Parad Lond 1 t 14 1805 Leuconymphaea Kuntze Revis Gen Pl 1 11 1891 Ondinea Hartog Blumea 18 413 1970 Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Subgenera 2 2 Species 3 Cultivation 4 Uses 5 Culture 6 Examples 7 See also 8 References 9 External links 10 Further readingDescription Edit nbsp A bright field micrograph of a cross section of a floating leaf of Nymphaea alba E1 upper epidermE2 lower epidermP palisade mesophyllM spongy mesophyllB vascular bundleI intercellular gapS sclerenchymaWater lilies are aquatic rhizomatous herbaceous perennials sometimes with stolons as well The stem is angular and erect The leaves grow from the rhizome on long petioles stalk that attaches the leaf blade to the stem Floating round leaves of waterlily grow up to 30 centimetres 12 inches across The disc shaped leaf blades are notched and split to the stem in a V shape at the centre and are often purple underneath Most of them float on the surface of the water The leaves have smooth or spine toothed edges and they can be rounded or pointed The flowers rise out of the water or float on the surface opening during the day or at night 3 Many species of Nymphaea display protogynous flowering The temporal separation of these female and male phases is physically reinforced by flower opening and closing so the first flower opening displays female pistil and then closes at the end of the female phase and reopens with male stamens 6 Each has at least eight petals in shades of white pink blue or yellow Many stamens are at the center 3 Water lily flowers are entomophilous meaning they are pollinated by insects often beetles 3 The fruit is berry like and borne on a curving or coiling peduncle 3 The plant reproduces by root tubers and seeds Taxonomy Edit nbsp Nymphaea stellataThis is one of several genera of plants known commonly as lotuses It is not related to the legume genus Lotus or the East Asian and South Asian lotuses of genus Nelumbo It is closely related to Nuphar lotuses however In Nymphaea the petals are much larger than the sepals whereas in Nuphar the petals are much smaller The process of fruit maturation also differs with Nymphaea fruit sinking below the water level immediately after the flower closes and Nuphar fruit remaining above the surface citation needed Subgenera Edit Anecphya Brachyceras Hydrocallis Lotos Nymphaea section Chamaenymphaea section Nymphaea section Xanthantha 7 Species Edit As of June 2023 there are 65 accepted species by Plants of the World Online 1 Nymphaea abhayana A Chowdhury amp M Chowdhury Nymphaea alba L Nymphaea alexii S W L Jacobs amp Hellq Nymphaea amazonum Mart amp Zucc Nymphaea ampla Salisb DC Nymphaea atrans S W L Jacobs Nymphaea belophylla Trickett Nymphaea borealis E G Camus Nymphaea caatingae C T Lima amp Giul Nymphaea candida C Presl Nymphaea carpentariae S W L Jacobs amp Hellq Nymphaea conardii Wiersema Nymphaea daubenyana W T Baxter ex Daubeny Nymphaea dimorpha I M Turner Nymphaea divaricata Hutch Nymphaea elegans Hook Nymphaea elleniae S W L Jacobs Nymphaea francae C T Lima amp Giul Nymphaea gardneriana Planch Nymphaea georginae S W L Jacobs amp Hellq Nymphaea gigantea Hook Nymphaea glandulifera Rodschied Nymphaea gracilis Zucc Nymphaea guineensis Schumach amp Thonn Nymphaea harleyi C T Lima amp Giul Nymphaea hastifolia Domin Nymphaea heudelotii Planch Nymphaea immutabilis S W L Jacobs Nymphaea jacobsii Hellq Nymphaea jamesoniana Planch Nymphaea kakaduensis Hellq A Leu amp M L Moody Nymphaea kimberleyensis S W L Jacobs S W L Jacobs amp Hellq Nymphaea lasiophylla Mart amp Zucc Nymphaea leibergii Morong Rydb Nymphaea lingulata Wiersema Nymphaea loriana Wiersema Hellq amp Borsch Nymphaea lotus L Nymphaea lukei S W L Jacobs amp Hellq Nymphaea macrosperma Merr amp L M Perry Nymphaea maculata Schumach amp Thonn Nymphaea manipurensis Asharani amp Biseshwori Nymphaea mexicana Zucc Nymphaea micrantha Guill amp Perr Nymphaea noelae S W L Jacobs amp Hellq Nymphaea nouchali Burm f Nymphaea novogranatensis Wiersema Nymphaea odorata Aiton Nymphaea ondinea Lohne Wiersema amp Borsch Nymphaea oxypetala Planch Nymphaea paganuccii C T Lima amp Giul Nymphaea pedersenii Wiersema C T Lima amp Giul Nymphaea potamophila Wiersema Nymphaea prolifera Wiersema Nymphaea pubescens Willd Nymphaea pulchella DC Nymphaea rapinii C T Lima amp Giul Nymphaea rosea Sims Sweet Nymphaea rubra Roxb ex Andrews Nymphaea rudgeana G Mey Nymphaea siamensis Puripany Nymphaea stuhlmannii Engl Schweinf amp Gilg Nymphaea sulphurea Gilg Nymphaea sundvikii Hiitonen Nymphaea tenuinervia Casp Nymphaea tetragona Georgi Nymphaea thermarum Eb Fisch Nymphaea thiona D B Ward Nymphaea vanildae C T Lima amp Giul Nymphaea vaporalis S W L Jacobs amp Hellq Nymphaea violacea Lehm Cultivation EditWater lilies are not only decorative but also provide useful shade which helps reduce the growth of algae in ponds and lakes 8 Many of the water lilies familiar in water gardening are hybrids and cultivars These cultivars have gained the Royal Horticultural Society s Award of Garden Merit nbsp Escarboucle Escarboucle 9 orange red Gladstoniana 10 double white flowers with prominent yellow stamens Gonnere 11 double white scented flowers James Brydon 12 cupped rose red flowers Marliacea Chromatella 13 pale yellow flowers Pygmaea Helvola 14 miniature with cupped fragrant yellow flowers Uses EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Nymphaea news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message All water lilies are poisonous and contain an alkaloid called nupharin in almost all of their parts 15 with the exception of the seeds and in some species the tubers The European species contain large amounts of nupharin and are considered inedible The amount of nupharin in the leaves and stalks appears to vary seasonally in European species In some species the rhizomes and tubers are eaten after boiling has neutralised the nupharin The tubers of a number of Australian Asian and African species are completely edible during the dry season some consist almost entirely of starch The Ancient Egyptians ate them boiled In India it has mostly been eaten as a famine food or as a medicinal both cooked 16 but in one area the dried rhizomes were pounded into a sort of bread and the tubers are often eaten in the floodplains In Vietnam the rhizomes were eaten roasted In Sri Lanka it was formerly eaten as a type of medicine and its price was too high to serve as a normal meal but in the 1940s or earlier some villagers began to grow water lilies in the paddy fields left uncultivated during the monsoon season Yala season and the price dropped The tubers are called manel here and eaten boiled and in curries 16 The tubers of all occurring species were eaten in West Africa and Madagascar where they are called tantamon for blue and laze laze for white usually boiled or roasted In West Africa usage varied between cultures in the Upper Guinea the rhizomes were only considered famine foods here the tubers were either roasted in ashes or dried and ground into a flour The Buduma people ate the seeds and rhizomes Some tribes ate the rhizomes raw The Hausa people of Ghana Nigeria and the people of Southern Sudan used the tubers of Nymphaea lotus the seeds inside the tubers are locally referred to as gunsi in Ghana They are ground into flour 17 In China the tubers were eaten cooked The plants were also said to be eaten in the Philippines In the 1950s there were no records of leaves or flowers being eaten 18 In a North American species the boiled young leaves and unopened flower buds are said to be edible The seeds high in starch protein and oil may be popped parched or ground into flour Potato like tubers can be collected from the species N tuberosa N odorata 19 The tubers of Nymphaea gigantea of Australia were roasted by certain tribes these turn the colour blue when boiled the tubers of other species were also roasted elsewhere on that continent Water lilies were said to have been a major food source for a certain tribe of indigenous Australians in 1930 with the flowers and stems eaten raw while the roots and seedpods were cooked either on an open fire or in a ground oven 20 nbsp Blue lotus Nymphaea caerulea on an 18th Dynasty jar found at AmarnaCulture Edit nbsp Water Lilies by Claude Monet 1906 nbsp A nymphaea in the coat of arms of Palkane nbsp Lotus symbol of the Sasanian Empire flagThe Ancient Egyptians used the water lilies of the Nile as cultural symbols 21 Since 1580 it has become popular in the English language to apply the Latin word lotus originally used to designate a tree to the water lilies growing in Egypt and much later the word was used to translate words in Indian texts 22 The lotus motif is a frequent feature of temple column architecture In Egypt the lotus rising from the bottom mud to unfold its petals to the sun suggested the glory of the sun s own emergence from the primaeval slime It was a metaphor of creation It was a symbol of the fertility gods and goddesses as well as a symbol of the upper Nile as the giver of life 21 The flowers of the blue Egyptian water lily N caerulea open in the morning and close at dusk while those of the white water lily N lotus open at night and close in the morning Egyptians found this symbolic of the separation of deities and of death and the afterlife Remains of both flowers have been found in the burial tomb of Ramesses II citation needed A Roman belief existed that drinking a liquid of crushed Nymphaea in vinegar for 10 consecutive days turned a boy into a eunuch 23 The Nymphaea which is also called Nilufar in Persian can be seen in many reliefs of the Achaemenid period 552 BC such as the statue of Anahita in the Persepolis Lotus flower was included in Kaveh the blacksmith s Derafsh and later as the flag of the Sasanian Empire Derafsh Kaviani Today it is known as the symbol of Iranians Solar Hijri Calendar citation needed A Syrian terra cotta plaque from the 14th 13th centuries BC shows the goddess Asherah holding two lotus blossoms An ivory panel from the 9th 8th centuries BC shows the god Horus seated on a lotus blossom flanked by two cherubs 24 There is a Polish poem by 19th century poet Juliusz Slowacki in which the rhizomes are eaten The French Impressionist painter Claude Monet is known for his many paintings of water lilies in the pond in his garden at Giverny 25 N nouchali is the national flower of Bangladesh 26 and Sri Lanka 27 Water lilies are also used as ritual narcotics According to one source this topic was the subject of a lecture by William Emboden given at Nash Hall of the Harvard Botanical Museum on the morning of April 6 1979 28 Examples Edit nbsp Nymphaea alba nbsp Nymphaea colorata nbsp Nymphaea gigantea nbsp Nymphaea nouchali nbsp Nymphaea Attraction nbsp Nymphaea laydekeri purpurata nbsp Nymphaea mexicana nbsp Nymphaea capensis nbsp Nymphaea candida nbsp Nymphaea daubenyanaSee also EditAlbert de Lestang propagator and seed collector List of plants known as lilyReferences Edit a b c Nymphaea L Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved 29 June 2023 a b Nymphaea International Plant Names Index n d Retrieved June 26 2023 from https www ipni org n 330032 2 a b c d e f g Nymphaea Flora of North America Nymphaea The Jepson eFlora 2013 Nymphaea Integrated Taxonomic Information System ITIS Povilus R A Losada J M Friedman W E 2015 Floral biology and ovule and seed ontogeny of Nymphaea thermarum a water lily at the brink of extinction with potential as a model system for basal angiosperms Annals of Botany 115 2 211 226 doi 10 1093 aob mcu235 PMC 4551091 PMID 25497514 USDA GRIN Taxonomy Nymphaea L RHS A Z Encyclopedia of Garden Plants United Kingdom Dorling Kindersley 2008 p 1136 ISBN 978 1405332965 RHS Plant Selector Nymphaea Escarboucle Retrieved 16 January 2021 RHS Plant Selector Nymphaea Gladstoniana Retrieved 16 January 2021 RHS Plant Selector Nymphaea Gonnere Retrieved 16 January 2021 RHS Plant Selector Nymphaea James Brydon Retrieved 16 January 2021 RHS Plant Selector Nymphaea Marliacea Chromatella Retrieved 16 January 2021 RHS Plant Selector Nymphaea Pygmaea Helvola Retrieved 16 January 2021 Chapter 10 Nuphar Alkaloids J T Wrobel The Alkaloids Chemistry and Physiology 1967 Volume 9 Pages 441 465 doi 10 1016 S1876 0813 08 60206 7 a b Tiwari Ashok September 2019 Nutritional composition and antioxidative stress properties in boiled tuberous rhizome of Neel Kamal Nymphaea nouchali Burm f Indian Journal of Natural Products and Resources 10 1 59 67 Adanse John Bigson Kate Dare Nyefene Joe Glago Patricia 2021 Proximate and Functional Properties of Water Lily Nymphaea Lotus Coconut Cocos Nicifera and Wheat Titricum Aestivum Flour Blends J Food Tech Food Chem 3 104 FR Irvine RS Trickett Water lilies as Food Kew Bulletin 1953 Peterson L A 1977 A Field Guide to the Wild Edible Plants of Eastern and Central North America New York New York Houghton Mifflin p 22 McConnel U H 1930 The Wik Munkan Tribe of Cape York Peninsula Oceania 1 97 108 a b Tresidder Jack 1997 The Hutchinson Dictionary of Symbols London Duncan Baird Publishers p 126 ISBN 1 85986 059 1 Harper Douglas The Origin and Meaning of the word Lotus Etymology Online Douglas Harper Retrieved 1 April 2021 Marcellus Empiricus De medicamentis 33 64 compare Pliny the Elder Natural History 25 75 37 There is an herb called nymphaea in Greek Hercules club in Latin and baditis in Gaulish Its root pounded to a paste and drunk in vinegar for ten consecutive days has the astonishing effect of turning a boy into a eunuch Dever W G Did God have a Wife Archeology and Folk Religion in Ancient Israel Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Co 2008 pp 221 279 Water Lilies Claude Monet French 1840 1926 Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History Metropolitan Museum of Art December 2008 Retrieved 8 March 2015 Bangladesh Constitution Part I The Republic 4 3 Jayasuriya M Our national flower may soon be a thing of the past The Sunday Times April 17 2011 The Ethnopharmacology Society Newsletter Vol 2 no 4 Spring 1979 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nymphaea Knotts K The first hybrid waterlilies GRIN Species Records of Nymphaea Further reading EditSlocum P D Waterlilies and Lotuses Timber Press 2005 ISBN 0 88192 684 1 restricted online version at Google Books Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nymphaea amp oldid 1175017913, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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