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Atriplex

Atriplex (/ˈætrɪplɛks/[2]) is a plant genus of about 250 species, known by the common names of saltbush and orache (/ˈɒrɪ, -ə/;[3][4] also spelled orach). It belongs to the subfamily Chenopodioideae of the family Amaranthaceae s.l.. The genus is quite variable and widely distributed. It includes many desert and seashore plants and halophytes, as well as plants of moist environments. The generic name originated in Latin and was applied by Pliny the Elder to the edible oraches.[5] The name saltbush derives from the fact that the plants retain salt in their leaves; they are able to grow in areas affected by soil salination.

Atriplex
Garden orache (Atriplex hortensis)
From Sturm & Sturm (1796): Deutschlands Flora in Abbildungen.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Amaranthaceae
Subfamily: Chenopodioideae
Tribe: Atripliceae
Genus: Atriplex
L.[1]
Type species
Atriplex hortensis
L.
Species

See List of Atriplex species

Synonyms[1]
List
  • Armola (Kirschl.) Montandon
    Blackiella Aellen
    Cremnophyton Brullo & Pavone
    Halimione Aellen
    Halimus Wallr.
    Haloxanthium Ulbr.
    Lophocarya Nutt. ex Moq.
    Morrisiella Aellen
    Neopreissia Ulbr.
    Obione Gaertn.
    Pachypharynx Aellen
    Phyllocarpa Nutt. ex Moq.
    Pterocarya Nutt. ex Moq.
    Pterochiton Torr. & Frém.
    Schizotheca (C.A.Mey.) Lindl.
    Senniella Aellen
    Sukhorukovia Vasjukov
    Teutliopsis (Dumort.) Celak.
    Theleophyton Moq.

Description edit

Species of plants in genus Atriplex are annual or perennial herbs, subshrubs, or shrubs. The plants are often covered with bladderlike hairs, that later collapse and form a silvery, scurfy or mealy surface, rarely with elongate trichomes. The leaves are arranged alternately along the branches, rarely in opposite pairs, either sessile or on a petiole, and are sometimes deciduous. The leaf blade is variably shaped and may be entire, tooth or lobed.[6][7][8][9][10]

The flowers are borne in leaf axils or on the ends of branches, in spikes or spike-like panicles . The flowers are unisexual, some species monoecious, others dioecious. Male flowers have 3-5 perianth lobes and 3-5 stamens. Female flowers are usually lacking a perianth, but are enclosed by 2 leaf-like bracteoles, have a short style and 2 stigmas.[6][7][8][9][10]

After flowering, the bracteoles sometimes enlarge, thicken or become appendaged, enclosing the fruit but without adhering to it.[6][7][8][9][10]

The chromosome base number is x = 9, except for Atriplex lanfrancoi, which is x=10.[11]

A few Atriplex species are C3-plants, but most species are C4-plants, with a characteristic leaf anatomy, known as kranz anatomy.[11]

Taxonomy edit

The genus Atriplex was first formally described in 1753 by Carl Linnaeus in Species Plantarum.[1][12][13] The genus name was used by Pliny for orach, or mountain spinach (A. hortensis).[14]

Phylogeny edit

The genus evolved in Middle Miocene, the C4-photosynthesis pathway developed about 14.1–10.9 million years ago (mya), when the climate became increasingly dry. The genus diversified rapidly and spread over the continents. The C4 Atriplex colonized North America probably from Eurasia during the Middle/Late Miocene, about 9.8–8.8 mya, and later spread to South America. Australia was colonized twice by two C4 lineages, one from Eurasia or America about 9.8–7.8 mya, and one from Central Asia about 6.3–4.8 mya. The last lineage diversified rapidly, and became the ancestor of most Australian Atriplex species.[11]

Systematics edit

The type species (lectotype) is Atriplex hortensis.[15] The name is derived from Ancient Greek ἀτράφαξυς (atraphaxys), "orach", itself a Pre-Greek substrate loanword.

Atriplex is an extremely species-rich genus and comprises about 250[7]-300[11] species, with new species still being discovered. An example includes Atriplex yeelirrie, formally described in 2015.[16]

Traditional taxonomy of Atripliceae based on morphological features has been controversial.[17] Molecular studies have found that many genera are not true clades. One such study found that Atripliceae could be divided into two main clades, Archiatriplex, with a few, scattered species, and the larger Atriplex clade, which is highly diverse and found around the world.[17] After phylogenetic research, Kadereit et al. (2010) excluded Halimione as a distinct sister genus. The remaining Atriplex species were grouped into several clades.[11]

The following is a cladogram with estimated divergence times for the tribe Atripliceae. To infer the phylogeny, an ITS matrix composed of spacer ITS-1, the 5.8S subunit, and spacer ITS-2 were amplified and sequenced for each specimen. Not all species in the genus Atriplex are presented in the cladogram (based on page 7 of [18]). This work suggested that the Americas were colonised by C4 Atriplex from Eurasia or Australia. Furthermore, that in the Americas Atriplex first appeared in South America, where two lineages underwent in situ diversification and evolved sympatrically. North America was then colonised by Atriplex from South America, then one lineage later moved back to South America.[18]

Cladogram of estimated divergences within the genus Atriplex
 
Background colour in cladogram represents the region where a species is endemic.
  South America
  North America
  Australia
  Eurasia
 
Brignone et al. (2019) hypothesis for the evolution and movement of Atriplex species globally.[18]
Atripliceae
Atriplex

Atriplex pentandra

Atriplex hystrix

Atriplex clivicola

Atriplex taltalensis

Atriplex vallenarensis

Atriplex peruviana

Atriplex leuca

Atriplex philippii

Atriplex myriophylla

Atriplex chapinii

Atriplex chizae

Atriplex frigida

Atriplex ameghinoi

Atriplex monevidensis

Atriplex pamparum

Atriplex serenana

Atriplex parishii

Atriplex lentiformis

Atriplex undulata

Atriplex patagonica

Atriplex lithophila

Atriplex atacamensis

Atriplex braunii

Atriplex oreophila

Atriplex retusa

Atriplex rusbyi

Atriplex quixadensis

Atriplex sagittifolia

Atriplex vulgatissima

Atriplex cordubensis

Atriplex lampa

Atriplex crenatifolia

Atriplex coquimbana

Atriplex costellata

Atriplex repanda

Atriplex sorianoi

Atriplex spegazzinii

Atriplex boecheri

Atriplex nitrophiloides

Atriplex rotundifolia

Atriplex imbricata

Atriplex argentina

Atriplex oesteophora

Atriplex asplundii

Atriplex halimus

Atriplex leucoclada

Atriplex semibaccata

Atriplex muelleri

Atriplex suberecta

Atriplex eardleyae

Atriplex centralasiatica

Atriplex siberirica

Atriplex rosea

Atriplex sphaeromorpha

Atriplex dimorphostegia

Atriplex laciniata

Atriplex tatarica

Atriplex moneta

C3 Atriplex clade
sect. Teutliopsis
sect. Atriplex

Atriplex aucherii

Atriplex hortensis

Atriplex crassifolia

Atriplex lanfrancoi

Atriplex cana

Halimione

Halimione portulacoides

Halimione verrucifera

Archiatriplex clade

Extriplex californica

(13 other taxa)

Clades of Atriplex
  • Atriplex lanfrancoi/cana-Clade:
    • Atriplex lanfrancoi (Brullo & Pavone) G. Kadereit et Sukhor. (Syn.: Cremnophyton lanfrancoi Brullo & Pavone): endemic to Malta and Gozo.
    • Atriplex cana C.A. Mey.: from Eastern European Russia to western China.
  • Atriplex section Atriplex: annual C3-plants.
  • Atriplex section Teutliopsis Dumort.: annual C3-plants.
    • Atriplex australasica Moq.
    • Atriplex calotheca (Rafn) Fr.: in Northern Europe.
    • Atriplex davisii Aellen: from southern Europe to Egypt.
    • Atriplex glabriuscula Edmondston – Northeastern saltbush, Babington's orache, smooth orache, Scotland orache, glabrous orache: In central and northern Europe.
    • Atriplex gmelinii C.A. Mey. ex Bong. – Gmelin's saltbush: in Asia and North America.
    • Atriplex intracontinentalis Sukhor.: from Central Europe to Asia.
    • Atriplex laevis C.A. Mey.: in Asia, naturalized in eastern Europe.
    • Atriplex latifolia Wahlenb.: in Eurasia.
    • Atriplex littoralis L. – Grass-leaved orache: in Eurasia and North Africa.
    • Atriplex longipes Drejer – Long-stalked orache: in northern Europe.
    • Atriplex micrantha C.A. Mey.: in Asia, naturalized in Europe.
    • Atriplex nudicaulis Boguslaw – Baltic saltbush: in Eurasia.
    • Atriplex patula L. – Common orache, spreading orache: in Eurasia and North Africa.
    • Atriplex praecox Hülph. – Early orache: in northern Europe.
    • Atriplex prostrata Moq. – Spear-leaved orache, thin-leaved orache, triangle orache, fat hen: in Eurasia and North Africa.
  • C4-Atriplex-Clade: containing the majority of species. The traditional classification into sections (sect. Obione, sect. Pterochiton, sect. Psammophila, sect. Sclerocalymma, sect. Stylosa) did not reflect the phylogenetical relationships and was rejected by Kadereit et al. (2010).[11]
    • Atriplex acanthocarpa (Torr.) S. Watson: in North America.
    • Atriplex acutibractea Anderson: in Australia.
    • Atriplex altaica Sukhor.: in Asia.
    • Atriplex angulata Benth.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex billardierei (Moq.) Hook. f.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex canescens (Pursh) Nutt. – Chamiso, chamiza, four-winged saltbush, grey sagebrush: in North America.
    • Atriplex centralasiatica Iljin: in Asia.
    • Atriplex cinerea Poir. – Grey saltbush, truganini:[19] in Australia
    • Atriplex codonocarpa P.G. Wilson: in Australia.
    • Atriplex conduplicata F. Muell.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex confertifolia (Torr. & Frém.) S. Watson – Shadscale (saltbush): in North America.
    • Atriplex cordobensis Gand. & Stuck.: in South America.
    • Atriplex deserticola Phil.: in South America.
    • Atriplex dimorphostegia Kar. & Kir.: in North Africa.
    • Atriplex eardleyae Aellen: in Australia
    • Atriplex elachophylla F. Muell.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex fissivalvis F. Muell.: in Australia
    • Atriplex flabellum Bunge ex Boiss.: in Eurasia.
    • Atriplex gardneri (Moq.) D. Dietr. – Gardner's saltbush, moundscale: in North America
    • Atriplex glauca L.: in Portugal, Spain and in North Africa.
    • Atriplex halimus L. – Mediterranean saltbush, sea orache, shrubby orache: in south Europe, North Africa and southwest Asia.
    • Atriplex herzogii Standl.: in North America.
    • Atriplex holocarpa F. Muell.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex hymenelytra (Torr.) S. Watson – Desert holly: in North America.
    • Atriplex hymenotheca Moq.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex imbricata (Moq.) D. Dietr.: in South America.
    • Atriplex inamoena Aellen: in Eurasia.
    • Atriplex intermedia Anderson: in Australia.
    • Atriplex isatidea Moq.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex laciniata L. – Frosted orache: In western and northern Europe.
    • Atriplex lampa (Moq.) Gillies ex Small: in South America.
    • Atriplex lehmanniana Bunge: in Eurasia.
    • Atriplex lentiformis (Torr.) S. Watson – Quail bush: in North America.
    • Atriplex leptocarpa F. Muell.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex leucoclada Boiss.: in Eurasia.
    • Atriplex leucophylla (Moq.) D. Dietr.: in North America
    • Atriplex lindleyi Moq.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex moneta Bunge ex Boiss.: in Eurasia.
    • Atriplex muelleri Benth.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex nessorhina S.W.L. Jacobs: in Australia.
    • Atriplex nummularia Lindl. – Old man saltbush, giant saltbush: in Australia.
    • Atriplex obovata Moq.: in North America.
    • Atriplex pamirica Iljin: in Eurasia.
    • Atriplex parishii S. Watson: in North America
    • Atriplex parryi S. Watson: in North America
    • Atriplex parvifolia Kunth: in South America.
    • Atriplex patagonica (Moq.) D. Dietr.: in South America.
    • Atriplex phyllostegia (Torr. ex S. Watson) S. Watson: in North America.
    • Atriplex polycarpa (Torr.) S. Watson – Allscale (saltbush), desert saltbush, cattle saltbush, cattle spinach: in North America.
    • Atriplex powellii S. Watson – Powell's saltbush: in North America.
    • Atriplex pseudocampanulata Aellen: in Australia.
    • Atriplex quinii F. Muell.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex recurva d'Urv.: in Eurasia, endemic to areas around the Aegean.
    • Atriplex rhagodioides F. Muell.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex rosea L. – Tumbling orache: in Eurasia and North Africa.
    • Atriplex rusbyi Britton ex Rusby: in South America.
    • Atriplex schugnanica Iljin: in Asia.
    • Atriplex semibaccata R. Br. – Australian saltbush, berry saltbush, creeping saltbush: in Australia.
    • Atriplex semilunaris Aellen: in Australia.
    • Atriplex serenana A. Nelson ex Abrams: in North America
    • Atriplex sibirica L.; in Asia, naturalized in Europe.
    • Atriplex sphaeromorpha Iljin: in Russia, Ukraine and Caucasus.
    • Atriplex spinibractea Anderson: in Australia.
    • Atriplex spongiosa F. Muell.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex stipitata Benth.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex sturtii S.W.L. Jacobs: in Australia.
    • Atriplex suberecta I. Verd. – Sprawling saltbush, lagoon saltbush: in Australia.
    • Atriplex tatarica Aellen: in Europe, North Africa and Asia.
    • Atriplex turbinata (Anderson) Aellen: in Australia.
    • Atriplex undulata (Moq.) D. Dietr.: in South America.
    • Atriplex velutinella F. Muell.: in Australia.
    • Atriplex vesicaria Heward ex Benth. – Bladder saltbush: in Australia.

Distribution and habitat edit

The genus Atriplex is distributed nearly worldwide from subtropical to temperate and to subarctic regions. Most species-rich are Australia, North America, South America and Eurasia. Many species are halophytes and are adapted to dry environments with salty soils.[11]

Ecology edit

Atriplex species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species; see the list of Lepidoptera which feed on Atriplex.[20] They are also sometimes consumed by camels.[21] For spiders such as Phidippus californicus and other arthropods, saltbush plants offer opportunities to hide and hunt in habitat that is otherwise often quite barren.

It has been proposed that genus Atriplex was a main food source in the diet of the extinct giant kangaroo Procoptodon goliah.[22] Stable isotopic data suggested that their diet consisted of plants that used the C4 photosynthetic pathway, and due to their semi-arid distribution, chenopod saltbushes were likely responsible.[23][24][25]

Uses edit

The favored species for human consumption is now usually garden orache (A. hortensis),[26][27][28] but many species are edible and the use of Atriplex as food is known since at least the late Epipaleolithic (Mesolithic).

Common orache (A. patula) is attested as an archaeophyte in northern Europe, and the Ertebølle culture is presumed to have used it as a food.[29] Its seed has been found among apparent evidence of cereal preparation and cooking at Late Iron Age villages in Britain.[30] In the biblical Book of Job, mallûaḥ (מַלּ֣וּחַ, probably Mediterranean saltbush, A. halimus, the major culinary saltbush in the region) is mentioned as food eaten by social outcasts (Job 30:4[31]). Grey saltbush (A. cinerea) has been used as bushfood in Australia since prehistoric times. Chamiso (A. canescens) and shadscale (A. confertifolia) were eaten by Native Americans, and spearscale (A. hastata) was a food in rural Eurasia.

Studies on Atriplex species demonstrated their potential use in agriculture. Meat from sheep which have grazed on saltbush has surprisingly high levels of vitamin E, is leaner and more hydrated than regular lamb and has consumer appeal equal to grain-fed lamb.[32] The vitamin E levels could have animal health benefits while extending the shelf-life and maintaining the fresh red colour of saltbush lamb. This effect has been demonstrated for old man saltbush (A. nummularia) and river saltbush (A. amnicola). For reasons unknown, sheep seem to prefer the more fibrous, less nutritious river saltbush.[33][32]

A study on A. nummularia discovered the species have a nitrogen content of 2.5–3.5%, and could potentially be used as a protein supplement for grazing if palatable.[34] A subsequent study allowed sheep and goats to voluntarily feed on Atriplex halimus and aimed to determine if the saltbush was palatable, and if so, did it provide enough nutrients to supplement the diet of these animals.[35] In this study they determined when goats and sheep are given as much A. halimus as they like, they do obtain enough nutrients to supplement their diet – unless the animal requirements are higher during pregnancy and milk production.

Saltbushes are also used as an ornamental plant in landscaping and can be used to prevent soil erosion in coastal areas.[36][37] Old man saltbush (Atriplex nummularia) has also been successfully used to rehabilitate old mining sites around Lightning Ridge (Australia).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Atriplex L." Plants of the World Online. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  2. ^ Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607
  3. ^ "orach". The Chambers Dictionary (9th ed.). Chambers. 2003. ISBN 0-550-10105-5.
  4. ^ "orache". Oxford English Dictionary third edition. Oxford University Press. June 2004. Retrieved 7 December 2018.
  5. ^ Quattrocchi, Umberto (2000). CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names. Vol. I: A-C. CRC Press. p. 232. ISBN 978-0-8493-2675-2.
  6. ^ a b c Stanley L. Welsh: Atriplex - online, In: Flora of North America Editorial Committee (ed.): Flora of North America North of Mexico, Volume 4: Magnoliophyta: Caryophyllidae, part 1., Oxford University Press, New York. 2003, ISBN 0-19-517389-9.
  7. ^ a b c d Gelin Zhu, Sergei L. Mosyakin & Steven E. Clemants: Chenopodiaceae: Atriplex - online, In: Wu Zhengyi, Peter H. Raven, Deyuan Hong (ed.): Flora of China, Volume 5: Ulmaceae through Basellaceae., Science Press und Missouri Botanical Garden Press, Beijing und St. Louis, 2003, ISBN 1-930723-27-X.
  8. ^ a b c Walsh, Neville G. "Atriples". Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  9. ^ a b c Jacobs, Surrey W.L. "Atriplex". Royal Botanic Garden Sydney. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  10. ^ a b c "Atriplex". FloraBase. Western Australian Government Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Gudrun Kadereit, Evgeny V. Mavrodiev, Elizabeth H. Zacharias & Alexander P. Sukhorukov: Molecular phylogeny of Atripliceae (Chenopodioideae, Chenopodiaceae): Implications for systematics, biogeography, flower and fruit evolution, and the origin of C4 Photosynthesis. - American Journal of Botany 97(10): 1664-1687, 2010.
  12. ^ Linnaeus, Carl (1753). Species Plantarum. Vol. 2. pp. 1052–1053. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
  13. ^ Carl Linnaeus (1753), "Atriplex", Species Plantarum, vol. 2, Lars Salvius/Biodiversity Heritage Library, pp. 1052–1054, retrieved 19 May 2015
  14. ^ Sharr, Francis Aubi; George, Alex (2019). Western Australian Plant Names and Their Meanings (3rd ed.). Kardinya, WA: Four Gables Press. p. 61. ISBN 9780958034180.
  15. ^ Atriplex at Tropicos, accessed 2013-07-11
  16. ^ Shepherd, Kelly; Thiele, Kevin; Sampson, Jane; Coates, David; Bryne, Margaret (2015). "A rare, new species of Atriplex (Chenopodiaceae) comprising two genetically distinct but morphologically cryptic populations in arid Western Australia: implications for taxonomy and conservation". Australian Systematic Botany. 28 (4): 235. doi:10.1071/SB15029. S2CID 85903596. Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  17. ^ a b Flores, Hilda; Davis, Jerrold I. (2001). "A Cladistic Analysis of Atripliceae (Chenopodiaceae) Based on Morphological Data". Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society. 128 (3): 297. doi:10.2307/3088719. JSTOR 3088719.
  18. ^ a b c Brignone, Nicolás F.; Pozner, Raúl E.; Denham, Silvia S. (October 2019). "Origin and evolution of Atriplex (Amaranthaceae s.l.) in the Americas: Unexpected insights from South American species". Taxon. 68 (5): 1027. doi:10.1002/tax.12133. S2CID 214371753.
  19. ^ Tasmanian name, also transcribed trucanini, trucaninny, trugannini, trugernanna, etc. The plant was the namesake for Truganini, among the last of her people.
  20. ^ Robinson, Gaden S.; Ackery, Phillip R.; Kitching, Ian; Beccaloni, George W.; Hernández, Luis M. (2023). "HOSTS - The Hostplants and Caterpillars Database at the Natural History Museum". www.nhm.ac.uk. doi:10.5519/havt50xw. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  21. ^ Shawket, S. M. (1999). "Fattening of camel calves on saltbush, Atriplex halimas with different energy sources". Mansoura University, Journal of Agricultural Sciences (Egypt). ISSN 1110-0346.
  22. ^ Prideaux, Gavin J.; Ayliffe, Linda K.; DeSantis, Larisa R. G.; Schubert, Blaine W.; Murray, Peter F.; Gagan, Michael K.; Cerling, Thure E. (2009-07-14). "Extinction implications of a chenopod browse diet for a giant Pleistocene kangaroo". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 106 (28): 11646–11650. Bibcode:2009PNAS..10611646P. doi:10.1073/pnas.0900956106. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 2710660. PMID 19556539. S2CID 19904871.
  23. ^ Kadereit, Gudrun; Mavrodiev, Evgeny V.; Zacharias, Elizabeth H.; Sukhorukov, Alexander P. (2010). "Molecular phylogeny of Atripliceae (Chenopodioideae, Chenopodiaceae): Implications for systematics, biogeography, flower and fruit evolution, and the origin of C4 photosynthesis". American Journal of Botany. 97 (10): 1664–1687. doi:10.3732/ajb.1000169. ISSN 1537-2197. PMID 21616801.
  24. ^ Prideaux, G. (2004). "Systematics and Evolution of the Sthenurine Kangaroos". UC Publications in Geological Sciences. University of California Press. doi:10.1525/california/9780520098459.001.0001. ISBN 9780520098459.
  25. ^ DeSantis, Larisa R. G.; Field, Judith H.; Wroe, Stephen; Dodson, John R. (May 2017). "Dietary responses of Sahul (Pleistocene Australia–New Guinea) megafauna to climate and environmental change". Paleobiology. 43 (2): 181–195. Bibcode:2017Pbio...43..181D. doi:10.1017/pab.2016.50. ISSN 0094-8373. S2CID 13134989.
  26. ^ "Orach facts and health benefits". 4 February 2020. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  27. ^ "Atriplex hortensis Orach, Garden orache PFAF Plant Database". pfaf.org. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  28. ^ "Atriplex hortensis (garden orache)". www.cabi.org. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  29. ^ Koch, Eva (December 1999). . Archived from the original on 2006-07-17.
  30. ^ Christopher Evans (2015), North West Cambridge Archaeology: University of Cambridge 2013 Excavations, The Traveller's Rest Sub-site (PDF), Cambridge Archaeological Unit University Of Cambridge, pp. 100–113
  31. ^ Mistranslated as "mallows" in the King James Bible and as Nesseln (nettles) in the Luther Bible
  32. ^ a b Pearce, Kelly & Jacob, Robin (2004): Saltbush lifts sheep meat vitamin content. Farming Ahead 153(October): 63. PDF fulltext July 23, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
  33. ^ Norman, Hayley C.; Freind, Colby; Masters, David G.; Rintoul, Allan J.; Dynes, Robyn A. & Williams, Ian H. (2004): Variation within and between two saltbush species in plant composition and subsequent selection by sheep. Aust. J. Agr. Res. 55(9): 999–1007. doi:10.1071/AR04031 (HTML abstract)
  34. ^ Wilson, A.D.; Harrington, G.N. (1980). "Nutritive value of Australian browse plants". International Livestock Centre for Africa. Addis Ababa: 291.
  35. ^ Valderrabano, J.; Munoz, F.; Delgado, I. (1996). "Browsing ability and utilisation by sheep and goats of Atriplex hamilus L. shrubs". Small Ruminant Research. 19 (2). Zaragoza, Spain: 131–136. doi:10.1016/0921-4488(95)00754-7. Retrieved 13 April 2020.
  36. ^ "Saltbushes for dryland salinity management in Western Australia". www.agric.wa.gov.au. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  37. ^ "Atriplex semibaccata (Australian saltbush)". www.cabi.org. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  • Davidson, Alan (1999): Orach. In: Oxford Companion to Food: 556. ISBN 0-19-211579-0
  • Everitt, J.H.; Lonard, R.L.; Little, C.R. (2007). Weeds in South Texas and Northern Mexico. Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press. ISBN 0-89672-614-2

atriplex, other, plants, called, saltbush, saltbush, plant, genus, about, species, known, common, names, saltbush, orache, also, spelled, orach, belongs, subfamily, chenopodioideae, family, amaranthaceae, genus, quite, variable, widely, distributed, includes, . For other plants called saltbush see Saltbush Atriplex ˈ ae t r ɪ p l ɛ k s 2 is a plant genus of about 250 species known by the common names of saltbush and orache ˈ ɒ r ɪ tʃ e tʃ 3 4 also spelled orach It belongs to the subfamily Chenopodioideae of the family Amaranthaceae s l The genus is quite variable and widely distributed It includes many desert and seashore plants and halophytes as well as plants of moist environments The generic name originated in Latin and was applied by Pliny the Elder to the edible oraches 5 The name saltbush derives from the fact that the plants retain salt in their leaves they are able to grow in areas affected by soil salination Atriplex Garden orache Atriplex hortensis From Sturm amp Sturm 1796 Deutschlands Flora in Abbildungen Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Eudicots Order Caryophyllales Family Amaranthaceae Subfamily Chenopodioideae Tribe Atripliceae Genus AtriplexL 1 Type species Atriplex hortensisL Species See List of Atriplex species Synonyms 1 List Armola Kirschl Montandon Blackiella Aellen Cremnophyton Brullo amp Pavone Halimione Aellen Halimus Wallr Haloxanthium Ulbr Lophocarya Nutt ex Moq Morrisiella Aellen Neopreissia Ulbr Obione Gaertn Pachypharynx Aellen Phyllocarpa Nutt ex Moq Pterocarya Nutt ex Moq Pterochiton Torr amp Frem Schizotheca C A Mey Lindl Senniella Aellen Sukhorukovia Vasjukov Teutliopsis Dumort Celak Theleophyton Moq Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Phylogeny 2 2 Systematics 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Ecology 5 Uses 6 See also 7 ReferencesDescription editSpecies of plants in genus Atriplex are annual or perennial herbs subshrubs or shrubs The plants are often covered with bladderlike hairs that later collapse and form a silvery scurfy or mealy surface rarely with elongate trichomes The leaves are arranged alternately along the branches rarely in opposite pairs either sessile or on a petiole and are sometimes deciduous The leaf blade is variably shaped and may be entire tooth or lobed 6 7 8 9 10 The flowers are borne in leaf axils or on the ends of branches in spikes or spike like panicles The flowers are unisexual some species monoecious others dioecious Male flowers have 3 5 perianth lobes and 3 5 stamens Female flowers are usually lacking a perianth but are enclosed by 2 leaf like bracteoles have a short style and 2 stigmas 6 7 8 9 10 After flowering the bracteoles sometimes enlarge thicken or become appendaged enclosing the fruit but without adhering to it 6 7 8 9 10 The chromosome base number is x 9 except for Atriplex lanfrancoi which is x 10 11 A few Atriplex species are C3 plants but most species are C4 plants with a characteristic leaf anatomy known as kranz anatomy 11 nbsp Atriplex elegans nbsp Atriplex hymenelytra nbsp Atriplex lentiformis nbsp Atriplex nummularia nbsp Atriplex suberecta nbsp Atriplex patula female flower with bracteoles and ovuleTaxonomy editFurther information List of Atriplex species The genus Atriplex was first formally described in 1753 by Carl Linnaeus in Species Plantarum 1 12 13 The genus name was used by Pliny for orach or mountain spinach A hortensis 14 Phylogeny edit The genus evolved in Middle Miocene the C4 photosynthesis pathway developed about 14 1 10 9 million years ago mya when the climate became increasingly dry The genus diversified rapidly and spread over the continents The C4 Atriplex colonized North America probably from Eurasia during the Middle Late Miocene about 9 8 8 8 mya and later spread to South America Australia was colonized twice by two C4 lineages one from Eurasia or America about 9 8 7 8 mya and one from Central Asia about 6 3 4 8 mya The last lineage diversified rapidly and became the ancestor of most Australian Atriplex species 11 Systematics edit The type species lectotype is Atriplex hortensis 15 The name is derived from Ancient Greek ἀtrafa3ys atraphaxys orach itself a Pre Greek substrate loanword Atriplex is an extremely species rich genus and comprises about 250 7 300 11 species with new species still being discovered An example includes Atriplex yeelirrie formally described in 2015 16 Traditional taxonomy of Atripliceae based on morphological features has been controversial 17 Molecular studies have found that many genera are not true clades One such study found that Atripliceae could be divided into two main clades Archiatriplex with a few scattered species and the larger Atriplex clade which is highly diverse and found around the world 17 After phylogenetic research Kadereit et al 2010 excluded Halimione as a distinct sister genus The remaining Atriplex species were grouped into several clades 11 The following is a cladogram with estimated divergence times for the tribe Atripliceae To infer the phylogeny an ITS matrix composed of spacer ITS 1 the 5 8S subunit and spacer ITS 2 were amplified and sequenced for each specimen Not all species in the genus Atriplex are presented in the cladogram based on page 7 of 18 This work suggested that the Americas were colonised by C4 Atriplex from Eurasia or Australia Furthermore that in the Americas Atriplex first appeared in South America where two lineages underwent in situ diversification and evolved sympatrically North America was then colonised by Atriplex from South America then one lineage later moved back to South America 18 Cladogram of estimated divergences within the genus Atriplex nbsp Background colour in cladogram represents the region where a species is endemic South America North America Australia Eurasia nbsp Brignone et al 2019 hypothesis for the evolution and movement of Atriplex species globally 18 Atripliceae Atriplex Atriplex pentandra Atriplex hystrix Atriplex clivicola Atriplex taltalensis Atriplex vallenarensis Atriplex peruviana Atriplex leuca Atriplex philippii Atriplex myriophylla Atriplex chapinii Atriplex chizae Atriplex frigida Atriplex ameghinoi Atriplex monevidensis Atriplex pamparum Atriplex serenana Atriplex leucophylla Atriplex watsonii Atriplex acanthocarpa Atriplex polycarpa Atriplex canescens Atriplex phyllostegia Atriplex obovata Atriplex powellii Atriplex parishii Atriplex hymenelytra Atriplex parryi Atriplex lentiformis Atriplex undulata Atriplex patagonica Atriplex lithophila Atriplex atacamensis Atriplex braunii Atriplex oreophila Atriplex retusa Atriplex rusbyi Atriplex quixadensis Atriplex sagittifolia Atriplex vulgatissima Atriplex cordubensis Atriplex lampa Atriplex crenatifolia Atriplex coquimbana Atriplex costellata Atriplex repanda Atriplex sorianoi Atriplex spegazzinii Atriplex boecheri Atriplex nitrophiloides Atriplex rotundifolia Atriplex imbricata Atriplex argentina Atriplex oesteophora Atriplex asplundii Atriplex cinerea Atriplex rhagodioides Atriplex isatidea Atriplex nummularia Atriplex halimus Atriplex leucoclada Atriplex billardierei Atriplex holocarpa Atriplex vesicaria Atriplex spongiosa Atriplex semibaccata Atriplex muelleri Atriplex suberecta Atriplex eardleyae Atriplex centralasiatica Atriplex siberirica Atriplex rosea Atriplex sphaeromorpha Atriplex dimorphostegia Atriplex laciniata Atriplex tatarica Atriplex moneta C3 Atriplex clade sect Teutliopsis Atriplex australasica Atriplex glabriuscula Atriplex micrantha Atriplex latifolia Atriplex oblongifolia Atriplex calotheca Atriplex prostrata Atriplex patula Atriplex chilensis sect Atriplex Atriplex aucherii Atriplex hortensis Atriplex crassifolia Atriplex lanfrancoi Atriplex cana Halimione Halimione portulacoides Halimione verrucifera Archiatriplex clade Extriplex californica 13 other taxa Clades of Atriplex Atriplex lanfrancoi cana Clade Atriplex lanfrancoi Brullo amp Pavone G Kadereit et Sukhor Syn Cremnophyton lanfrancoi Brullo amp Pavone endemic to Malta and Gozo Atriplex cana C A Mey from Eastern European Russia to western China Atriplex section Atriplex annual C3 plants Atriplex aucheri Moq in Eastern Europe and West Asia Atriplex hortensis L Garden orache red orach mountain spinach French spinach in Asia cultivated or naturalized in Europe Atriplex oblongifolia Waldst amp Kit Oblong leaved orache in Eurasia Atriplex sagittata Borkh Syn Atriplex nitens Schkuhr in Eurasia Atriplex section Teutliopsis Dumort annual C3 plants Atriplex australasica Moq Atriplex calotheca Rafn Fr in Northern Europe Atriplex davisii Aellen from southern Europe to Egypt Atriplex glabriuscula Edmondston Northeastern saltbush Babington s orache smooth orache Scotland orache glabrous orache In central and northern Europe Atriplex gmelinii C A Mey ex Bong Gmelin s saltbush in Asia and North America Atriplex intracontinentalis Sukhor from Central Europe to Asia Atriplex laevis C A Mey in Asia naturalized in eastern Europe Atriplex latifolia Wahlenb in Eurasia Atriplex littoralis L Grass leaved orache in Eurasia and North Africa Atriplex longipes Drejer Long stalked orache in northern Europe Atriplex micrantha C A Mey in Asia naturalized in Europe Atriplex nudicaulis Boguslaw Baltic saltbush in Eurasia Atriplex patula L Common orache spreading orache in Eurasia and North Africa Atriplex praecox Hulph Early orache in northern Europe Atriplex prostrata Moq Spear leaved orache thin leaved orache triangle orache fat hen in Eurasia and North Africa C4 Atriplex Clade containing the majority of species The traditional classification into sections sect Obione sect Pterochiton sect Psammophila sect Sclerocalymma sect Stylosa did not reflect the phylogenetical relationships and was rejected by Kadereit et al 2010 11 Atriplex acanthocarpa Torr S Watson in North America Atriplex acutibractea Anderson in Australia Atriplex altaica Sukhor in Asia Atriplex angulata Benth in Australia Atriplex billardierei Moq Hook f in Australia Atriplex canescens Pursh Nutt Chamiso chamiza four winged saltbush grey sagebrush in North America Atriplex centralasiatica Iljin in Asia Atriplex cinerea Poir Grey saltbush truganini 19 in Australia Atriplex codonocarpa P G Wilson in Australia Atriplex conduplicata F Muell in Australia Atriplex confertifolia Torr amp Frem S Watson Shadscale saltbush in North America Atriplex cordobensis Gand amp Stuck in South America Atriplex deserticola Phil in South America Atriplex dimorphostegia Kar amp Kir in North Africa Atriplex eardleyae Aellen in Australia Atriplex elachophylla F Muell in Australia Atriplex fissivalvis F Muell in Australia Atriplex flabellum Bunge ex Boiss in Eurasia Atriplex gardneri Moq D Dietr Gardner s saltbush moundscale in North America Atriplex glauca L in Portugal Spain and in North Africa Atriplex halimus L Mediterranean saltbush sea orache shrubby orache in south Europe North Africa and southwest Asia Atriplex herzogii Standl in North America Atriplex holocarpa F Muell in Australia Atriplex hymenelytra Torr S Watson Desert holly in North America Atriplex hymenotheca Moq in Australia Atriplex imbricata Moq D Dietr in South America Atriplex inamoena Aellen in Eurasia Atriplex intermedia Anderson in Australia Atriplex isatidea Moq in Australia Atriplex laciniata L Frosted orache In western and northern Europe Atriplex lampa Moq Gillies ex Small in South America Atriplex lehmanniana Bunge in Eurasia Atriplex lentiformis Torr S Watson Quail bush in North America Atriplex leptocarpa F Muell in Australia Atriplex leucoclada Boiss in Eurasia Atriplex leucophylla Moq D Dietr in North America Atriplex lindleyi Moq in Australia Atriplex moneta Bunge ex Boiss in Eurasia Atriplex muelleri Benth in Australia Atriplex nessorhina S W L Jacobs in Australia Atriplex nummularia Lindl Old man saltbush giant saltbush in Australia Atriplex obovata Moq in North America Atriplex pamirica Iljin in Eurasia Atriplex parishii S Watson in North America Atriplex parryi S Watson in North America Atriplex parvifolia Kunth in South America Atriplex patagonica Moq D Dietr in South America Atriplex phyllostegia Torr ex S Watson S Watson in North America Atriplex polycarpa Torr S Watson Allscale saltbush desert saltbush cattle saltbush cattle spinach in North America Atriplex powellii S Watson Powell s saltbush in North America Atriplex pseudocampanulata Aellen in Australia Atriplex quinii F Muell in Australia Atriplex recurva d Urv in Eurasia endemic to areas around the Aegean Atriplex rhagodioides F Muell in Australia Atriplex rosea L Tumbling orache in Eurasia and North Africa Atriplex rusbyi Britton ex Rusby in South America Atriplex schugnanica Iljin in Asia Atriplex semibaccata R Br Australian saltbush berry saltbush creeping saltbush in Australia Atriplex semilunaris Aellen in Australia Atriplex serenana A Nelson ex Abrams in North America Atriplex sibirica L in Asia naturalized in Europe Atriplex sphaeromorpha Iljin in Russia Ukraine and Caucasus Atriplex spinibractea Anderson in Australia Atriplex spongiosa F Muell in Australia Atriplex stipitata Benth in Australia Atriplex sturtii S W L Jacobs in Australia Atriplex suberecta I Verd Sprawling saltbush lagoon saltbush in Australia Atriplex tatarica Aellen in Europe North Africa and Asia Atriplex turbinata Anderson Aellen in Australia Atriplex undulata Moq D Dietr in South America Atriplex velutinella F Muell in Australia Atriplex vesicaria Heward ex Benth Bladder saltbush in Australia Distribution and habitat editThe genus Atriplex is distributed nearly worldwide from subtropical to temperate and to subarctic regions Most species rich are Australia North America South America and Eurasia Many species are halophytes and are adapted to dry environments with salty soils 11 Ecology editAtriplex species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species see the list of Lepidoptera which feed on Atriplex 20 They are also sometimes consumed by camels 21 For spiders such as Phidippus californicus and other arthropods saltbush plants offer opportunities to hide and hunt in habitat that is otherwise often quite barren It has been proposed that genus Atriplex was a main food source in the diet of the extinct giant kangaroo Procoptodon goliah 22 Stable isotopic data suggested that their diet consisted of plants that used the C4 photosynthetic pathway and due to their semi arid distribution chenopod saltbushes were likely responsible 23 24 25 Uses editThe favored species for human consumption is now usually garden orache A hortensis 26 27 28 but many species are edible and the use of Atriplex as food is known since at least the late Epipaleolithic Mesolithic Common orache A patula is attested as an archaeophyte in northern Europe and the Ertebolle culture is presumed to have used it as a food 29 Its seed has been found among apparent evidence of cereal preparation and cooking at Late Iron Age villages in Britain 30 In the biblical Book of Job malluaḥ מ ל ו ח probably Mediterranean saltbush A halimus the major culinary saltbush in the region is mentioned as food eaten by social outcasts Job 30 4 31 Grey saltbush A cinerea has been used as bushfood in Australia since prehistoric times Chamiso A canescens and shadscale A confertifolia were eaten by Native Americans and spearscale A hastata was a food in rural Eurasia Studies on Atriplex species demonstrated their potential use in agriculture Meat from sheep which have grazed on saltbush has surprisingly high levels of vitamin E is leaner and more hydrated than regular lamb and has consumer appeal equal to grain fed lamb 32 The vitamin E levels could have animal health benefits while extending the shelf life and maintaining the fresh red colour of saltbush lamb This effect has been demonstrated for old man saltbush A nummularia and river saltbush A amnicola For reasons unknown sheep seem to prefer the more fibrous less nutritious river saltbush 33 32 A study on A nummularia discovered the species have a nitrogen content of 2 5 3 5 and could potentially be used as a protein supplement for grazing if palatable 34 A subsequent study allowed sheep and goats to voluntarily feed on Atriplex halimus and aimed to determine if the saltbush was palatable and if so did it provide enough nutrients to supplement the diet of these animals 35 In this study they determined when goats and sheep are given as much A halimus as they like they do obtain enough nutrients to supplement their diet unless the animal requirements are higher during pregnancy and milk production Saltbushes are also used as an ornamental plant in landscaping and can be used to prevent soil erosion in coastal areas 36 37 Old man saltbush Atriplex nummularia has also been successfully used to rehabilitate old mining sites around Lightning Ridge Australia See also editBarbara Hulme producer of Atriplex hybridsReferences edit a b c Atriplex L Plants of the World Online Retrieved 19 June 2022 Sunset Western Garden Book 1995 606 607 orach The Chambers Dictionary 9th ed Chambers 2003 ISBN 0 550 10105 5 orache Oxford English Dictionary third edition Oxford University Press June 2004 Retrieved 7 December 2018 Quattrocchi Umberto 2000 CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names Vol I A C CRC Press p 232 ISBN 978 0 8493 2675 2 a b c Stanley L Welsh Atriplex online In Flora of North America Editorial Committee ed Flora of North America North of Mexico Volume 4 Magnoliophyta Caryophyllidae part 1 Oxford University Press New York 2003 ISBN 0 19 517389 9 a b c d Gelin Zhu Sergei L Mosyakin amp Steven E Clemants Chenopodiaceae Atriplex online In Wu Zhengyi Peter H Raven Deyuan Hong ed Flora of China Volume 5 Ulmaceae through Basellaceae Science Press und Missouri Botanical Garden Press Beijing und St Louis 2003 ISBN 1 930723 27 X a b c Walsh Neville G Atriples Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria Retrieved 16 July 2022 a b c Jacobs Surrey W L Atriplex Royal Botanic Garden Sydney Retrieved 16 July 2022 a b c Atriplex FloraBase Western Australian Government Department of Biodiversity Conservation and Attractions a b c d e f g Gudrun Kadereit Evgeny V Mavrodiev Elizabeth H Zacharias amp Alexander P Sukhorukov Molecular phylogeny of Atripliceae Chenopodioideae Chenopodiaceae Implications for systematics biogeography flower and fruit evolution and the origin of C4 Photosynthesis American Journal of Botany 97 10 1664 1687 2010 Linnaeus Carl 1753 Species Plantarum Vol 2 pp 1052 1053 Retrieved 19 June 2022 Carl Linnaeus 1753 Atriplex Species Plantarum vol 2 Lars Salvius Biodiversity Heritage Library pp 1052 1054 retrieved 19 May 2015 Sharr Francis Aubi George Alex 2019 Western Australian Plant Names and Their Meanings 3rd ed Kardinya WA Four Gables Press p 61 ISBN 9780958034180 Atriplex at Tropicos accessed 2013 07 11 Shepherd Kelly Thiele Kevin Sampson Jane Coates David Bryne Margaret 2015 A rare new species of Atriplex Chenopodiaceae comprising two genetically distinct but morphologically cryptic populations in arid Western Australia implications for taxonomy and conservation Australian Systematic Botany 28 4 235 doi 10 1071 SB15029 S2CID 85903596 Retrieved 8 September 2021 a b Flores Hilda Davis Jerrold I 2001 A Cladistic Analysis of Atripliceae Chenopodiaceae Based on Morphological Data Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society 128 3 297 doi 10 2307 3088719 JSTOR 3088719 a b c Brignone Nicolas F Pozner Raul E Denham Silvia S October 2019 Origin and evolution of Atriplex Amaranthaceae s l in the Americas Unexpected insights from South American species Taxon 68 5 1027 doi 10 1002 tax 12133 S2CID 214371753 Tasmanian name also transcribed trucanini trucaninny trugannini trugernanna etc The plant was the namesake for Truganini among the last of her people Robinson Gaden S Ackery Phillip R Kitching Ian Beccaloni George W Hernandez Luis M 2023 HOSTS The Hostplants and Caterpillars Database at the Natural History Museum www nhm ac uk doi 10 5519 havt50xw Retrieved 2020 09 28 Shawket S M 1999 Fattening of camel calves on saltbush Atriplex halimas with different energy sources Mansoura University Journal of Agricultural Sciences Egypt ISSN 1110 0346 Prideaux Gavin J Ayliffe Linda K DeSantis Larisa R G Schubert Blaine W Murray Peter F Gagan Michael K Cerling Thure E 2009 07 14 Extinction implications of a chenopod browse diet for a giant Pleistocene kangaroo Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106 28 11646 11650 Bibcode 2009PNAS 10611646P doi 10 1073 pnas 0900956106 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 2710660 PMID 19556539 S2CID 19904871 Kadereit Gudrun Mavrodiev Evgeny V Zacharias Elizabeth H Sukhorukov Alexander P 2010 Molecular phylogeny of Atripliceae Chenopodioideae Chenopodiaceae Implications for systematics biogeography flower and fruit evolution and the origin of C4 photosynthesis American Journal of Botany 97 10 1664 1687 doi 10 3732 ajb 1000169 ISSN 1537 2197 PMID 21616801 Prideaux G 2004 Systematics and Evolution of the Sthenurine Kangaroos UC Publications in Geological Sciences University of California Press doi 10 1525 california 9780520098459 001 0001 ISBN 9780520098459 DeSantis Larisa R G Field Judith H Wroe Stephen Dodson John R May 2017 Dietary responses of Sahul Pleistocene Australia New Guinea megafauna to climate and environmental change Paleobiology 43 2 181 195 Bibcode 2017Pbio 43 181D doi 10 1017 pab 2016 50 ISSN 0094 8373 S2CID 13134989 Orach facts and health benefits 4 February 2020 Retrieved 2020 09 28 Atriplex hortensis Orach Garden orache PFAF Plant Database pfaf org Retrieved 2020 09 28 Atriplex hortensis garden orache www cabi org Retrieved 2020 09 28 Koch Eva December 1999 Prehistoric plant food of Denmark Archived from the original on 2006 07 17 Christopher Evans 2015 North West Cambridge Archaeology University of Cambridge 2013 Excavations The Traveller s Rest Sub site PDF Cambridge Archaeological Unit University Of Cambridge pp 100 113 Mistranslated as mallows in the King James Bible and as Nesseln nettles in the Luther Bible a b Pearce Kelly amp Jacob Robin 2004 Saltbush lifts sheep meat vitamin content Farming Ahead 153 October 63 PDF fulltext Archived July 23 2005 at the Wayback Machine Norman Hayley C Freind Colby Masters David G Rintoul Allan J Dynes Robyn A amp Williams Ian H 2004 Variation within and between two saltbush species in plant composition and subsequent selection by sheep Aust J Agr Res 55 9 999 1007 doi 10 1071 AR04031 HTML abstract Wilson A D Harrington G N 1980 Nutritive value of Australian browse plants International Livestock Centre for Africa Addis Ababa 291 Valderrabano J Munoz F Delgado I 1996 Browsing ability and utilisation by sheep and goats of Atriplex hamilus L shrubs Small Ruminant Research 19 2 Zaragoza Spain 131 136 doi 10 1016 0921 4488 95 00754 7 Retrieved 13 April 2020 Saltbushes for dryland salinity management in Western Australia www agric wa gov au Retrieved 2020 09 28 Atriplex semibaccata Australian saltbush www cabi org Retrieved 2020 09 28 Davidson Alan 1999 Orach In Oxford Companion to Food 556 ISBN 0 19 211579 0 Everitt J H Lonard R L Little C R 2007 Weeds in South Texas and Northern Mexico Lubbock Texas Tech University Press ISBN 0 89672 614 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Atriplex amp oldid 1180785831, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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