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Peony

The peony or paeony /ˈpən/ [2][3] is a flowering plant in the genus Paeonia /pˈnə/,[4] the only genus in the family Paeoniaceae /pˌnˈsˌ/. Peonies are native to Asia, Europe and Western North America. Scientists differ on the number of species that can be distinguished, ranging from 25 to 40,[5][6] although the current consensus is 33 known species.[7] The relationships between the species need to be further clarified.[8]

Peony
Paeonia suffruticosa
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Saxifragales
Family: Paeoniaceae
Raf.[1]
Genus: Paeonia
L.
Type species
Paeonia officinalis
L.
Sections
  • Moutan
  • Onaepia
  • Paeoniae

and for lower taxa see text

The range of Paeonia.

Most are herbaceous perennial plants 0.25–1 metre (1–3 ft) tall, but some are woody shrubs 0.25–3.5 metres (1–11 ft) tall. They have compound, deeply lobed leaves and large, often fragrant flowers, in colors ranging from purple and pink to red, white or yellow, in late spring and early summer. The flowers have a short blooming season, usually only 7–10 days.

Peonies are popular garden plants in temperate regions. Herbaceous peonies are also sold as cut flowers on a large scale, although generally only available in late spring and early summer.[9]

Description

Morphology

All Paeoniaceae are herbaceous perennials or deciduous shrubs, with thick storage roots and thin roots for gathering water and minerals. Some species are caespitose (tufted), because the crown produces adventitious buds, while others have stolons. They have rather large compound leaves without glands and stipules, and with anomocytic stomata. In the woody species the new growth emerges from scaly buds on the previous flush or from the crown of the rootstock. The large bisexual flowers are mostly single at the end of the stem. In P. emodi, P. lactiflora, P. veitchii and many of the cultivars these contributed to, few additional flowers develop in the axils of the leaves. Flowers close at night or when the sky is overcast. Each flower is subtended by a number of bracts, that may form a sort of involucre, has 3-7 tough free sepals and mostly 5-8, but occasionally up to 13 free petals. These categories however are intergrading, making it difficult to assign some of them, and the number of these parts may vary. Within are numerous (50–160) free stamens, with anthers fixed at their base to the filaments, and are sagittate in shape, open with longitudal slits at the outer side and free pollen grains which have three slits or pores and consist of two cells. Within the circle of stamens is a more or less prominent, lobed disc, which is presumed not to excrete nectar. Within the disk is a varying number (1-15) of separate carpels, which have a very short style and a decurrent stigma. Each of these develops into a dry fruit (which is called a follicle), which opens with a lengthwise suture and each of which contains one or a few large fleshy seeds. The annual growth is predetermined: if the growing tip of a shoot is removed, no new buds will develop that season.[9][10][11]

Phytochemistry

Over 262 compounds have been obtained so far from the plants of Paeoniaceae. These include monoterpenoid glucosides, flavonoids, tannins, stilbenoids, triterpenoids, steroids, paeonols, and phenols. In vitro biological activities include antioxidant, antitumor, antipathogenic, immunomodulative, cardiovascular-system-protective activities and central-nervous-system activities.[12]

Paeoniaceae are dependent on C3 carbon fixation. They contain ellagic acid, myricetin, ethereal oils and flavones, as well as crystals of calcium oxalate. The wax tubules that are formed primarily consist of palmitone (the ketone of palmitic acid).[10][11]

Genome

The basic chromosome number is five. About half of the species of the section Paeonia however is tetraploid (4n=20), particularly many of those in the Mediterranean region. Both allotetraploids and autotetraploids are known, and some diploid species are also of hybrid origin.[10]

Taxonomy

The family name "Paeoniaceae" was first used by Friedrich K.L. Rudolphi in 1830, following a suggestion by Friedrich Gottlieb Bartling that same year.[5] The family had been given other names a few years earlier.[13] The composition of the family has varied, but it has always consisted of Paeonia and one or more genera that are now placed in Ranunculales.[6] It has been widely believed that Paeonia is closest to Glaucidium, and this idea has been followed in some recent works.[5][14] Molecular phylogenetic studies, however, have demonstrated conclusively that Glaucidium belongs in the family Ranunculaceae, order Ranunculales,[15] but that Paeonia belongs in the unrelated order Saxifragales.[16] The genus Paeonia consists of about 35 species, assigned to three sections: Moutan, Onaepia and Paeoniae. The section Onaepia only includes P. brownii and P. californicum. The section Moutan is divided into P. delavayi and P. ludlowii, together making up the subsection Delavayanae, and P. catayana, P. decomposita, P. jishanensis, P. osti, P. qiui and P. rockii which constitute the subsection Vaginatae. P. suffruticosa is a cultivated hybrid swarm, not a naturally occurring species.[17]

The remainder of the species belongs to the section Paeonia, which is characterised by a complicated reticulate evolution. Only about half of the (sub)species is diploid, the other half tetraploid, while some species both have diploid and tetraploid populations. In addition to the tetraploids, are some diploid species also likely the result of hybridisation, or nothospecies. Known diploid taxa in the Paeonia-section are P. anomala, P. lactiflora, P. veitchii, P. tenuifolia, P. emodi, P. broteri, P. cambedessedesii, P. clusii, P. rhodia, P. daurica subsps. coriifolia, daurica, macrophylla and mlokosewitschii. Tetraploid taxa are P. arietina, P. officinalis, P. parnassica, P. banatica, P. russi, P. peregrina, P. coriacea, P. mascula subsps. hellenica and mascula, and P. daurica subsps. tomentosa and wittmanniana. Species that have both diploid and tetraploid populations include P. clusii, P. mairei and P. obovata. P. anomala was proven to be a hybrid of P. lactiflora and P. veitchii, although being a diploid with 10 chromosomes. P. emodi and P. sterniana are diploid hybrids of P. lactiflora and P. veitchii too, and radically different in appearance. P. russi is the tetraploid hybrid of diploid P. lactiflora and P. mairei, while P. cambedessedesii is the diploid hybrid of P. lactiflora, likely P. mairei, but possibly also P. obovata. P. peregrina is the tetraploid hybrid of P. anomala and either P. arietina, P. humilis, P. officinalis, P. parnassica or less likely P. tenuifolia, or one of their (now extinct) common ancestors. P. banatica is the tetraploid hybrid of P. mairei and one of this same group. P. broteri, P. coriacea, P. clusii, P. rhodia, P. daurica subsp. mlokosewitschi, P. mascula subsp. hellenica and ssp. mascula, and P. daurica subsp. wittmanniana are all descendants of hybrids of P. lactiflora and P. obovata.[17][18]

Phylogeny

Recent genetic analyses relate the monogeneric family Paeoniaceae to a group of families with woody species in the order Saxifragales. This results in the following relationship tree.[16] One dissertation suggests the section Onaepia branches off earliest, but a later publication of the same author and others suggests the Moutan-section splits off first. Within that section P. ludlowii and P. delavayi are more related to each other than to any other species.[19][20]

Saxifragales

Peridiscaceae

 woody clade 

 core Saxifragales 

genus Paeonia
section Paeoniae

all Eurasian herbaceous peonies

section Moutan
subsection Vaginatae

all other tree peonies

subsection Delavayanae
section Onaepia

Species

Distribution

The genus Paeonia naturally occurs in the temperate and cold areas of the Northern Hemisphere. The section Moutan, which includes all woody species, is restricted in the wild to Central and Southern China, including Tibet. The section Onaepia consist of two herbaceous species and is present in the West of North-America, P. brownii between southern British Columbia and the Sierra Nevada in California and eastward to Wyoming and Utah, while P. californica is limited to the coastal mountains of Southern and Central California.

The section Paeonia, which comprises all other herbaceous species, occurs in a band stretching roughly from Morocco and Spain to Japan. One species of the section Paeonia, P. anomala, has by far the largest distribution, which is also north of the distribution of the other species: from the Kola peninsula in North-West Russia, to Lake Baikal in Siberia and South to the Tien Shan Mountains of Kazakhstan. The rest of the section concentrates around the Mediterranean, and in Asia.

The species around the Mediterranean include Paeonia algeriensis that is an endemic of the coastal mountains of Algeria, P. coriacea in the Rif Mountains and Andalusia, P. cambessedesii on Majorca, P. russoi on Corsica, Sardinia and Sicilly, P. corsica on Corsica, Sardinia, the Ionian islands and in western Greece, P. clusii subsp. clusii on Crete and Karpathos, and subsp. rhodia on Rhodes, P. kesrouanensis in the Western Taurus Mountains, P. arietina from the Middle Taurus Mountains, P. broteri in Andalucia, P. humilis from Andalucia to the Provence, P. officinalis from the South of France, through Switzerland to the Middle of Italy, P. banatica in western Romania, northern Serbia and Slovenia and in southern Hungary, P. peregrina in Albania, western Bulgaria, northern Greece, western Romania, Serbia, Montenegro and Bosnia, while P. mascula has a large distribution from Catalonia and southern France to Israel and Turkey.

Between the two concentrations, the subspecies of Paeonia daurica occur, with subspecies velebitensis in Croatia, and daurica in the Balkans and Crimea, while the other subspecies coriifolia, macrophylla, mlokosewitschii, tomentosa and wittmanniana are known from the Caucasus, Kaçkar and Alborz Mountains.

Paeonia emodi occurs in the western Himalayas between Pakistan and western Nepal, P. sterniana is an endemic of southeastern Tibet, P. veitchii grows in Central China (Qinghai, Ningxia, Gansu, Shaanxi, Shanxi, Sichuan and the eastern rim of Tibet), like P. mairei (Gansu, Guizhou, Hubei, Shaanxi, Sichuan, and Yunnan), while P. obovata grows in warm-temperate to cold China, including Manchuria, Korea, Japan, Far Eastern Russia (Primorsky Krai) and on Sakhalin, and P. lactiflora occurs in Northern China, including Manchuria, Japan, Korea, Mongolia, Russia (Far East and Siberia).[18]

Distributional history

The species of the section Paeonia have a disjunct distribution, with most of the species occurring in the Mediterranean, while many others occur in eastern Asia. Genetic analysis has shown that all Mediterranean species are either diploid or tetraploid hybrids that resulted from the crossbreeding of species currently limited to eastern Asia. The large distance between the ranges of the parent species and the nothospecies suggest that hybridisation already occurred relatively long ago. It is likely that the parent species occurred in the same region when the hybrids arose, and were later exterminated by successive Pleistocene glaciations, while the nothospecies remained in refugia to the South of Europe. During their retreat P. lactiflora and P. mairei likely became sympatric and so produced the Himalayan nothospecies P. emodi and P. sterniana.[18]

 
 
Distribution maps of the species of Paeonia in Europe and Western Asia.

Cultivation

 
Paeonia 'Sarah Bernhardt'

Ancient Chinese texts mention the peony was used for flavoring food. Peonies have been used and cultivated in China since early history. Ornamental cultivars were created from plants cultivated for medicine in China as of the sixth and seventh century. Peonies became particularly popular during the Tang dynasty, when they were grown in the imperial gardens. In the tenth century the cultivation of peonies spread through China, and the seat of the Song dynasty, Luoyang, was the centre for its cultivation, a position it still holds today. A second centre for peony cultivation developed during the Qing dynasty in Cáozhōu, now known as He Ze. Both cities still host annual peony exhibitions and state-funded peony research facilities. Before the tenth century, P. lactiflora was introduced in Japan, and over time many varieties were developed both by self fertilisation and crossbreeding, particularly during the eighteenth to twentieth centuries (middle Edo to early Shōwa periods). During the 1940s Toichi Itoh succeeded in crossing tree peonies and herbaceous peonies and so created a new class of so-called intersectional hybrids. Although P. officinalis and its cultivars were grown in Europe from the fifteenth century on, originally also for medicinal purposes, intensive breeding started only in the nineteenth century when P. lactiflora was introduced from its native China to Europe. The tree peony was introduced in Europe and planted in Kew Gardens in 1789. The main centre of peony breeding in Europe has been in the United Kingdom, and particularly France. Here, breeders like Victor Lemoine and François Félix Crousse selected many new varieties, mainly with P. lactiflora, such as "Avant Garde" and "Le Printemps". The Netherlands is the largest peony cut flower producing country with about 50 million stems each year, with "Sarah Bernhardt" dominating the sales with over 20 million stems.[9] An emerging source of peonies in mid to late summer is the Alaskan market. Unique growing conditions due to long hours of sunlight create availability from Alaska when other sources have completed harvest.[21]

Plant growth habits

Peony species come in two distinct growth habits, while hybrid cultivars in addition may occupy an intermediate habit.

  • herbaceous: During summer, renewal buds develop on the underground stem (the "crown"), particularly at the foot of the current season's annual shoots. These renewal buds come in various sizes. Large buds will grow into stems the following growing season, but smaller buds remain dormant. The primordia for the leaves can already be found in June, but the flower only starts differentiating in October, as the annual shoots die down, completing its development in December, when sepals, petals, stamens and pistils are all recognisable.[9]
  • tree: During the summer, large buds develop at the tip of the annual growth and near its foot. In the autumn, the leaves are shed, and the new stems become woody and are perennial.
  • Itoh (or "Intersectional"): In 1948 horticulturist Toichi Itoh from Tokyo used pollen from the yellow tree peony "Alice Harding" to fertilize the herbaceous P. lactiflora "Katoden", which resulted in a new category of peonies, the Itoh or intersectional cultivars. These are herbaceous, have leaves like tree peonies, with many large flowers from late spring to early autumn, and good peony wilt resistance. Some of the early Itoh cultivars are "Yellow Crown", "Yellow Dream", "Yellow Emperor" and "Yellow Heaven".[22]

Flower types

Six types of flower are generally distinguished in cultivars of herbaceous peonies.

  • single: a single or double row of broad petals encircle fertile stamens, carpels visible.
  • Japanese: a single or double row of broad petals encircle somewhat broadened staminodes, may carry pollen along the edges, carpels visible.
  • anemone: a single or double row of broad petals encircle narrow incurved petal-like staminodes; fertile stamens are absent, carpels visible.
  • semi-double: a single or double row of broad petals encircles further broad petals intermingled with stamens.
  • bomb: a single row of broad petals encircles a shorter dense pompon of narrower petals.
  • double: the flower consists of many broad petals only, including those which likely are altered stamens and carpels.[9]

Propagation

Herbaceous and Itoh peonies are propagated by root division, and sometimes by seed. Tree peonies can be propagated by grafting, division, seed, and from cuttings, although root grafting is most common commercially.[23][24]

Herbaceous peonies such as Paeonia lactiflora, will die back to ground level each autumn. Their stems will reappear the following spring. However tree peonies, such as Paeonia suffruticosa, are shrubbier. They produce permanent woody stems that will lose their leaves in winter but the stem itself remains intact above ground level.[25]

Hybrid cultivars

The following hybrids and cultivars have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit:-

  • 'Bartzella'[26]
  • 'Coral Charm' [27]
  • Paeonia × festiva 'Rubra Plena'[28]
  • Paeonia × lemoinei 'High Noon'[29]

Uses

The herb known as Paeonia, in particular the root of P. lactiflora (Bai Shao, Radix Paeoniae Lactiflorae), has been used frequently in traditional medicines of Korea, China and Japan. In Japan, Paeonia lactiflora used to be called ebisugusuri ("foreign medicine"). Pronunciation of 牡丹 (peony) in Japan is "botan." In kampo, the Japanese adaptation of Chinese medicine, its root was used as a treatment for convulsions. It is also cultivated as a garden plant. In Japan Paeonia suffruticosa is called the "King of Flowers" and Paeonia lactiflora is called the "Prime Minister of Flowers."[30]

In China, the fallen petals of Paeonia lactiflora are parboiled and sweetened as a tea-time delicacy. Peony water, an infusion of peony petals, was used for drinking in the Middle Ages. The petals may be added to salads or to punches and lemonades.[31]

Peonies are also extensively grown as ornamental plants for their very large, often scented flowers.

Culture

 
In this gold-engraved lacquerware food tray from the Song dynasty (960–1279), the two long-tailed birds represent longevity, and the peony seen at the top center represents prosperity
 
Peony, by Chinese artist Wang Qian, Yuan dynasty (1271–1368)
 
Portrait of a peony by Chinese artist Yun Shouping, 17th century

Located in Cuigou Village, Chaoyang Town, Mengjin District, Luoyang, Henan, China. The first generation of Kao, wild peony, Ranunculaceae, and medicinal genus, was founded in 1800 meters in Baiyun Mountain, Song County, Henan. Transplanted by Cui Yueqi, the owner of the house, in May 1958, after 27 years of labor and land, the plant chapter of "Henan Geography Knowledge Expo" was filmed by China Education Television in April 2017. The height of the tree is 1.7 meters, the diameter of the canopy is more than two meters, and the number of flowers will reach 350 in the future. The peony is among the longest-used flowers in Eastern culture. Along with the plum blossom, it is a traditional floral symbol of China, where the Paeonia suffruticosa is called 牡丹 (mǔdān). It is also known as 富貴花 (fùguìhuā) "flower of riches and honour" or 花王 (huawang) "king of the flowers", and is used symbolically in Chinese art.

[32] In 1903, the Qing dynasty declared the peony as the national flower. Currently, the Republic of China government in Taiwan designates the plum blossom as the national flower, while the People's Republic of China government has no legally designated national flower. In 1994, the peony was proposed as the national flower after a nationwide poll, but the National People's Congress failed to ratify the selection. In 2003, another selection process was initiated, but no choice has been made to date.

The ancient Chinese city Luoyang has a reputation as a cultivation centre for the peonies. Throughout Chinese history, peonies in Luoyang have been said to be the finest in the country. Dozens of peony exhibitions and shows are still held there annually.

In the Middle Ages, peonies were often painted with their ripe seed-capsules, since it was the seeds, not the flowers, which were medically significant.[33] Ancient superstition dictated that great care be taken not to be seen by a woodpecker while picking the plant's fruit, or the bird might peck out one's eyes.[34]

The red flowers of the species Paeonia peregrina are important in Serbian folklore. Known as Kosovo peonies (Serbian: косовски божур, kosovski božur), they are said to represent the blood of Serbian warriors who died in the Battle of Kosovo.[35]

In 1957, the Indiana General Assembly passed a law to make the peony the state flower of Indiana, a title which it holds to this day. It replaced the zinnia, which had been the state flower since 1931.[36]

Mischievous nymphs were said to hide in the petals of the Peony, giving it the meaning of Shame or Bashfulness in the Language of Flowers. While the peony takes several years to re-establish itself when moved, it blooms annually for decades once it has done so.[37]

Peonies tend to attract ants to the flower buds. This is due to the nectar that forms on the outside of the flower buds, and is not required for the plants' own pollination or other growth.[38] The presence of ants is thought to provide some deterrence to other harmful insects though, so the production of ant-attracting nectar is plausibly a functional adaptation. Ants do not harm the plants.[39]

Peonies are a common subject in tattoos, often used along with koi-fish. The popular use of peonies in Japanese tattoo was inspired by the ukiyo-e artist Utagawa Kuniyoshi's illustrations of Suikoden, a classical Chinese novel. His paintings of warrior-heroes covered in pictorial tattoos included lions, tigers, dragons, koi fish, and peonies, among other symbols. The peony became a masculine motif, associated with a devil-may-care attitude and disregard for consequence.

Famous painters of peonies have included Conrad Gessner (ca. 1550) and Auguste Renoir in 1879. Paeonia officinalis can be found in the altar picture of Maria im Rosenhag by Schongauer in the former Dominican Church in Colmar.[33] The Italian Jesuit, painter and architect Giuseppe Castiglione (1688-1766), who worked at the court of the Qianlong Emperor in the Qing dynasty, painted peonies.

References

  1. ^ Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (2009). "An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG II" (PDF). Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. 161 (2): 105–121. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.2009.00996.x. Retrieved 6 July 2013.
  2. ^ The Concise Oxford English Dictionary (twelfth edition, 2011) lists 'paeony' as a variant spelling of 'peony'.
  3. ^ Dictionary.com
  4. ^ "Paeonia". Merriam-Webster Dictionary.
  5. ^ a b c Halda, Josef J.; Waddick, James W. (2004). The genus Paeonia. Oregon, USA: Timber Press.
  6. ^ a b Tamura, Michio (2007). "Paeoniaceae". In Klaus Kubitski (ed.). The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants. Vol. IX. Berlin, Heidelberg, Germany: Springer-Verlag. pp. 265–269.
  7. ^ Christenhusz, M. J. M. & Byng, J. W. (2016). "The number of known plants species in the world and its annual increase". Phytotaxa. 261 (3): 201–217. doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.261.3.1.
  8. ^ Deyuan, Hong; Kaiyu, Pan; Turland, Nicholas J. (2001). Flora of China (PDF). Vol. 6. pp. 127–132. Retrieved 10 May 2016.
  9. ^ a b c d e Kamenetsky, Rina; Dole, John (2012). "Herbaceous Peony (Paeonia): Genetics, Physiology and Cut Flower Production" (PDF). Floriculture and Ornamental Biotechnology. 6 (Special Issue 1): 62–77. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
  10. ^ a b c "Saxifragales". ANGIOSPERM PHYLOGENY WEBSITE. Retrieved 26 April 2016.
  11. ^ a b L. Watson and M.J. Dallwitz. "Paeoniaceae Rudolphi". The families of flowering plants. Retrieved 26 April 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  12. ^ He, C.-N.; Peng, Y.; Zhang, Y.-C.; Xu, L.-J.; Gu, J.; Xiao, P.-G. (2010). "Phytochemical and Biological Studies of Paeoniaceae". Chemistry & Biodiversity. 7 (4): 805–838. doi:10.1002/cbdv.200800341. PMID 20397219. S2CID 205544231.
  13. ^ James L. Reveal. 2008 onward. "A Checklist of Family and Suprafamilial Names for Extant Vascular Plants." At: Home page of James L. Reveal and C. Rose Broome. (see External links below).
  14. ^ David J. Mabberley. 2008. Mabberley's Plant-Book.Cambridge University Press: UK.
  15. ^ Wang, Wei; Lu, An-Ming; Ren, Yi; Endress, Mary E.; Chen, Zhi-Duan (2009). "Phylogeny and Classification of Ranunculales: Evidence from four molecular loci and morphological data". Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics. 11 (2): 81–110. doi:10.1016/j.ppees.2009.01.001.
  16. ^ a b Jian, Shuguang; Soltis, Pamela S.; Gitzendanner, Matthew A.; Moore, Michael J.; Li, Ruiqi; Hendry, Tory A.; Qiu, Yin-Long; Dhingra, Amit; Bell, Charles D.; Soltis, Douglas E. (2008). "Resolving an Ancient, Rapid Radiation in Saxifragales". Systematic Biology. 57 (1): 38–57. doi:10.1080/10635150801888871. PMID 18275001.
  17. ^ a b Ji, Li Jing; Wang, Qi; Teixeira da Silva, Jaime A.; Yu, Xiao Nan (2012). "The genetic diversity of Paeonia L.". Scientia Horticulturae. 143: 62–74. doi:10.1016/j.scienta.2012.06.011.
  18. ^ a b c Sang, Tao; Crawford, Daniel J.; Stuessy, Tod F. (1995). "Documentation of reticulate evolution in peonies (Paeonia) using internal transcripted spacer sequences of nuclear ribosomal DNA: Implications for biogeography and concerted evolution". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 92 (15): 6813–6817. Bibcode:1995PNAS...92.6813S. doi:10.1073/pnas.92.15.6813. PMC 41419. PMID 7624325.
  19. ^ Sang, Tao (1996). Phylogeny and Biogeography of Paeonia (PAEONIACEAE), dissertation. The Ohio State University. cited on "Tao Sang, DISSERTATION, chapter 4". Paeon. Retrieved 19 May 2016.
  20. ^ Sang, T.; Donoghue, M.J.; Zhang, D. (1997). "Evolution of alcohol dehydrogenase genes in peonies (Paeonia): phylogenetic relationships of putative nonhybrid species". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 14 (10): 994–1007. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a025716. PMID 9335140.
  21. ^ "'The industry's about to explode': Peony market flourishes in Alaska". Anchorage Daily News. 5 August 2018. Retrieved 10 January 2019.
  22. ^ Pauwels, I.; Vervoort, G. (2009). Pioenen [Peonies] (1: in volle glorie [in full splendor] ed.). Uitgever Lannoo Uitgeverij. p. 143. ISBN 978-9020965070.
  23. ^ Coit, J. Eliot (1908). "Peony". Bulletin. 259: 104.
  24. ^ "Peony". Royal Horticultural Society.
  25. ^ "Paeonia suffruticosa".
  26. ^ "Paeonia 'Bartzella'". RHS. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  27. ^ "Paeonia 'Coral Charm'". RHS. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  28. ^ "Paeonia × festiva 'Rubra Plena'". RHS. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  29. ^ "Paeonia × lemoinei 'High Noon'". RHS. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  30. ^ Sasaki, Sanmi. 2005. Chado: The Way of Tea: A Japanese Tea Master's Almanac. Translated from the Japanese by Shaun McCabe and Iwasaki Satoko. Boston: Tuttle. Page 247.
  31. ^ "Getting to know peonies' symbolism - part 2". Bloomthis.
  32. ^ Terese Tse Bartholomew, Hidden Meanings in Chinese Art (San Francisco: Asian Art Museum/Chong-Moon Lee Center for Asian Art and Culture), 2006.
  33. ^ a b Walter Good. . Archived from the original on 13 March 2016.
  34. ^ Sowerby, James & John Edward. 1899. Ranunculaceae to Cruciferae. London: George Bell & Sons. Page 69.
  35. ^ Natalia. "A Pilgrimage to Kosovo Today". Serbian Orthodox Church. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  36. ^ "Peony". State Symbols USA. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  37. ^ The Language of Flowers, edited by Sheila Pickles, 1990
  38. ^ "HPS Frequently Asked Questions: Ants on Peonies". Heartland Peony Society. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
  39. ^ "Ants on Peony Flowers: An Example of Biological Mutualism". Integrated Pest Management - University of Missouri.

Bibliography

  • Auer, James D.; Greenberg, Joshua (June 2009). "Peonies: An Economic Background for Alaska Flower Growers" (PDF). SNRAS/AFES Miscellaneous Publication MP 2009-08. School of Natural Resources & Agricultural Resources, University of Alaska, Fairbanks.

External links

  • Family and Suprafamilial Names At: James L. Reveal
  • Paeoniaceae in Topwalks
  • Flora Europaea: Paeonia
  • Ornamental Plants from Russia: Paeonia
  • The Peony Society (UK) (defunct as of 2106)
  • Canadian Peony Society
  • U.S. Peony Society
  • Carsten Burkhardt's Open Source Peony Project
  • German Peony Group
  • China Daily article on the 2003 national flower selection process

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For other uses see Peony disambiguation The peony or paeony ˈ p iː e n iː 2 3 is a flowering plant in the genus Paeonia p iː ˈ oʊ n iː e 4 the only genus in the family Paeoniaceae p iː ˌ oʊ n iː ˈ eɪ s iː ˌ iː Peonies are native to Asia Europe and Western North America Scientists differ on the number of species that can be distinguished ranging from 25 to 40 5 6 although the current consensus is 33 known species 7 The relationships between the species need to be further clarified 8 PeonyPaeonia suffruticosaScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsOrder SaxifragalesFamily PaeoniaceaeRaf 1 Genus PaeoniaL Type speciesPaeonia officinalisL SectionsMoutan Onaepia Paeoniaeand for lower taxa see textThe range of Paeonia Most are herbaceous perennial plants 0 25 1 metre 1 3 ft tall but some are woody shrubs 0 25 3 5 metres 1 11 ft tall They have compound deeply lobed leaves and large often fragrant flowers in colors ranging from purple and pink to red white or yellow in late spring and early summer The flowers have a short blooming season usually only 7 10 days Peonies are popular garden plants in temperate regions Herbaceous peonies are also sold as cut flowers on a large scale although generally only available in late spring and early summer 9 Contents 1 Description 1 1 Morphology 1 2 Phytochemistry 1 3 Genome 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Phylogeny 2 2 Species 3 Distribution 3 1 Distributional history 4 Cultivation 4 1 Plant growth habits 4 2 Flower types 4 3 Propagation 4 4 Hybrid cultivars 5 Uses 6 Culture 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksDescription EditMorphology Edit All Paeoniaceae are herbaceous perennials or deciduous shrubs with thick storage roots and thin roots for gathering water and minerals Some species are caespitose tufted because the crown produces adventitious buds while others have stolons They have rather large compound leaves without glands and stipules and with anomocytic stomata In the woody species the new growth emerges from scaly buds on the previous flush or from the crown of the rootstock The large bisexual flowers are mostly single at the end of the stem In P emodi P lactiflora P veitchii and many of the cultivars these contributed to few additional flowers develop in the axils of the leaves Flowers close at night or when the sky is overcast Each flower is subtended by a number of bracts that may form a sort of involucre has 3 7 tough free sepals and mostly 5 8 but occasionally up to 13 free petals These categories however are intergrading making it difficult to assign some of them and the number of these parts may vary Within are numerous 50 160 free stamens with anthers fixed at their base to the filaments and are sagittate in shape open with longitudal slits at the outer side and free pollen grains which have three slits or pores and consist of two cells Within the circle of stamens is a more or less prominent lobed disc which is presumed not to excrete nectar Within the disk is a varying number 1 15 of separate carpels which have a very short style and a decurrent stigma Each of these develops into a dry fruit which is called a follicle which opens with a lengthwise suture and each of which contains one or a few large fleshy seeds The annual growth is predetermined if the growing tip of a shoot is removed no new buds will develop that season 9 10 11 Paeonia suffruticosa buds young growth of a tree peony Paeonia veitchii leaf Paeonia tenuifolia leaves and flower buds Paeonia suffruticosa showing the disk that encloses the carpels Paeonia wittmanniana ripe follicles with seeds Paeonia anomala seedsPhytochemistry Edit Over 262 compounds have been obtained so far from the plants of Paeoniaceae These include monoterpenoid glucosides flavonoids tannins stilbenoids triterpenoids steroids paeonols and phenols In vitro biological activities include antioxidant antitumor antipathogenic immunomodulative cardiovascular system protective activities and central nervous system activities 12 Paeoniaceae are dependent on C3 carbon fixation They contain ellagic acid myricetin ethereal oils and flavones as well as crystals of calcium oxalate The wax tubules that are formed primarily consist of palmitone the ketone of palmitic acid 10 11 Genome Edit The basic chromosome number is five About half of the species of the section Paeonia however is tetraploid 4n 20 particularly many of those in the Mediterranean region Both allotetraploids and autotetraploids are known and some diploid species are also of hybrid origin 10 Taxonomy EditThe family name Paeoniaceae was first used by Friedrich K L Rudolphi in 1830 following a suggestion by Friedrich Gottlieb Bartling that same year 5 The family had been given other names a few years earlier 13 The composition of the family has varied but it has always consisted of Paeonia and one or more genera that are now placed in Ranunculales 6 It has been widely believed that Paeonia is closest to Glaucidium and this idea has been followed in some recent works 5 14 Molecular phylogenetic studies however have demonstrated conclusively that Glaucidium belongs in the family Ranunculaceae order Ranunculales 15 but that Paeonia belongs in the unrelated order Saxifragales 16 The genus Paeonia consists of about 35 species assigned to three sections Moutan Onaepia and Paeoniae The section Onaepia only includes P brownii and P californicum The section Moutan is divided into P delavayi and P ludlowii together making up the subsection Delavayanae and P catayana P decomposita P jishanensis P osti P qiui and P rockii which constitute the subsection Vaginatae P suffruticosa is a cultivated hybrid swarm not a naturally occurring species 17 The remainder of the species belongs to the section Paeonia which is characterised by a complicated reticulate evolution Only about half of the sub species is diploid the other half tetraploid while some species both have diploid and tetraploid populations In addition to the tetraploids are some diploid species also likely the result of hybridisation or nothospecies Known diploid taxa in the Paeonia section are P anomala P lactiflora P veitchii P tenuifolia P emodi P broteri P cambedessedesii P clusii P rhodia P daurica subsps coriifolia daurica macrophylla and mlokosewitschii Tetraploid taxa are P arietina P officinalis P parnassica P banatica P russi P peregrina P coriacea P mascula subsps hellenica and mascula and P daurica subsps tomentosa and wittmanniana Species that have both diploid and tetraploid populations include P clusii P mairei and P obovata P anomala was proven to be a hybrid of P lactiflora and P veitchii although being a diploid with 10 chromosomes P emodi and P sterniana are diploid hybrids of P lactiflora and P veitchii too and radically different in appearance P russi is the tetraploid hybrid of diploid P lactiflora and P mairei while P cambedessedesii is the diploid hybrid of P lactiflora likely P mairei but possibly also P obovata P peregrina is the tetraploid hybrid of P anomala and either P arietina P humilis P officinalis P parnassica or less likely P tenuifolia or one of their now extinct common ancestors P banatica is the tetraploid hybrid of P mairei and one of this same group P broteri P coriacea P clusii P rhodia P daurica subsp mlokosewitschi P mascula subsp hellenica and ssp mascula and P daurica subsp wittmanniana are all descendants of hybrids of P lactiflora and P obovata 17 18 Phylogeny Edit Recent genetic analyses relate the monogeneric family Paeoniaceae to a group of families with woody species in the order Saxifragales This results in the following relationship tree 16 One dissertation suggests the section Onaepia branches off earliest but a later publication of the same author and others suggests the Moutan section splits off first Within that section P ludlowii and P delavayi are more related to each other than to any other species 19 20 Saxifragales Peridiscaceae woody clade PaeoniaAltingiaceaeHamamelidaceaeCercidiphyllumDaphniphyllum core Saxifragales genus Paeonia section Paeoniae all Eurasian herbaceous peoniessection Moutan subsection Vaginatae all other tree peoniessubsection Delavayanae P ludlowiiP delavayisection Onaepia P browniiP californicaSpecies Edit Herbaceous species about 30 species Paeonia algeriensis Paeonia anomala Paeonia arietina Paeonia broteri Paeonia brownii Brown s peony Paeonia californica California peony or wild peony Paeonia cambessedesii Majorcan peony Paeonia clusii subsp clusii subsp rhodia Paeonia coriacea Paeonia corsica Paeonia daurica subsp coriifolia subsp daurica subsp macrophylla subsp mlokosewitschii subsp tomentosa subsp velebitensis subsp wittmanniana Paeonia emodi Paeonia intermedia Paeonia kesrouanensis Keserwan peony Paeonia lactiflora Chinese or common garden peony Paeonia mairei Paeonia mascula Balkan wild or male peony Paeonia obovata subsp willmottiae Paeonia officinalis European or common peony type species Paeonia parnassica Greek peony Paeonia peregrina Paeonia sterniana Paeonia tenuifolia Steppe peony Paeonia veitchii Veitch s peony Woody species about 8 species Paeonia decomposita Paeonia delavayi Delavay s tree peony Paeonia jishanensis Jishan peony Paeonia ludlowii Ludlow s tree peony Paeonia ostii Osti s peony Paeonia qiui Qiu s peony Paeonia rockii Rock s peony or tree peony synonym Paeonia suffruticosa subsp rockii Chinese tree peony known as moutan moutan peony in China Paeonia anomala Paeonia broteri Paeonia brownii Paeonia californica Paeonia cambessedesii Paeonia cambessedesii Paeonia daurica mlokosewitschii Paeonia delavayi Paeonia emodi Paeonia intermedia Paeonia ludlowii Paeonia mairei Paeonia mascula Paeonia russoi Paeonia obovata japonica Paeonia officinalis Paeonia ostii Paeonia rockii Paeonia tenuifoliaDistribution EditThe genus Paeonia naturally occurs in the temperate and cold areas of the Northern Hemisphere The section Moutan which includes all woody species is restricted in the wild to Central and Southern China including Tibet The section Onaepia consist of two herbaceous species and is present in the West of North America P brownii between southern British Columbia and the Sierra Nevada in California and eastward to Wyoming and Utah while P californica is limited to the coastal mountains of Southern and Central California The section Paeonia which comprises all other herbaceous species occurs in a band stretching roughly from Morocco and Spain to Japan One species of the section Paeonia P anomala has by far the largest distribution which is also north of the distribution of the other species from the Kola peninsula in North West Russia to Lake Baikal in Siberia and South to the Tien Shan Mountains of Kazakhstan The rest of the section concentrates around the Mediterranean and in Asia The species around the Mediterranean include Paeonia algeriensis that is an endemic of the coastal mountains of Algeria P coriacea in the Rif Mountains and Andalusia P cambessedesii on Majorca P russoi on Corsica Sardinia and Sicilly P corsica on Corsica Sardinia the Ionian islands and in western Greece P clusii subsp clusii on Crete and Karpathos and subsp rhodia on Rhodes P kesrouanensis in the Western Taurus Mountains P arietina from the Middle Taurus Mountains P broteri in Andalucia P humilis from Andalucia to the Provence P officinalis from the South of France through Switzerland to the Middle of Italy P banatica in western Romania northern Serbia and Slovenia and in southern Hungary P peregrina in Albania western Bulgaria northern Greece western Romania Serbia Montenegro and Bosnia while P mascula has a large distribution from Catalonia and southern France to Israel and Turkey Between the two concentrations the subspecies of Paeonia daurica occur with subspecies velebitensis in Croatia and daurica in the Balkans and Crimea while the other subspecies coriifolia macrophylla mlokosewitschii tomentosa and wittmanniana are known from the Caucasus Kackar and Alborz Mountains Paeonia emodi occurs in the western Himalayas between Pakistan and western Nepal P sterniana is an endemic of southeastern Tibet P veitchii grows in Central China Qinghai Ningxia Gansu Shaanxi Shanxi Sichuan and the eastern rim of Tibet like P mairei Gansu Guizhou Hubei Shaanxi Sichuan and Yunnan while P obovata grows in warm temperate to cold China including Manchuria Korea Japan Far Eastern Russia Primorsky Krai and on Sakhalin and P lactiflora occurs in Northern China including Manchuria Japan Korea Mongolia Russia Far East and Siberia 18 Distributional history Edit The species of the section Paeonia have a disjunct distribution with most of the species occurring in the Mediterranean while many others occur in eastern Asia Genetic analysis has shown that all Mediterranean species are either diploid or tetraploid hybrids that resulted from the crossbreeding of species currently limited to eastern Asia The large distance between the ranges of the parent species and the nothospecies suggest that hybridisation already occurred relatively long ago It is likely that the parent species occurred in the same region when the hybrids arose and were later exterminated by successive Pleistocene glaciations while the nothospecies remained in refugia to the South of Europe During their retreat P lactiflora and P mairei likely became sympatric and so produced the Himalayan nothospecies P emodi and P sterniana 18 Distribution maps of the species of Paeonia in Europe and Western Asia Cultivation Edit Paeonia Sarah Bernhardt Ancient Chinese texts mention the peony was used for flavoring food Peonies have been used and cultivated in China since early history Ornamental cultivars were created from plants cultivated for medicine in China as of the sixth and seventh century Peonies became particularly popular during the Tang dynasty when they were grown in the imperial gardens In the tenth century the cultivation of peonies spread through China and the seat of the Song dynasty Luoyang was the centre for its cultivation a position it still holds today A second centre for peony cultivation developed during the Qing dynasty in Caozhōu now known as He Ze Both cities still host annual peony exhibitions and state funded peony research facilities Before the tenth century P lactiflora was introduced in Japan and over time many varieties were developed both by self fertilisation and crossbreeding particularly during the eighteenth to twentieth centuries middle Edo to early Shōwa periods During the 1940s Toichi Itoh succeeded in crossing tree peonies and herbaceous peonies and so created a new class of so called intersectional hybrids Although P officinalis and its cultivars were grown in Europe from the fifteenth century on originally also for medicinal purposes intensive breeding started only in the nineteenth century when P lactiflora was introduced from its native China to Europe The tree peony was introduced in Europe and planted in Kew Gardens in 1789 The main centre of peony breeding in Europe has been in the United Kingdom and particularly France Here breeders like Victor Lemoine and Francois Felix Crousse selected many new varieties mainly with P lactiflora such as Avant Garde and Le Printemps The Netherlands is the largest peony cut flower producing country with about 50 million stems each year with Sarah Bernhardt dominating the sales with over 20 million stems 9 An emerging source of peonies in mid to late summer is the Alaskan market Unique growing conditions due to long hours of sunlight create availability from Alaska when other sources have completed harvest 21 Plant growth habits Edit Peony species come in two distinct growth habits while hybrid cultivars in addition may occupy an intermediate habit herbaceous During summer renewal buds develop on the underground stem the crown particularly at the foot of the current season s annual shoots These renewal buds come in various sizes Large buds will grow into stems the following growing season but smaller buds remain dormant The primordia for the leaves can already be found in June but the flower only starts differentiating in October as the annual shoots die down completing its development in December when sepals petals stamens and pistils are all recognisable 9 tree During the summer large buds develop at the tip of the annual growth and near its foot In the autumn the leaves are shed and the new stems become woody and are perennial Itoh or Intersectional In 1948 horticulturist Toichi Itoh from Tokyo used pollen from the yellow tree peony Alice Harding to fertilize the herbaceous P lactiflora Katoden which resulted in a new category of peonies the Itoh or intersectional cultivars These are herbaceous have leaves like tree peonies with many large flowers from late spring to early autumn and good peony wilt resistance Some of the early Itoh cultivars are Yellow Crown Yellow Dream Yellow Emperor and Yellow Heaven 22 Flower types Edit Six types of flower are generally distinguished in cultivars of herbaceous peonies single a single or double row of broad petals encircle fertile stamens carpels visible Japanese a single or double row of broad petals encircle somewhat broadened staminodes may carry pollen along the edges carpels visible anemone a single or double row of broad petals encircle narrow incurved petal like staminodes fertile stamens are absent carpels visible semi double a single or double row of broad petals encircles further broad petals intermingled with stamens bomb a single row of broad petals encircles a shorter dense pompon of narrower petals double the flower consists of many broad petals only including those which likely are altered stamens and carpels 9 Paeonia arendsii Claire de Lune single flowered Paeonia Walter Mains Japanese flowered Paeonia lactiflora Bowl Of Beauty anemone flowered Paeonia lactiflora James Kelway semi double flowered Paeonia Ruth Clay bomb flowered Paeonia lactiflora Da Fu Gui double floweredPropagation Edit Herbaceous and Itoh peonies are propagated by root division and sometimes by seed Tree peonies can be propagated by grafting division seed and from cuttings although root grafting is most common commercially 23 24 Herbaceous peonies such as Paeonia lactiflora will die back to ground level each autumn Their stems will reappear the following spring However tree peonies such as Paeonia suffruticosa are shrubbier They produce permanent woody stems that will lose their leaves in winter but the stem itself remains intact above ground level 25 Hybrid cultivars Edit The following hybrids and cultivars have gained the Royal Horticultural Society s Award of Garden Merit Bartzella 26 Coral Charm 27 Paeonia festiva Rubra Plena 28 Paeonia lemoinei High Noon 29 Uses EditThe herb known as Paeonia in particular the root of P lactiflora Bai Shao Radix Paeoniae Lactiflorae has been used frequently in traditional medicines of Korea China and Japan In Japan Paeonia lactiflora used to be called ebisugusuri foreign medicine Pronunciation of 牡丹 peony in Japan is botan In kampo the Japanese adaptation of Chinese medicine its root was used as a treatment for convulsions It is also cultivated as a garden plant In Japan Paeonia suffruticosa is called the King of Flowers and Paeonia lactiflora is called the Prime Minister of Flowers 30 In China the fallen petals of Paeonia lactiflora are parboiled and sweetened as a tea time delicacy Peony water an infusion of peony petals was used for drinking in the Middle Ages The petals may be added to salads or to punches and lemonades 31 Peonies are also extensively grown as ornamental plants for their very large often scented flowers Culture Edit In this gold engraved lacquerware food tray from the Song dynasty 960 1279 the two long tailed birds represent longevity and the peony seen at the top center represents prosperity Peony by Chinese artist Wang Qian Yuan dynasty 1271 1368 Portrait of a peony by Chinese artist Yun Shouping 17th century Located in Cuigou Village Chaoyang Town Mengjin District Luoyang Henan China The first generation of Kao wild peony Ranunculaceae and medicinal genus was founded in 1800 meters in Baiyun Mountain Song County Henan Transplanted by Cui Yueqi the owner of the house in May 1958 after 27 years of labor and land the plant chapter of Henan Geography Knowledge Expo was filmed by China Education Television in April 2017 The height of the tree is 1 7 meters the diameter of the canopy is more than two meters and the number of flowers will reach 350 in the future The peony is among the longest used flowers in Eastern culture Along with the plum blossom it is a traditional floral symbol of China where the Paeonia suffruticosa is called 牡丹 mǔdan It is also known as 富貴花 fuguihua flower of riches and honour or 花王 huawang king of the flowers and is used symbolically in Chinese art 32 In 1903 the Qing dynasty declared the peony as the national flower Currently the Republic of China government in Taiwan designates the plum blossom as the national flower while the People s Republic of China government has no legally designated national flower In 1994 the peony was proposed as the national flower after a nationwide poll but the National People s Congress failed to ratify the selection In 2003 another selection process was initiated but no choice has been made to date The ancient Chinese city Luoyang has a reputation as a cultivation centre for the peonies Throughout Chinese history peonies in Luoyang have been said to be the finest in the country Dozens of peony exhibitions and shows are still held there annually In the Middle Ages peonies were often painted with their ripe seed capsules since it was the seeds not the flowers which were medically significant 33 Ancient superstition dictated that great care be taken not to be seen by a woodpecker while picking the plant s fruit or the bird might peck out one s eyes 34 The red flowers of the species Paeonia peregrina are important in Serbian folklore Known as Kosovo peonies Serbian kosovski bozhur kosovski bozur they are said to represent the blood of Serbian warriors who died in the Battle of Kosovo 35 In 1957 the Indiana General Assembly passed a law to make the peony the state flower of Indiana a title which it holds to this day It replaced the zinnia which had been the state flower since 1931 36 Mischievous nymphs were said to hide in the petals of the Peony giving it the meaning of Shame or Bashfulness in the Language of Flowers While the peony takes several years to re establish itself when moved it blooms annually for decades once it has done so 37 Peonies tend to attract ants to the flower buds This is due to the nectar that forms on the outside of the flower buds and is not required for the plants own pollination or other growth 38 The presence of ants is thought to provide some deterrence to other harmful insects though so the production of ant attracting nectar is plausibly a functional adaptation Ants do not harm the plants 39 Peonies are a common subject in tattoos often used along with koi fish The popular use of peonies in Japanese tattoo was inspired by the ukiyo e artist Utagawa Kuniyoshi s illustrations of Suikoden a classical Chinese novel His paintings of warrior heroes covered in pictorial tattoos included lions tigers dragons koi fish and peonies among other symbols The peony became a masculine motif associated with a devil may care attitude and disregard for consequence Famous painters of peonies have included Conrad Gessner ca 1550 and Auguste Renoir in 1879 Paeonia officinalis can be found in the altar picture of Maria im Rosenhag by Schongauer in the former Dominican Church in Colmar 33 The Italian Jesuit painter and architect Giuseppe Castiglione 1688 1766 who worked at the court of the Qianlong Emperor in the Qing dynasty painted peonies References Edit Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 2009 An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants APG II PDF Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 161 2 105 121 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8339 2009 00996 x Retrieved 6 July 2013 The Concise Oxford English Dictionary twelfth edition 2011 lists paeony as a variant spelling of peony Dictionary com Paeonia Merriam Webster Dictionary a b c Halda Josef J Waddick James W 2004 The genus Paeonia Oregon USA Timber Press a b Tamura Michio 2007 Paeoniaceae In Klaus Kubitski ed The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants Vol IX Berlin Heidelberg Germany Springer Verlag pp 265 269 Christenhusz M J M amp Byng J W 2016 The number of known plants species in the world and its annual increase Phytotaxa 261 3 201 217 doi 10 11646 phytotaxa 261 3 1 Deyuan Hong Kaiyu Pan Turland Nicholas J 2001 Flora of China PDF Vol 6 pp 127 132 Retrieved 10 May 2016 a b c d e Kamenetsky Rina Dole John 2012 Herbaceous Peony Paeonia Genetics Physiology and Cut Flower Production PDF Floriculture and Ornamental Biotechnology 6 Special Issue 1 62 77 Retrieved 29 April 2016 a b c Saxifragales ANGIOSPERM PHYLOGENY WEBSITE Retrieved 26 April 2016 a b L Watson and M J Dallwitz Paeoniaceae Rudolphi The families of flowering plants Retrieved 26 April 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link He C N Peng Y Zhang Y C Xu L J Gu J Xiao P G 2010 Phytochemical and Biological Studies of Paeoniaceae Chemistry amp Biodiversity 7 4 805 838 doi 10 1002 cbdv 200800341 PMID 20397219 S2CID 205544231 James L Reveal 2008 onward A Checklist of Family and Suprafamilial Names for Extant Vascular Plants At Home page of James L Reveal and C Rose Broome see External links below David J Mabberley 2008 Mabberley s Plant Book Cambridge University Press UK Wang Wei Lu An Ming Ren Yi Endress Mary E Chen Zhi Duan 2009 Phylogeny and Classification of Ranunculales Evidence from four molecular loci and morphological data Perspectives in Plant Ecology Evolution and Systematics 11 2 81 110 doi 10 1016 j ppees 2009 01 001 a b Jian Shuguang Soltis Pamela S Gitzendanner Matthew A Moore Michael J Li Ruiqi Hendry Tory A Qiu Yin Long Dhingra Amit Bell Charles D Soltis Douglas E 2008 Resolving an Ancient Rapid Radiation in Saxifragales Systematic Biology 57 1 38 57 doi 10 1080 10635150801888871 PMID 18275001 a b Ji Li Jing Wang Qi Teixeira da Silva Jaime A Yu Xiao Nan 2012 The genetic diversity of Paeonia L Scientia Horticulturae 143 62 74 doi 10 1016 j scienta 2012 06 011 a b c Sang Tao Crawford Daniel J Stuessy Tod F 1995 Documentation of reticulate evolution in peonies Paeonia using internal transcripted spacer sequences of nuclear ribosomal DNA Implications for biogeography and concerted evolution Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 92 15 6813 6817 Bibcode 1995PNAS 92 6813S doi 10 1073 pnas 92 15 6813 PMC 41419 PMID 7624325 Sang Tao 1996 Phylogeny and Biogeography of Paeonia PAEONIACEAE dissertation The Ohio State University cited on Tao Sang DISSERTATION chapter 4 Paeon Retrieved 19 May 2016 Sang T Donoghue M J Zhang D 1997 Evolution of alcohol dehydrogenase genes in peonies Paeonia phylogenetic relationships of putative nonhybrid species Molecular Biology and Evolution 14 10 994 1007 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals molbev a025716 PMID 9335140 The industry s about to explode Peony market flourishes in Alaska Anchorage Daily News 5 August 2018 Retrieved 10 January 2019 Pauwels I Vervoort G 2009 Pioenen Peonies 1 in volle glorie in full splendor ed Uitgever Lannoo Uitgeverij p 143 ISBN 978 9020965070 Coit J Eliot 1908 Peony Bulletin 259 104 Peony Royal Horticultural Society Paeonia suffruticosa Paeonia Bartzella RHS Retrieved 18 January 2021 Paeonia Coral Charm RHS Retrieved 18 January 2021 Paeonia festiva Rubra Plena RHS Retrieved 18 January 2021 Paeonia lemoinei High Noon RHS Retrieved 18 January 2021 Sasaki Sanmi 2005 Chado The Way of Tea A Japanese Tea Master s Almanac Translated from the Japanese by Shaun McCabe and Iwasaki Satoko Boston Tuttle Page 247 Getting to know peonies symbolism part 2 Bloomthis Terese Tse Bartholomew Hidden Meanings in Chinese Art San Francisco Asian Art Museum Chong Moon Lee Center for Asian Art and Culture 2006 a b Walter Good The World of the Peony Archived from the original on 13 March 2016 Sowerby James amp John Edward 1899 Ranunculaceae to Cruciferae London George Bell amp Sons Page 69 Natalia A Pilgrimage to Kosovo Today Serbian Orthodox Church Retrieved 21 April 2018 Peony State Symbols USA Retrieved 21 April 2018 The Language of Flowers edited by Sheila Pickles 1990 HPS Frequently Asked Questions Ants on Peonies Heartland Peony Society Retrieved 2 May 2010 Ants on Peony Flowers An Example of Biological Mutualism Integrated Pest Management University of Missouri Bibliography EditAuer James D Greenberg Joshua June 2009 Peonies An Economic Background for Alaska Flower Growers PDF SNRAS AFES Miscellaneous Publication MP 2009 08 School of Natural Resources amp Agricultural Resources University of Alaska Fairbanks External links Edit Wikispecies has information related to Paeonia Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paeonia Family and Suprafamilial Names At James L Reveal Paeoniaceae in Topwalks Flora Europaea Paeonia Ornamental Plants from Russia Paeonia The Peony Society UK defunct as of 2106 Canadian Peony Society U S Peony Society Carsten Burkhardt s Open Source Peony Project German Peony Group China Daily article on the 2003 national flower selection process Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peony amp oldid 1140669309, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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