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Allium ochotense

Allium ochotense, the Siberian onion,[3] is a primarily East Asian species of wild onion native to northern Japan, Korea, China, and the Russian Far East, as well as on Attu Island in Alaska.[1]

Allium ochotense
Allium ochotense
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Amaryllidaceae
Subfamily: Allioideae
Genus: Allium
Species:
A. ochotense
Binomial name
Allium ochotense
Prokh.
Synonyms[1][2]
Synonymy
  • Allium victorialis var. platyphyllum (Hultén) Makino
  • Allium victorialis var. variegatum Nakai ex T.Mori
  • Allium victorialis subsp. platyphyllum Hultén
  • Allium victorialis var. asiaticum Nakai
  • Allium latissimum Prokh.
  • Allium ochotense f. variegatum (Nakai ex T.Mori) Nakai
  • Allium victorialis f. variegatum (Nakai ex T.Mori) S.O.Yu, W.T.Lee & S.Lee
  • Allium wenchuanense Z.Y.Zhu

Some authors have considered A. ochotense as belonging to the same species as A. victorialis,[4] but more recent authorities have treated it as a distinct species.[1][5][6][7][8]

Description Edit

Allium ochotense grows to 20–30 cm (8–12 in) in height,[9] with a strong garlic-like odor,[9] and has "bulbs.. surrounded by a grayish-brown, netlike coating. The leaves are 1–3 glabrous, broadly elliptic,... perianth (flower) whitish-green".[10] The plant is slow-growing, and aside from seed-propagation, "A. victorialis has two vegetative propagation systems; one is tillering and the other is adventitious buds".[11]

The plant has an intense garlic-like odor (cf. allicin content) that is thought more intense than garlic itself.

Etymology Edit

Allium is the ancient Latin name for garlic.[12]

The specific epithet, ochotense, was given by Yarosláv Ivánovich Prokhánov (Яросла́в Ива́нович Проха́нов) [1902-1965], a Soviet botanist, systematist, geographer, geneticist, Doctor of Biological Science, and professor.[13] It was presumably named in reference to the Okhotsk region of Russia, a place where this species is known to occur.

Distribution Edit

Allium ochotense is centered in the Amur River basin area, thus, it occurs in the Amur, Khabarovsk, Primorye regions of Siberia, and into Sakhalin and Kuril Islands within the Russian Far East. In China, the plant grows in Inner Mongolia and China (Heilongjiang, Jilin, Liaoning), Hebei, Henan, Anhui, Hubei, Zhejiang, Shaanxi, Shanxi, Gansu, and Sichuan). The range also includes Korea, in Ulleung Island and the high mountains (over 1,000 metres (3,300 ft)) in the Korean peninsula, including Baekdu Mountain,[14] and Japan (Hokkaido and Honshu), in colonies from Hokkaido down to the Kinki area (Nara Prefecture[9]), in coniferous and mixed forested wetlands in subalpine terrain. The plant's range extends nominally into the United States, but A. ochotense is only found natively growing on Attu Island, the westernmost island of the Aleutian archipelago. There are colonies on Unalaska Island, but they are thought to be introduced.[15]

Cultivation Edit

From around 1990, it has been grown horticulturally in Hokkaido and snowy regions on the eastern side of Honshū. Outbreaks of plant disease have been reported in these onion paddy farms.[16] It requires approximately four years from sowing to harvest.

Cultivars Edit

At Utsunomiya University's Agriculture Department, the research group led by then-assistant professor Nobuaki Fujishige developed an A. ochotense × A. tuberosum (garlic chives) hybrid, which they dubbed gyōjana (行者菜).[17] It resembles the garlic chive in outward appearance, but inherits the thick-stalked trait of A. victorialis, and like the garlic chive, is ready for harvest after 1 year. It has been sold in the commercial market since 2008 in Nagai, Yamagata.[18]

Chemistry Edit

Researchers have identified 1-propenyl disulfides and vinyldithiins as odor compounds.[19] Specific odor agents include: "methyl allyl disulfide (Chinese chive odor), diallyl disulfide (garlic-like odor), and dimethyl disulfide and methyl allyl trisulfide (pickles-like odor)".[20]

Uses Edit

Culinary Edit

China Edit

In China its name is given as gecong (Chinese: 各蔥(茖蔥); pinyin: gěcōng; Wade–Giles: ko3-t'ung1; lit. 'ge onion') or shancong (Chinese: 山蔥; pinyin: shāncōng; Wade–Giles: shan1-t'ung1; lit. 'alpine onion').[21] Its use may be not be widespread. One source only mentions that the Jiarongic minority harvest the "tender unfolding leaves" which they sun-dry and serve on special occasions.[21]

Japan Edit

The Japanese name gyōja ninniku (ギョウジャニンニク/行者葫) means literally "a (type of) garlic that a gyōja makes use of as food,"[9] where a gyōja signifies a monk or a lay person engaged in ascetic training outdoors (cf. shugyō (修行), Shugendō). Much of its flourishing habitat occurs in nature reserves such as national parks. Hence it is considered a scarce sansai (wild-harvested vegetable), and commands high prices at the market.

Siberian onion is an important ethnobotanic food plant for the indigenous Ainu people of Japan. In the Ainu language it is called pukusa,[22][23] kitobiru,[23] or ( since "biru/hiru" is a Japanese word for onion-type plants), simply kito.[24] Siberian onion comes into season in Hokkaido for foraging from early to mid-May. The Ainu traditionally gather the leaves (but not the whole bulb), which are chopped up and dried for future use.[23] The plant may be used by the Ainu in the savory soup called ohaw (オハウ), or in the ratashkep (rataskep) (ラタシケプ), described as a type of stew using multiple ingredients, or a dish where ingredients are tossed in animal fat oil.

In modern days, the leafstalk can be preserved by steeping in soy sauce, or the fresh leaves can be made into ohitashi (parboiled and served plain or with dashi flavor), made into gyōza (pot-sticker dumplings), or blended into a tamagoyaki-type omelet. The young unraveled leaves with a stalk about 1 cm (half-inch) have rich flavor and fragrance and are especially prized. Also, the stalks being commercially grown by blanching (cf. white asparagus) have been gaining popularity.

There are a number of inedible or poisonous plants that can be mistaken for victory onions in Japan, and those reported cases of consumption and illness include: Veratrum album (Ja: baikeisō), Veratrum stamineum (Ja: ko-baikeisō), Colchicum autumnale (Ja:inu-safuran) and lily of the valley.[25] The distinctive smell should tell it apart.

Korea Edit

 
Myeongi-jangajji (pickled Siberian onion leaves)

In Korea, the A. ochotense and A. microdictyon are called sanmaneul (산마늘, "mountain garlic"). While the official name for A. ochotense is Ulleung sanmaneul (울릉산마늘, "Ulleung Island mountain garlic"),[3] the most common name used by Korean people is myeongi (명이), whose romanized form (along with Siberian onion) is an English name of the plant.[3] Myeongi is also called myeonginamul (명이나물), because it is considered a namul (vegetable).

Myeongi is a specialty of Ulleung Island, where the leaves grow wider and hardier.[14]

The leaves and the scaly bulb of myeongi are most often eaten as a namul-type side dish, or as a ssam vegetable for a samgyeopsal (grilled pork belly) meal. Myeongi is also eaten pickled as a jangajji-type side dish, or used as the last ingredient in dak-gomtang ("chicken bone soup").

Siberia Edit

In Siberia, the young shoots are eaten.[10][21]

Medicinal Edit

Japan Edit

In Japan, pukusa or Siberian onion has been used as a folk remedy among the Ainu. For example, it is administered as a diuretic to treat urine blockage relating to certain stomach disorders.[24]

Korea Edit

In traditional Korean medicine, myeongi was considered to be a warming herb, a stomachic, and a detoxicant. As a herb, it was used to treat indigestion, heatburn, small abscesses, and bites and stings from venomous insects. The seed was used to treat nocturnal emission.[14]

Magical Edit

In Japan, Ainu folklore held that due to its odor, Siberian onion was capable of repelling diseases. When an epidemic broke out, the onion would be left hanging at the entrances to the village or dangled from the eaves of each house.[26]

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
  2. ^ International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants (Melbourne Code), article 11, see section 11.2 explaining why "ochotense" holds priority
  3. ^ a b c Korea National Arboretum (2015). (PDF). Pocheon: National Arboretum. p. 347. ISBN 978-89-97450-98-5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 May 2017. Retrieved 27 November 2016 – via Korea Forest Service.
  4. ^ Flora of China Vol. 24 Page 172 茖葱 ge cong Allium victorialis Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1: 295. 1753.
  5. ^ The Plant List, Allium ochotense Prokh.
  6. ^ Denisov, N. (2008). Addition to Vascular flora of the Kozlov island (Peter the Great Gulf, Japanese sea). Turczaninowia 11(4): 29–42.
  7. ^ Choi, H.J. & Oh, B.U. (2011). A partial revision of Allium (Amaryllidaceae) in Korea and north-eastern China. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 167: 153–211.
  8. ^ Kharkevich, S.S. (ed.) (1987). Plantae Vasculares Orientalis Extremi Sovietici 2: 1–448. Nauka, Leningrad.
  9. ^ a b c d Heibonsha (1964). 世界百科事典(Sekai hyakka jiten). (world encyclopedia, in Japanese), article on gyōja ninniku by botanist Jisaburo Ohwi (大井次三郎)
  10. ^ a b Hultén, Eric (1968). Flora of Alaska and Neighboring Territories: A Manual of the Vascular Plants. Stanford University Press. p. 307. ISBN 978-0804-70643-8.
  11. ^ Kanazawa, T.; Yakuwa, T.; Araki, H. (1996). "Cultivation Systems of Allium victorialis L. ssp. in Japan" (Actahort). ISHS Acta Horticulturae. 467.
  12. ^ Gledhill, David (2008). "The Names of Plants". Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521866453 (hardback), ISBN 9780521685535 (paperback). p 43
  13. ^ (1930). "Bulletin of Applied Botany, Genetics, and Plant Breeding". 114. 2: 174
  14. ^ a b c "울릉산마늘" [Allium ochotense Prokh.]. Korea Biodiversity Information System (in Korean). Korea National Arboretum. Retrieved 27 November 2016.
  15. ^ Flora of North America, Vol. 26 Page 234 Allium victorialis Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 1: 295. 1753.
  16. ^ ギョウジャニンニクに発生した新病害、白色疫病とすすかび病(新称) 農林水産省 農林水産技術会議事務局筑波事務所
  17. ^ 行者菜・ギョウジャナ
  18. ^ 新しい野菜「行者菜」がデビュー! 2015-04-18 at the Wayback Machine - やまがたアグリネット。
  19. ^ Mitchell, Steve (1996). Biological Interactions Of Sulfur Compounds (preview). CRC Press. p. 157. ISBN 978-0748-40245-8., citing Nisimura et al. 1988 for NMR analysis.
  20. ^ Nishimura, Hiroyuki; Tomonari Takahashi1; C. Hanny Wijaya; Atsushi Satoh; Toyohiko Ariga (2000). "Thermochemical transformation of sulfur compounds in Japanese domestic Allium, Allium victorialis L". BioFactors. 13 (1–4): 257–263. doi:10.1002/biof.5520130139. PMID 11237191.
  21. ^ a b c Hu, Shiu-ying (2005), Food plants of China (preview), vol. 1, Chinese University Press, pp. 315–16, ISBN 9789629962296
  22. ^ Yamada, Takako (2001). The world view of the Ainu: nature and cosmos reading from language (snippet). Kegan Paul. ISBN 978-0710-30732-3.
  23. ^ a b c Batchelor, John; Miyabe, Kingo (1893). Ainu economic plants (google). Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan. Vol. 21. Yokohama: R. Meiklejohn.
  24. ^ a b Ohnuki-Tierney, Emiko (1981). Illness and Healing Among the Sakhalin Ainu: A Symbolic Interpretation (preview). CUP Archive. p. 192. ISBN 978-0521-23636-2.
  25. ^ . 東京都健康安全研究センター. Archived from the original on 2011-08-21.
  26. ^ 佐々木利和 (2001). アイヌ文化誌ノート (google). London: 吉川弘文館. p. 225. ISBN 978-4642055284. "酒を得る前の樺太アイヌはお祈りのときに、ギョウジャ二ン二ク(プクサ)..を用いたという。これは強烈な臭気を発するので、その臭気を嫌う伝染病などは近づかないので、流行り病があると村の入り口や家の軒に下げておくことがある。"

allium, ochotense, siberian, onion, primarily, east, asian, species, wild, onion, native, northern, japan, korea, china, russian, east, well, attu, island, alaska, scientific, classificationkingdom, plantaeclade, tracheophytesclade, angiospermsclade, monocotso. Allium ochotense the Siberian onion 3 is a primarily East Asian species of wild onion native to northern Japan Korea China and the Russian Far East as well as on Attu Island in Alaska 1 Allium ochotenseAllium ochotenseScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade MonocotsOrder AsparagalesFamily AmaryllidaceaeSubfamily AllioideaeGenus AlliumSpecies A ochotenseBinomial nameAllium ochotenseProkh Synonyms 1 2 Synonymy Allium victorialis var platyphyllum Hulten MakinoAllium victorialis var variegatum Nakai ex T MoriAllium victorialis subsp platyphyllum HultenAllium victorialis var asiaticum NakaiAllium latissimum Prokh Allium ochotense f variegatum Nakai ex T Mori NakaiAllium victorialis f variegatum Nakai ex T Mori S O Yu W T Lee amp S LeeAllium wenchuanense Z Y ZhuSome authors have considered A ochotense as belonging to the same species as A victorialis 4 but more recent authorities have treated it as a distinct species 1 5 6 7 8 Contents 1 Description 2 Etymology 3 Distribution 4 Cultivation 4 1 Cultivars 5 Chemistry 6 Uses 6 1 Culinary 6 1 1 China 6 1 2 Japan 6 1 3 Korea 6 1 4 Siberia 6 2 Medicinal 6 2 1 Japan 6 2 2 Korea 6 3 Magical 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 ReferencesDescription EditAllium ochotense grows to 20 30 cm 8 12 in in height 9 with a strong garlic like odor 9 and has bulbs surrounded by a grayish brown netlike coating The leaves are 1 3 glabrous broadly elliptic perianth flower whitish green 10 The plant is slow growing and aside from seed propagation A victorialis has two vegetative propagation systems one is tillering and the other is adventitious buds 11 The plant has an intense garlic like odor cf allicin content that is thought more intense than garlic itself Etymology EditAllium is the ancient Latin name for garlic 12 The specific epithet ochotense was given by Yaroslav Ivanovich Prokhanov Yarosla v Iva novich Proha nov 1902 1965 a Soviet botanist systematist geographer geneticist Doctor of Biological Science and professor 13 It was presumably named in reference to the Okhotsk region of Russia a place where this species is known to occur Distribution EditAllium ochotense is centered in the Amur River basin area thus it occurs in the Amur Khabarovsk Primorye regions of Siberia and into Sakhalin and Kuril Islands within the Russian Far East In China the plant grows in Inner Mongolia and China Heilongjiang Jilin Liaoning Hebei Henan Anhui Hubei Zhejiang Shaanxi Shanxi Gansu and Sichuan The range also includes Korea in Ulleung Island and the high mountains over 1 000 metres 3 300 ft in the Korean peninsula including Baekdu Mountain 14 and Japan Hokkaido and Honshu in colonies from Hokkaido down to the Kinki area Nara Prefecture 9 in coniferous and mixed forested wetlands in subalpine terrain The plant s range extends nominally into the United States but A ochotense is only found natively growing on Attu Island the westernmost island of the Aleutian archipelago There are colonies on Unalaska Island but they are thought to be introduced 15 Cultivation EditFrom around 1990 it has been grown horticulturally in Hokkaido and snowy regions on the eastern side of Honshu Outbreaks of plant disease have been reported in these onion paddy farms 16 It requires approximately four years from sowing to harvest Cultivars Edit At Utsunomiya University s Agriculture Department the research group led by then assistant professor Nobuaki Fujishige developed an A ochotense A tuberosum garlic chives hybrid which they dubbed gyōjana 行者菜 17 It resembles the garlic chive in outward appearance but inherits the thick stalked trait of A victorialis and like the garlic chive is ready for harvest after 1 year It has been sold in the commercial market since 2008 in Nagai Yamagata 18 Chemistry EditResearchers have identified 1 propenyl disulfides and vinyldithiins as odor compounds 19 Specific odor agents include methyl allyl disulfide Chinese chive odor diallyl disulfide garlic like odor and dimethyl disulfide and methyl allyl trisulfide pickles like odor 20 Uses EditCulinary Edit China Edit In China its name is given as gecong Chinese 各蔥 茖蔥 pinyin gecōng Wade Giles ko3 t ung1 lit ge onion or shancong Chinese 山蔥 pinyin shancōng Wade Giles shan1 t ung1 lit alpine onion 21 Its use may be not be widespread One source only mentions that the Jiarongic minority harvest the tender unfolding leaves which they sun dry and serve on special occasions 21 Japan Edit The Japanese name gyōja ninniku ギョウジャニンニク 行者葫 means literally a type of garlic that a gyōja makes use of as food 9 where a gyōja signifies a monk or a lay person engaged in ascetic training outdoors cf shugyō 修行 Shugendō Much of its flourishing habitat occurs in nature reserves such as national parks Hence it is considered a scarce sansai wild harvested vegetable and commands high prices at the market Siberian onion is an important ethnobotanic food plant for the indigenous Ainu people of Japan In the Ainu language it is called pukusa 22 23 kitobiru 23 or since biru hiru is a Japanese word for onion type plants simply kito 24 Siberian onion comes into season in Hokkaido for foraging from early to mid May The Ainu traditionally gather the leaves but not the whole bulb which are chopped up and dried for future use 23 The plant may be used by the Ainu in the savory soup called ohaw オハウ or in the ratashkep rataskep ラタシケプ described as a type of stew using multiple ingredients or a dish where ingredients are tossed in animal fat oil In modern days the leafstalk can be preserved by steeping in soy sauce or the fresh leaves can be made into ohitashi parboiled and served plain or with dashi flavor made into gyōza pot sticker dumplings or blended into a tamagoyaki type omelet The young unraveled leaves with a stalk about 1 cm half inch have rich flavor and fragrance and are especially prized Also the stalks being commercially grown by blanching cf white asparagus have been gaining popularity There are a number of inedible or poisonous plants that can be mistaken for victory onions in Japan and those reported cases of consumption and illness include Veratrum album Ja baikeisō Veratrum stamineum Ja ko baikeisō Colchicum autumnale Ja inu safuran and lily of the valley 25 The distinctive smell should tell it apart Korea Edit nbsp Myeongi jangajji pickled Siberian onion leaves In Korea the A ochotense and A microdictyon are called sanmaneul 산마늘 mountain garlic While the official name for A ochotense is Ulleung sanmaneul 울릉산마늘 Ulleung Island mountain garlic 3 the most common name used by Korean people is myeongi 명이 whose romanized form along with Siberian onion is an English name of the plant 3 Myeongi is also called myeonginamul 명이나물 because it is considered a namul vegetable Myeongi is a specialty of Ulleung Island where the leaves grow wider and hardier 14 The leaves and the scaly bulb of myeongi are most often eaten as a namul type side dish or as a ssam vegetable for a samgyeopsal grilled pork belly meal Myeongi is also eaten pickled as a jangajji type side dish or used as the last ingredient in dak gomtang chicken bone soup Siberia Edit In Siberia the young shoots are eaten 10 21 Medicinal Edit Japan Edit In Japan pukusa or Siberian onion has been used as a folk remedy among the Ainu For example it is administered as a diuretic to treat urine blockage relating to certain stomach disorders 24 Korea Edit In traditional Korean medicine myeongi was considered to be a warming herb a stomachic and a detoxicant As a herb it was used to treat indigestion heatburn small abscesses and bites and stings from venomous insects The seed was used to treat nocturnal emission 14 Magical Edit In Japan Ainu folklore held that due to its odor Siberian onion was capable of repelling diseases When an epidemic broke out the onion would be left hanging at the entrances to the village or dangled from the eaves of each house 26 Gallery Edit nbsp A ochotense Hokkaido nbsp A ochotense Nagano prefecture See also EditAllium ursinum ramsons Allium tricoccum ramps References Edit a b c Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families International Code of Nomenclature for algae fungi and plants Melbourne Code article 11 see section 11 2 explaining why ochotense holds priority a b c Korea National Arboretum 2015 English Names for Korean Native Plants PDF Pocheon National Arboretum p 347 ISBN 978 89 97450 98 5 Archived from the original PDF on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 27 November 2016 via Korea Forest Service Flora of China Vol 24 Page 172 茖葱 ge cong Allium victorialis Linnaeus Sp Pl 1 295 1753 The Plant List Allium ochotense Prokh Denisov N 2008 Addition to Vascular flora of the Kozlov island Peter the Great Gulf Japanese sea Turczaninowia 11 4 29 42 Choi H J amp Oh B U 2011 A partial revision of Allium Amaryllidaceae in Korea and north eastern China Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 167 153 211 Kharkevich S S ed 1987 Plantae Vasculares Orientalis Extremi Sovietici 2 1 448 Nauka Leningrad a b c d Heibonsha 1964 世界百科事典 Sekai hyakka jiten world encyclopedia in Japanese article on gyōja ninniku by botanist Jisaburo Ohwi 大井次三郎 a b Hulten Eric 1968 Flora of Alaska and Neighboring Territories A Manual of the Vascular Plants Stanford University Press p 307 ISBN 978 0804 70643 8 Kanazawa T Yakuwa T Araki H 1996 Cultivation Systems of Allium victorialis L ssp in Japan Actahort ISHS Acta Horticulturae 467 Gledhill David 2008 The Names of Plants Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521866453 hardback ISBN 9780521685535 paperback p 43 1930 Bulletin of Applied Botany Genetics and Plant Breeding 114 2 174 a b c 울릉산마늘 Allium ochotense Prokh Korea Biodiversity Information System in Korean Korea National Arboretum Retrieved 27 November 2016 Flora of North America Vol 26 Page 234 Allium victorialis Linnaeus Sp Pl 1 295 1753 ギョウジャニンニクに発生した新病害 白色疫病とすすかび病 新称 農林水産省 農林水産技術会議事務局筑波事務所 行者菜 ギョウジャナ 新しい野菜 行者菜 がデビュー Archived 2015 04 18 at the Wayback Machine やまがたアグリネット Mitchell Steve 1996 Biological Interactions Of Sulfur Compounds preview CRC Press p 157 ISBN 978 0748 40245 8 citing Nisimura et al 1988 for NMR analysis Nishimura Hiroyuki Tomonari Takahashi1 C Hanny Wijaya Atsushi Satoh Toyohiko Ariga 2000 Thermochemical transformation of sulfur compounds in Japanese domestic Allium Allium victorialis L BioFactors 13 1 4 257 263 doi 10 1002 biof 5520130139 PMID 11237191 a b c Hu Shiu ying 2005 Food plants of China preview vol 1 Chinese University Press pp 315 16 ISBN 9789629962296 Yamada Takako 2001 The world view of the Ainu nature and cosmos reading from language snippet Kegan Paul ISBN 978 0710 30732 3 a b c Batchelor John Miyabe Kingo 1893 Ainu economic plants google Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan Vol 21 Yokohama R Meiklejohn a b Ohnuki Tierney Emiko 1981 Illness and Healing Among the Sakhalin Ainu A Symbolic Interpretation preview CUP Archive p 192 ISBN 978 0521 23636 2 ギョウジャニンニクとイヌサフラン 有毒 東京都健康安全研究センター Archived from the original on 2011 08 21 佐々木利和 2001 アイヌ文化誌ノート google London 吉川弘文館 p 225 ISBN 978 4642055284 酒を得る前の樺太アイヌはお祈りのときに ギョウジャ二ン二ク プクサ を用いたという これは強烈な臭気を発するので その臭気を嫌う伝染病などは近づかないので 流行り病があると村の入り口や家の軒に下げておくことがある nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Allium ochotense Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Allium ochotense amp oldid 1171121009, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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