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Daucus carota

Daucus carota, whose common names include wild carrot,[3] European wild carrot, bird's nest, bishop's lace, and Queen Anne's lace (North America), is a flowering plant in the family Apiaceae. It is native to temperate regions of the Old World and was naturalized in the New World.

Wild carrot
The umbel of a wild carrot
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Apiales
Family: Apiaceae
Genus: Daucus
Species:
D. carota
Binomial name
Daucus carota
Synonyms[2]
List
    • Ballimon maritimum (Lam.) Raf.
    • Carota sativa (Hoffm.) Rupr.
    • Carota sylvestris (Mill.) Lobel ex Rupr.
    • Caucalis carnosa Roth
    • Caucalis carota (L.) Crantz
    • Caucalis daucus Crantz
    • Caucalis gingidium (L.) Crantz
    • Caucalis hispanica Crantz
    • Caucalis pumila Willd.
    • Daucus abyssinicus C.A.Mey.
    • Daucus agrestis Raf.
    • Daucus alatus Poir.
    • Daucus allionii Link
    • Daucus annuus (Bég.) Wojew., Reduron, Banasiak & Spalik
    • Daucus asturiarum Barnadez ex Cutanda
    • Daucus australis Guss.
    • Daucus australis Kotov
    • Daucus blanchei Reut.
    • Daucus bocconei Guss.
    • Daucus brevicaulis Raf.
    • Daucus capillifolius Gilli
    • Daucus carnosus Moench
    • Daucus carota var. acaulis (Bréb.) P.D.Sell
    • Daucus carota subsp. boissieri (Schweinf.) Hosni
    • Daucus carota var. brachycaulos Reduron
    • Daucus carota f. epurpuratus Farw.
    • Daucus carota f. fischeri Moldenke
    • Daucus carota var. fontanesii (Thell.) Reduron
    • Daucus carota f. goodmanii Moldenke
    • Daucus carota var. gummifer Syme
    • Daucus carota var. linearis Reduron
    • Daucus carota var. pseudocarota (Rouy & E.G.Camus) Reduron
    • Daucus carota f. roseus Farw.
    • Daucus carota f. roseus Millsp.
    • Daucus carota var. tenuisectus (Degen ex Palyi) Reduron
    • Daucus communis Rouy & E.G.Camus
    • Daucus communis var. pseudocarota Rouy & E.G.Camus
    • Daucus commutatus (Paol.) Thell.
    • Daucus dentatus Bertol.
    • Daucus drepanensis (Arcang.) Tod. ex Lojac.
    • Daucus esculentus Salisb.
    • Daucus exiguus Steud.
    • Daucus foliosus Guss.
    • Daucus gadecaei (Rouy & E.G.Camus) Rouy & E.G.Camus
    • Daucus gibbosus Bertol.
    • Daucus gingidium Georgi
    • Daucus gingidium L.
    • Daucus gingidium subsp. atlanticus Rivas Mart.
    • Daucus gingidium subsp. commutatus (Prolongo) O.Bolòs & Vigo
    • Daucus gingidium subsp. hispanicus (Gouan) O.Bolòs & Vigo
    • Daucus gingidium subsp. majoricus (A.Pujadas) Mart.Flores, Juan, M.A.Alonso, A.Pujadas & M.B.Crespo
    • Daucus gouanii Nyman
    • Daucus gummifer All.
    • Daucus gummifer Lam.
    • Daucus gummifer var. acaulis Bréb.
    • Daucus gummifer var. intermedius Corb.
    • Daucus halophilus Brot.
    • Daucus herculeus Pau
    • Daucus heterophylus Raf.
    • Daucus hispanicus Gouan
    • Daucus hispidus Desf.
    • Daucus hispidus Gilib.
    • Daucus hispidus Mill.
    • Daucus hispidus var. tenuisectus Degen ex Palyi
    • Daucus jolensis Pomel
    • Daucus kotovii M.Hiroe
    • Daucus levis Raf.
    • Daucus lucidus L.f.
    • Daucus marcidus Timb.-Lagr.
    • Daucus maritimus Lam.
    • Daucus maritimus With.
    • Daucus martellii Gand. ex Calest.
    • Daucus masclefii Corb.
    • Daucus matthiolii Bubani
    • Daucus mauritanicus L.
    • Daucus mauritanicus Salzm. ex DC.
    • Daucus maximus Desf.
    • Daucus micranthus Pomel
    • Daucus montanus Schmidt ex Nyman
    • Daucus nebrodensis Strobl
    • Daucus neglectus Lowe
    • Daucus nitidus Gasp.
    • Daucus nudicaulis Raf.
    • Daucus officinalis Gueldenst. ex Ledeb.
    • Daucus paralias Pomel
    • Daucus parviflorus Desf.
    • Daucus polygamus Gouan
    • Daucus polygamus Jacq. ex Nyman
    • Daucus rupestris Guss.
    • Daucus russeus Heldr.
    • Daucus sativus (Hoffm.) Röhl. ex Pass.
    • Daucus scariosus Raf.
    • Daucus sciadophylus Raf.
    • Daucus serotinus Pomel
    • Daucus serratus Moris
    • Daucus siculus Tineo
    • Daucus strigosus Raf.
    • Daucus sylvestris Mill.
    • Daucus tenuissimus (A.Chev.) Spalik, Wojew., Banasiak & Reduron
    • Daucus vulgaris Garsault
    • Daucus vulgaris Lam.
    • Daucus vulgaris Neck.
    • Melanoselinum annuum (Bég.) A.Chev.
    • Melanoselinum tenuissimum A.Chev.
    • Peltactila hispida Raf.
    • Peltactila parviflora (Desf.) Raf.
    • Platyspermum alatum (Poir.) Schult.
    • Thapsia annua (A.Chev.) M.Hiroe
    • Thapsia tenuissima (A.Chev.) M.Hiroe
    • Tiricta daucoides Raf.
    • Tornabenea annua Bég.
    • Tornabenea tenuissima (A.Chev.) A.Hansen & Sunding

Domesticated carrots are cultivars of a subspecies, Daucus carota subsp. sativus.

Description Edit

 
Inflorescences and foliage
 
Flowers (worm's-eye view)
 
Fruit cluster containing oval fruits with hooked spines

The wild carrot is a herbaceous, somewhat variable biennial plant that grows between 30 and 120 cm (1 and 4 ft) tall,[4][5] and is roughly hairy, with a stiff, solid stem. The leaves are tripinnate, finely divided and lacy, and overall triangular in shape. The leaves are 5–15 cm (2–6 in) long,[5] bristly and alternate in a pinnate pattern that separates into thin segments. The flowers are small and dull white, clustered in flat, dense umbels. The umbels are terminal and about 8–15 cm (3–6 in) wide.[6][5] They may be pink in bud and may have a reddish or purple[7] flower in the centre of the umbel. The lower bracts are three-forked or pinnate, which distinguishes the plant from other white-flowered umbellifers. As the seeds develop, the umbel curls up at the edges, becomes more congested, and develops a concave surface. The fruits are small, dry, bumpy, oval and flattened, with short styles and hooked spines, as well as protective hairs surrounding it.[8][6] The fruit has two mericarps, or bicarpellate. The endosperm of the fruit grows before the embryo.[9] The dried umbels detach from the plant, becoming tumbleweeds.[10] The function of the tiny red flower, coloured by anthocyanin, is to attract insects. The flowers bloom from May to September.[6][5]

Similar in appearance to the deadly poison hemlock, D. carota is distinguished by a mix of tripinnate leaves, fine hairs on its solid green stems and on its leaves, a root that smells like carrots, and occasionally a single dark red flower in the center of the umbel.[11][12] Hemlock is also different in tending to have purple mottling on its stems, which also lack the hairiness of the plain green Queen Anne's lace (wild carrot) stems.[13] Both plants have been spread into North America by European settlers and are now common wildflowers there.

Function of the dark central florets Edit

The function of the central dark florets of D. carota has been subject to debate since Charles Darwin speculated that they are a vestigial trait.[14] It has been suggested that they have the adaptive function of mimicking insects, thus either discouraging herbivory,[15] or attracting pollinators[16] by indicating the presence of food or opportunities for mating.[17] One study in Portugal found that the dark florets contributed to visitation by the varied carpet beetle, Anthrenus verbasci, and that higher numbers of dark florets correlated with increased visitation, whereas inflorescences without dark florets had fewer visits. Replacing the dark florets with one or more freeze-killed A. verbasci, who are similar to the florets in size and shape produced similar results to those observations of inflorescences with intact florets.[18]

Taxonomy Edit

The carrot was first officially described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1753 work Species Plantarum.[19] In 2016, an international team sequenced the full genome of Daucus carota.[20]

Subspecies Edit

Cultivated carrot's only parent is Daucus carota.[21]

Both domestic and wild carrot are from the same species, Daucus carota L. There are several subspecies of D. carota that have evolved to different climates and atmospheres. Two examples of these subspecies are specifically from the Netherlands. D. carota subsp. sativus has roots that can be a wide range of colors. It has a thicker root and sweeter taste. The whorl of barbs above the spine on the vallecular ridges of the mericarp of D. carota subsp. sativus mature very well.[clarification needed] D. carota subsp. carota has white roots that do not vary in color and, unlike D. carota subsp. sativus, has a thin root, bitter taste and are not edible. The middle umbellet of D. carota subsp. carota is not well developed (unlike in D. carota subsp. sativus) and the color of the flower can vary from red to deep purple.[22]

Subtaxa Edit

The following subtaxa are accepted:[2]

  • Daucus carota var. abyssinicus A.Braun
  • Daucus carota subsp. annuus (Bég.) Mart.Flores, D.M.Spooner & M.B.Crespo
  • Daucus carota subsp. azoricus Franco
  • Daucus carota subsp. cantabricus A.Pujadas
  • Daucus carota subsp. capillifolius (Gilli) Arbizu
  • Daucus carota subsp. caporientalis Reduron
  • Daucus carota subsp. carota
  • Daucus carota subsp. commutatus (Paol.) Thell.
  • Daucus carota subsp. corsoccidentalis Reduron
  • Daucus carota subsp. drepanensis (Arcang.) Heywood
  • Daucus carota subsp. fontanesii Thell.
  • Daucus carota subsp. gadecaei (Rouy & E.G.Camus) Heywood
  • Daucus carota subsp. gummifer (Syme) Hook.f.
  • Daucus carota subsp. halophilus (Brot.) A.Pujadas
  • Daucus carota subsp. hispanicus (Gouan) Thell.
  • Daucus carota subsp. major (Vis.) Arcang.
  • Daucus carota subsp. majoricus A.Pujadas
  • Daucus carota subsp. maritimus (Lam.) Batt.
  • Daucus carota subsp. maximus (Desf.) Ball
  • Daucus carota var. meriensis Reduron
  • Daucus carota subsp. otaportensis Reduron
  • Daucus carota subsp. rupestris (Guss.) Heywood
  • Daucus carota subsp. sativus (Hoffm.) Schübl. & G.Martens
  • Daucus carota subsp. tenuissimus (A.Chev.) Mart.Flores, D.M.Spooner & M.B.Crespo
  • Daucus carota subsp. valeriae Reduron

Distribution and habitat Edit

Native to temperate regions of Europe[5] and southwest Asia, the plant was spread to North America and Australia.

The plant is commonly found along roadsides and in unused fields. It thrives best in sun to partial shade.[6]

Toxicity Edit

Skin contact with the foliage of Daucus carota, especially wet foliage, can cause skin irritation in some people.[23][24] It may also have a mild effect on horses.[25]

The compound falcarinol is naturally found in Daucus carota for protection against fungal diseases. Lab tests show the compound to be toxic to mice and the water flea Daphnia magna.[26] Normal consumption of carrots has no toxic effect in humans.[27]

Uses Edit

Like the cultivated carrot, the D. carota root is edible while young, but it quickly becomes too woody to consume.[citation needed] The flowers are sometimes battered and fried. The leaves and seeds are also edible.[6]

D. carota bears a close resemblance to poison hemlock, and the leaves of the wild carrot may cause phytophotodermatitis,[28][24] so caution should also be used when handling the plant. The seeds and flowers have been used as a method of contraception and an abortifacient for centuries.[29][30][31] If used as a dyestuff, the flowers give a creamy, off-white color.

D. carota, when freshly cut, will draw or change color depending on the color of the water in which it is held. This effect is only visible on the "head" or flower of the plant. Carnations also exhibit this effect. This occurrence is a popular science demonstration in grade school.

Beneficial weed Edit

This beneficial weed can be used as a companion plant to crops. Like most members of the umbellifer family, it attracts wasps to its small flowers in its native land; however, where it has been introduced, it attracts very few wasps. In northeast Wisconsin, when introduced with blueberries it did succeed in attracting butterflies and wasps.[32] This species is also documented to boost tomato plant production when kept nearby, and it can provide a microclimate of cooler, moister air for lettuce, when intercropped with it.[33] However, the states of Iowa, Michigan, and Washington have listed it as a noxious weed,[34] and it is considered a serious pest in pastures. It persists in the soil seed bank for two to five years.[35]

Taste Edit

Several different factors can cause the root of a carrot to have abnormal metabolites (notably 6-methoxymellin) that can cause a bitter taste in the roots. For example, carrots have a bitterer taste when grown in the presence of apples. Also, ethylene can easily produce stress, causing a bitter taste.[36]

Culture Edit

Daucus carota was introduced and naturalized in North America, where it is often known as Queen Anne's lace. Both Anne, Queen of Great Britain, and her great-grandmother, Anne of Denmark, are taken to be the Queen Anne for whom the plant is named.[37] It is so called because the flower resembles lace, prominent in fine clothing of the day; the red flower in the center is said to represent a droplet of blood where Queen Anne pricked herself with a needle when she was making the lace.

History through artwork Edit

The history of Daucus carota and its cultivation in different parts of the world can be traced back through historical texts and artwork. Paintings from the 16th and 17th century, for example, that are of maids in a market or farmers' most recent crops can provide information on carrots' history. Studying such paintings shows that yellow or red roots were cultivated in Turkey, North Africa, and Spain. Orange roots were cultivated in 17th century Netherlands.[38]

References in poetry Edit

"Queen Anne's Lace" is the title and subject of a poem by William Carlos Williams published in the 1921 collection titled Sour Grapes.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Collett, L., Korpelainen, H., Draper Munt, D., Labokas, J., Magos Brehm, J., Tavares, M., Eliáš, P., Strajeru, S., Smekalova, T. & Bulińska, Z. 2011. Daucus carota. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2011: e.T172210A6849906. Downloaded on 02 July 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Daucus carota L." Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved March 20, 2022.
  3. ^ David Chapman (2008). Exploring the Cornish Coast. Penzance: Alison Hodge. p. 110. ISBN 9780906720561.
  4. ^ Ontario Weeds: Wild carrot
  5. ^ a b c d e Spellenberg, Richard (2001) [1979]. National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Wildflowers: Western Region (rev ed.). Knopf. p. 338. ISBN 978-0-375-40233-3.
  6. ^ a b c d e "Daucus carota". plants.ces.ncsu.edu. Retrieved March 31, 2017.
  7. ^ A field guide to wildflowers: northeastern and north-central North America, Peterson, Roger Tory, and Margaret McKenny. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1968. p. 48 Retrieved on 27 March 2017.
  8. ^ McClintock, David; Fitter, R. S. R. (1956). The Pocket Guide to Wild Flowers. Collins. p. 103.
  9. ^ Wurtele, E S; Wang, H; Durgerian, S; Nikolau, B J; Ulrich, T H (May 1993). "Characterization of a gene that is expressed early in somatic embryogenesis of Daucus carota". Plant Physiology. 102 (1): 303–312. doi:10.1104/pp.102.1.303. PMC 158776. PMID 8108498.
  10. ^ Faulkner, Herbert Waldron (1917). The Mysteries of the Flowers. Frederick A. Stokes. p. 210.
  11. ^ Noxious weeds: Poison-hemlock, King County, Washington
  12. ^ Hemlock Poisoning at eMedicine
  13. ^ Garms, Gabe. "How to Tell the Difference Between Poison Hemlock and Queen Anne's Lace". Raven's Roots.
  14. ^ Darwin, Charles. The Different Forms of Flowers on Plants of the Same Species. --. London: JMurray, 1877.
  15. ^ Detto, C. “Blutenbiologische Untersuchungen, I. Uber Die Beteutung Der Insektenahnlichkeit Der Ophrysblute Nebst Bemerkungen Uber Die Mohrenblute Dei Daucus Carota.” Flora, Jena 94 (1905): 287–329.
  16. ^ Rothschild, M. “Some Observations on the Relationship between Plants, Toxic Insects and Birds.” In Phytochemical Ecology, edited by J.B. Harborne, 1–12. London: Academic Press, 1972.
  17. ^ Yeo, P.F. (December 1972). "Miscellaneous notes on pollination and pollinators". Journal of Natural History. 6 (6): 667–686. doi:10.1080/00222937200770621.
  18. ^ Goulson, David; Mcguire, Kate; Munro, Emma E.; Adamson, Susan; Colliar, Louise; Park, Kirsty J.; Tinsley, Matthew C.; Gilburn, Andre S. (August 2009). "Functional significance of the dark central floret of Daucus carota (Apiaceae) L.; is it an insect mimic?". Plant Species Biology. 24 (2): 77–82. doi:10.1111/j.1442-1984.2009.00240.x.
  19. ^ Linnaeus, Carolus (1753). Species Plantarum (in Latin). Vol. 1. Stockholm: Laurentii Salvii. p. 242.
  20. ^ "Carrot Genome Sequenced". May 9, 2016.
  21. ^ Banga, O. (February 1957). "Origin of the European cultivated carrot". Euphytica. 6 (1): 54–63. doi:10.1007/BF00179518. S2CID 39884390.
  22. ^ Baranski, Rafal; Maksylewicz-Kaul, Anna; Nothnagel, Thomas; Cavagnaro, Pablo F.; Simon, Philipp W.; Grzebelus, Dariusz (February 2012). "Genetic diversity of carrot (Daucus carota L.) cultivars revealed by analysis of SSR loci". Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution. 59 (2): 163–170. doi:10.1007/s10722-011-9777-3.
  23. ^ "Daucus carota". www.hort.purdue.edu. Retrieved April 21, 2017.
  24. ^ a b "Don't touch these plants! Six lookalikes you want to avoid". U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service. July 19, 2017. Retrieved September 8, 2018.
  25. ^ LLC, HorseDVM. "Queen anne's lace Poisoning in Horses". HorseDVM.
  26. ^ Crosby, D.G.; Aharonson, N. (January 1967). "The structure of carotatoxin, a natural toxicant from carrot". Tetrahedron. 23 (1): 465–472. doi:10.1016/S0040-4020(01)83330-5. PMID 6037290.
  27. ^ Deshpande (2002). Handbook of Food Toxicology. Hyderabad, India: CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-8247-0760-6.
  28. ^ Phytophotodermatitis~clinical at eMedicine
  29. ^ Jansen, Gabrielle Claire; Wohlmuth, Hans (January 2014). "Carrot seed for contraception: A review". Australian Journal of Herbal Medicine. 26 (1): 10–17.
  30. ^ Contraception and Abortion from the Ancient World to the Renaissance, John M. Riddle, pg 58.
  31. ^ Peters, Emily (December 2014). (PDF). Ember Peters, RHP Wild Current Herbalism. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 20, 2020. Retrieved August 11, 2020.
  32. ^ Laurie Neverman (June 24, 2017). Queen Anne's Lace - Butterfly Host Plant and Blueberry Protector.
  33. ^ Philbrick, Helen; Gregg, Richard B. (August 1, 1966). Companion Plants and How to Use Them. Devin-Adair Publishing Company. p. 58. ISBN 978-0815952107. OCLC 2323470 – via Google Books. Lettuce likes strawberries, is aided by the presence of carrots and makes radishes tender in summer.
  34. ^ "Plant Profile - Daucus carota L. (Queen Anne's lace)". USDA. Retrieved June 11, 2007.
  35. ^ Clark, D. L.; Wilson, M. V. (May 1, 2003). "Post-dispersal seed fates of four prairie species". American Journal of Botany. 90 (5): 730–735. doi:10.3732/ajb.90.5.730. PMID 21659169.
  36. ^ Coxon, David T.; Curtis, R.Frank; Price, Keith R.; Levett, Gordon (August 1973). "Abnormal metabolites produced by Daucus carota roots stored under conditions of stress". Phytochemistry. 12 (8): 1881–1885. Bibcode:1973PChem..12.1881C. doi:10.1016/S0031-9422(00)91505-X.
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on June 21, 2012. Retrieved November 10, 2012.
  38. ^ Zeven, A. C.; Brandenburg, W. A. (October 1986). "Use of paintings from the 16th to 19th centuries to study the history of domesticated plants". Economic Botany. 40 (4): 397–408. doi:10.1007/BF02859650. S2CID 24391862.

Further reading Edit

  • Blanchan, Neltje (2005). Wild Flowers Worth Knowing. Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.
  • Bradeen, James M.; Simon, Philipp W. (2007). "Carrot". In Cole, Chittaranjan (ed.). Vegetables. Genome Mapping and Molecular Breeding in Plants. Vol. 5. New York, New York: Springer. pp. 162–184. ISBN 978-3-540-34535-0.
  • Clapham, A. R.; Tutin, T. G.; Warburg, E. F. (1962). Flora of the British Isles. Cambridge University Press.
  • Mabey, Richard (1997). Flora Britannica. London: Chatto and Windus.
  • Rose, Francis (2006). The Wild Flower Key (edition revised and expanded by Clare O'Reilly). London: Frederick Warne. ISBN 978-0-7232-5175-0.
  • Rubatsky, V.E.; Quiros, C.F.; Siman, P.W. (1999). Carrots and Related Vegetable Umbelliferae. CABI Publishing. ISBN 978-0-85199-129-0.

External links Edit

  • Connecticut Botanical Society

daucus, carota, wild, carrot, redirects, here, music, group, wild, carrot, band, whose, common, names, include, wild, carrot, european, wild, carrot, bird, nest, bishop, lace, queen, anne, lace, north, america, flowering, plant, family, apiaceae, native, tempe. Wild carrot redirects here For the music group see Wild Carrot band Daucus carota whose common names include wild carrot 3 European wild carrot bird s nest bishop s lace and Queen Anne s lace North America is a flowering plant in the family Apiaceae It is native to temperate regions of the Old World and was naturalized in the New World Wild carrotThe umbel of a wild carrotConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade AsteridsOrder ApialesFamily ApiaceaeGenus DaucusSpecies D carotaBinomial nameDaucus carotaL Synonyms 2 List Ballimon maritimum Lam Raf Carota sativa Hoffm Rupr Carota sylvestris Mill Lobel ex Rupr Caucalis carnosa Roth Caucalis carota L Crantz Caucalis daucus Crantz Caucalis gingidium L Crantz Caucalis hispanica Crantz Caucalis pumila Willd Daucus abyssinicus C A Mey Daucus agrestis Raf Daucus alatus Poir Daucus allionii Link Daucus annuus Beg Wojew Reduron Banasiak amp Spalik Daucus asturiarum Barnadez ex Cutanda Daucus australis Guss Daucus australis Kotov Daucus blanchei Reut Daucus bocconei Guss Daucus brevicaulis Raf Daucus capillifolius Gilli Daucus carnosus Moench Daucus carota var acaulis Breb P D Sell Daucus carota subsp boissieri Schweinf Hosni Daucus carota var brachycaulos Reduron Daucus carota f epurpuratus Farw Daucus carota f fischeri Moldenke Daucus carota var fontanesii Thell Reduron Daucus carota f goodmanii Moldenke Daucus carota var gummifer Syme Daucus carota var linearis Reduron Daucus carota var pseudocarota Rouy amp E G Camus Reduron Daucus carota f roseus Farw Daucus carota f roseus Millsp Daucus carota var tenuisectus Degen ex Palyi Reduron Daucus communis Rouy amp E G Camus Daucus communis var pseudocarota Rouy amp E G Camus Daucus commutatus Paol Thell Daucus dentatus Bertol Daucus drepanensis Arcang Tod ex Lojac Daucus esculentus Salisb Daucus exiguus Steud Daucus foliosus Guss Daucus gadecaei Rouy amp E G Camus Rouy amp E G Camus Daucus gibbosus Bertol Daucus gingidium Georgi Daucus gingidium L Daucus gingidium subsp atlanticus Rivas Mart Daucus gingidium subsp commutatus Prolongo O Bolos amp Vigo Daucus gingidium subsp hispanicus Gouan O Bolos amp Vigo Daucus gingidium subsp majoricus A Pujadas Mart Flores Juan M A Alonso A Pujadas amp M B Crespo Daucus gouanii Nyman Daucus gummifer All Daucus gummifer Lam Daucus gummifer var acaulis Breb Daucus gummifer var intermedius Corb Daucus halophilus Brot Daucus herculeus Pau Daucus heterophylus Raf Daucus hispanicus Gouan Daucus hispidus Desf Daucus hispidus Gilib Daucus hispidus Mill Daucus hispidus var tenuisectus Degen ex Palyi Daucus jolensis Pomel Daucus kotovii M Hiroe Daucus levis Raf Daucus lucidus L f Daucus marcidus Timb Lagr Daucus maritimus Lam Daucus maritimus With Daucus martellii Gand ex Calest Daucus masclefii Corb Daucus matthiolii Bubani Daucus mauritanicus L Daucus mauritanicus Salzm ex DC Daucus maximus Desf Daucus micranthus Pomel Daucus montanus Schmidt ex Nyman Daucus nebrodensis Strobl Daucus neglectus Lowe Daucus nitidus Gasp Daucus nudicaulis Raf Daucus officinalis Gueldenst ex Ledeb Daucus paralias Pomel Daucus parviflorus Desf Daucus polygamus Gouan Daucus polygamus Jacq ex Nyman Daucus rupestris Guss Daucus russeus Heldr Daucus sativus Hoffm Rohl ex Pass Daucus scariosus Raf Daucus sciadophylus Raf Daucus serotinus Pomel Daucus serratus Moris Daucus siculus Tineo Daucus strigosus Raf Daucus sylvestris Mill Daucus tenuissimus A Chev Spalik Wojew Banasiak amp Reduron Daucus vulgaris Garsault Daucus vulgaris Lam Daucus vulgaris Neck Melanoselinum annuum Beg A Chev Melanoselinum tenuissimum A Chev Peltactila hispida Raf Peltactila parviflora Desf Raf Platyspermum alatum Poir Schult Thapsia annua A Chev M Hiroe Thapsia tenuissima A Chev M Hiroe Tiricta daucoides Raf Tornabenea annua Beg Tornabenea tenuissima A Chev A Hansen amp SundingDomesticated carrots are cultivars of a subspecies Daucus carota subsp sativus Contents 1 Description 1 1 Function of the dark central florets 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Subspecies 2 2 Subtaxa 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Toxicity 5 Uses 5 1 Beneficial weed 5 2 Taste 6 Culture 6 1 History through artwork 6 2 References in poetry 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksDescription Edit nbsp Inflorescences and foliage nbsp Flowers worm s eye view nbsp Fruit cluster containing oval fruits with hooked spinesThe wild carrot is a herbaceous somewhat variable biennial plant that grows between 30 and 120 cm 1 and 4 ft tall 4 5 and is roughly hairy with a stiff solid stem The leaves are tripinnate finely divided and lacy and overall triangular in shape The leaves are 5 15 cm 2 6 in long 5 bristly and alternate in a pinnate pattern that separates into thin segments The flowers are small and dull white clustered in flat dense umbels The umbels are terminal and about 8 15 cm 3 6 in wide 6 5 They may be pink in bud and may have a reddish or purple 7 flower in the centre of the umbel The lower bracts are three forked or pinnate which distinguishes the plant from other white flowered umbellifers As the seeds develop the umbel curls up at the edges becomes more congested and develops a concave surface The fruits are small dry bumpy oval and flattened with short styles and hooked spines as well as protective hairs surrounding it 8 6 The fruit has two mericarps or bicarpellate The endosperm of the fruit grows before the embryo 9 The dried umbels detach from the plant becoming tumbleweeds 10 The function of the tiny red flower coloured by anthocyanin is to attract insects The flowers bloom from May to September 6 5 Similar in appearance to the deadly poison hemlock D carota is distinguished by a mix of tripinnate leaves fine hairs on its solid green stems and on its leaves a root that smells like carrots and occasionally a single dark red flower in the center of the umbel 11 12 Hemlock is also different in tending to have purple mottling on its stems which also lack the hairiness of the plain green Queen Anne s lace wild carrot stems 13 Both plants have been spread into North America by European settlers and are now common wildflowers there Function of the dark central florets Edit The function of the central dark florets of D carota has been subject to debate since Charles Darwin speculated that they are a vestigial trait 14 It has been suggested that they have the adaptive function of mimicking insects thus either discouraging herbivory 15 or attracting pollinators 16 by indicating the presence of food or opportunities for mating 17 One study in Portugal found that the dark florets contributed to visitation by the varied carpet beetle Anthrenus verbasci and that higher numbers of dark florets correlated with increased visitation whereas inflorescences without dark florets had fewer visits Replacing the dark florets with one or more freeze killed A verbasci who are similar to the florets in size and shape produced similar results to those observations of inflorescences with intact florets 18 Taxonomy EditThe carrot was first officially described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1753 work Species Plantarum 19 In 2016 an international team sequenced the full genome of Daucus carota 20 Subspecies Edit Cultivated carrot s only parent is Daucus carota 21 Both domestic and wild carrot are from the same species Daucus carota L There are several subspecies of D carota that have evolved to different climates and atmospheres Two examples of these subspecies are specifically from the Netherlands D carota subsp sativus has roots that can be a wide range of colors It has a thicker root and sweeter taste The whorl of barbs above the spine on the vallecular ridges of the mericarp of D carota subsp sativus mature very well clarification needed D carota subsp carota has white roots that do not vary in color and unlike D carota subsp sativus has a thin root bitter taste and are not edible The middle umbellet of D carota subsp carota is not well developed unlike in D carota subsp sativus and the color of the flower can vary from red to deep purple 22 Subtaxa Edit The following subtaxa are accepted 2 Daucus carota var abyssinicus A Braun Daucus carota subsp annuus Beg Mart Flores D M Spooner amp M B Crespo Daucus carota subsp azoricus Franco Daucus carota subsp cantabricus A Pujadas Daucus carota subsp capillifolius Gilli Arbizu Daucus carota subsp caporientalis Reduron Daucus carota subsp carota Daucus carota subsp commutatus Paol Thell Daucus carota subsp corsoccidentalis Reduron Daucus carota subsp drepanensis Arcang Heywood Daucus carota subsp fontanesii Thell Daucus carota subsp gadecaei Rouy amp E G Camus Heywood Daucus carota subsp gummifer Syme Hook f Daucus carota subsp halophilus Brot A Pujadas Daucus carota subsp hispanicus Gouan Thell Daucus carota subsp major Vis Arcang Daucus carota subsp majoricus A Pujadas Daucus carota subsp maritimus Lam Batt Daucus carota subsp maximus Desf Ball Daucus carota var meriensis Reduron Daucus carota subsp otaportensis Reduron Daucus carota subsp rupestris Guss Heywood Daucus carota subsp sativus Hoffm Schubl amp G Martens Daucus carota subsp tenuissimus A Chev Mart Flores D M Spooner amp M B Crespo Daucus carota subsp valeriae ReduronDistribution and habitat EditNative to temperate regions of Europe 5 and southwest Asia the plant was spread to North America and Australia The plant is commonly found along roadsides and in unused fields It thrives best in sun to partial shade 6 Toxicity EditSkin contact with the foliage of Daucus carota especially wet foliage can cause skin irritation in some people 23 24 It may also have a mild effect on horses 25 The compound falcarinol is naturally found in Daucus carota for protection against fungal diseases Lab tests show the compound to be toxic to mice and the water flea Daphnia magna 26 Normal consumption of carrots has no toxic effect in humans 27 Uses EditLike the cultivated carrot the D carota root is edible while young but it quickly becomes too woody to consume citation needed The flowers are sometimes battered and fried The leaves and seeds are also edible 6 D carota bears a close resemblance to poison hemlock and the leaves of the wild carrot may cause phytophotodermatitis 28 24 so caution should also be used when handling the plant The seeds and flowers have been used as a method of contraception and an abortifacient for centuries 29 30 31 If used as a dyestuff the flowers give a creamy off white color D carota when freshly cut will draw or change color depending on the color of the water in which it is held This effect is only visible on the head or flower of the plant Carnations also exhibit this effect This occurrence is a popular science demonstration in grade school Beneficial weed Edit This beneficial weed can be used as a companion plant to crops Like most members of the umbellifer family it attracts wasps to its small flowers in its native land however where it has been introduced it attracts very few wasps In northeast Wisconsin when introduced with blueberries it did succeed in attracting butterflies and wasps 32 This species is also documented to boost tomato plant production when kept nearby and it can provide a microclimate of cooler moister air for lettuce when intercropped with it 33 However the states of Iowa Michigan and Washington have listed it as a noxious weed 34 and it is considered a serious pest in pastures It persists in the soil seed bank for two to five years 35 Taste Edit Several different factors can cause the root of a carrot to have abnormal metabolites notably 6 methoxymellin that can cause a bitter taste in the roots For example carrots have a bitterer taste when grown in the presence of apples Also ethylene can easily produce stress causing a bitter taste 36 Culture EditDaucus carota was introduced and naturalized in North America where it is often known as Queen Anne s lace Both Anne Queen of Great Britain and her great grandmother Anne of Denmark are taken to be the Queen Anne for whom the plant is named 37 It is so called because the flower resembles lace prominent in fine clothing of the day the red flower in the center is said to represent a droplet of blood where Queen Anne pricked herself with a needle when she was making the lace History through artwork Edit The history of Daucus carota and its cultivation in different parts of the world can be traced back through historical texts and artwork Paintings from the 16th and 17th century for example that are of maids in a market or farmers most recent crops can provide information on carrots history Studying such paintings shows that yellow or red roots were cultivated in Turkey North Africa and Spain Orange roots were cultivated in 17th century Netherlands 38 References in poetry Edit Queen Anne s Lace is the title and subject of a poem by William Carlos Williams published in the 1921 collection titled Sour Grapes See also EditDaucus pusillus American wild carrotReferences Edit Collett L Korpelainen H Draper Munt D Labokas J Magos Brehm J Tavares M Elias P Strajeru S Smekalova T amp Bulinska Z 2011 Daucus carota The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2011 e T172210A6849906 Downloaded on 02 July 2021 a b Daucus carota L Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Retrieved March 20 2022 David Chapman 2008 Exploring the Cornish Coast Penzance Alison Hodge p 110 ISBN 9780906720561 Ontario Weeds Wild carrot a b c d e Spellenberg Richard 2001 1979 National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Wildflowers Western Region rev ed Knopf p 338 ISBN 978 0 375 40233 3 a b c d e Daucus carota plants ces ncsu edu Retrieved March 31 2017 A field guide to wildflowers northeastern and north central North America Peterson Roger Tory and Margaret McKenny Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 1968 p 48 Retrieved on 27 March 2017 McClintock David Fitter R S R 1956 The Pocket Guide to Wild Flowers Collins p 103 Wurtele E S Wang H Durgerian S Nikolau B J Ulrich T H May 1993 Characterization of a gene that is expressed early in somatic embryogenesis of Daucus carota Plant Physiology 102 1 303 312 doi 10 1104 pp 102 1 303 PMC 158776 PMID 8108498 Faulkner Herbert Waldron 1917 The Mysteries of the Flowers Frederick A Stokes p 210 Noxious weeds Poison hemlock King County Washington Hemlock Poisoning at eMedicine Garms Gabe How to Tell the Difference Between Poison Hemlock and Queen Anne s Lace Raven s Roots Darwin Charles The Different Forms of Flowers on Plants of the Same Species London JMurray 1877 Detto C Blutenbiologische Untersuchungen I Uber Die Beteutung Der Insektenahnlichkeit Der Ophrysblute Nebst Bemerkungen Uber Die Mohrenblute Dei Daucus Carota Flora Jena 94 1905 287 329 Rothschild M Some Observations on the Relationship between Plants Toxic Insects and Birds In Phytochemical Ecology edited by J B Harborne 1 12 London Academic Press 1972 Yeo P F December 1972 Miscellaneous notes on pollination and pollinators Journal of Natural History 6 6 667 686 doi 10 1080 00222937200770621 Goulson David Mcguire Kate Munro Emma E Adamson Susan Colliar Louise Park Kirsty J Tinsley Matthew C Gilburn Andre S August 2009 Functional significance of the dark central floret of Daucus carota Apiaceae L is it an insect mimic Plant Species Biology 24 2 77 82 doi 10 1111 j 1442 1984 2009 00240 x Linnaeus Carolus 1753 Species Plantarum in Latin Vol 1 Stockholm Laurentii Salvii p 242 Carrot Genome Sequenced May 9 2016 Banga O February 1957 Origin of the European cultivated carrot Euphytica 6 1 54 63 doi 10 1007 BF00179518 S2CID 39884390 Baranski Rafal Maksylewicz Kaul Anna Nothnagel Thomas Cavagnaro Pablo F Simon Philipp W Grzebelus Dariusz February 2012 Genetic diversity of carrot Daucus carota L cultivars revealed by analysis of SSR loci Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution 59 2 163 170 doi 10 1007 s10722 011 9777 3 Daucus carota www hort purdue edu Retrieved April 21 2017 a b Don t touch these plants Six lookalikes you want to avoid U S Fish amp Wildlife Service July 19 2017 Retrieved September 8 2018 LLC HorseDVM Queen anne s lace Poisoning in Horses HorseDVM Crosby D G Aharonson N January 1967 The structure of carotatoxin a natural toxicant from carrot Tetrahedron 23 1 465 472 doi 10 1016 S0040 4020 01 83330 5 PMID 6037290 Deshpande 2002 Handbook of Food Toxicology Hyderabad India CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8247 0760 6 Phytophotodermatitis clinical at eMedicine Jansen Gabrielle Claire Wohlmuth Hans January 2014 Carrot seed for contraception A review Australian Journal of Herbal Medicine 26 1 10 17 Contraception and Abortion from the Ancient World to the Renaissance John M Riddle pg 58 Peters Emily December 2014 Wild Carrot Monograph PDF Ember Peters RHP Wild Current Herbalism Archived from the original PDF on October 20 2020 Retrieved August 11 2020 Laurie Neverman June 24 2017 Queen Anne s Lace Butterfly Host Plant and Blueberry Protector Philbrick Helen Gregg Richard B August 1 1966 Companion Plants and How to Use Them Devin Adair Publishing Company p 58 ISBN 978 0815952107 OCLC 2323470 via Google Books Lettuce likes strawberries is aided by the presence of carrots and makes radishes tender in summer Plant Profile Daucus carota L Queen Anne s lace USDA Retrieved June 11 2007 Clark D L Wilson M V May 1 2003 Post dispersal seed fates of four prairie species American Journal of Botany 90 5 730 735 doi 10 3732 ajb 90 5 730 PMID 21659169 Coxon David T Curtis R Frank Price Keith R Levett Gordon August 1973 Abnormal metabolites produced by Daucus carota roots stored under conditions of stress Phytochemistry 12 8 1881 1885 Bibcode 1973PChem 12 1881C doi 10 1016 S0031 9422 00 91505 X Queen Ann s Lace Archived from the original on June 21 2012 Retrieved November 10 2012 Zeven A C Brandenburg W A October 1986 Use of paintings from the 16th to 19th centuries to study the history of domesticated plants Economic Botany 40 4 397 408 doi 10 1007 BF02859650 S2CID 24391862 Further reading EditBlanchan Neltje 2005 Wild Flowers Worth Knowing Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation Bradeen James M Simon Philipp W 2007 Carrot In Cole Chittaranjan ed Vegetables Genome Mapping and Molecular Breeding in Plants Vol 5 New York New York Springer pp 162 184 ISBN 978 3 540 34535 0 Clapham A R Tutin T G Warburg E F 1962 Flora of the British Isles Cambridge University Press Mabey Richard 1997 Flora Britannica London Chatto and Windus Rose Francis 2006 The Wild Flower Key edition revised and expanded by Clare O Reilly London Frederick Warne ISBN 978 0 7232 5175 0 Rubatsky V E Quiros C F Siman P W 1999 Carrots and Related Vegetable Umbelliferae CABI Publishing ISBN 978 0 85199 129 0 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Daucus carota Connecticut Botanical Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Daucus carota amp oldid 1180330935, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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