Lamprocapnos


Lamprocapnos spectabilis, commonly known as bleeding heart or Asian bleeding heart, is a species of flowering plant belonging to the fumitory subfamily of the Papaveraceae. It is native to Northeast China and the Korean peninsula; however, it has been introduced by humans into a larger area of Northeast Asia, including parts of Siberia, Russia and Japan.
It is the sole species in the monotypic genus Lamprocapnos, but is still widely sold under the obsolete name Dicentra spectabilis, not to be confused with the North American native bleeding heart plants of the genus Dicentra. It is valued in flower gardens for the heart-shaped pink and white flowers it produces in spring.

Etymology

The scientific name, Lamprocapnos spectabilis, can be broken up and translated: The Greek term "Lampro-" translates to words such as bright," "shining", "sparkling", "dazzling", "brilliant", or "glistening", while the Greek term "-capnos" translates to "smoke". The Greek term "spectabilis" translates to words such as "spectacular," "showy," "remarkable," or "worth seeing". The literal translation means "Spectacular sparkling smoke".

Common names

Other common names include lyre flower, heart flower, and lady-in-a-bath.
In China, the plant has the common name of 荷包牡丹 meaning "Purse peony", in reference to the resemblance of the individual flowers to an hébāo and of the foliage to that of tree peonies.
The Korean common name for the plant, 금낭화 or "Gold bag flower" makes the same comparison between the shape of the flower and that of an old-fashioned drawstring purse as does the Chinese.
Japanese common names for the plant include ケマンソウ and the quaint and evocative タイツリソウ given in recognition of the similarity in appearance of the inflorescence to a number of little fish hanging by their tails from a rod, while clasping yet smaller fish in their jaws.
Both the Chinese and Korean purse and the Japanese sea bream referenced in names for Lamprocapnos are not only considered auspicious, but also associated specifically with the New Year celebrations of their respective countries.

Description

The Asian bleeding-heart grows to 120 cm tall and 45 cm wide. It is a rhizomatous herbaceous perennial with 3-lobed compound leaves on fleshy green to pink stems. The arching horizontal racemes of up to 20 pendent flowers are borne in spring and early summer. The outer petals are bright fuchsia-pink, while the inner ones are white. The flowers strikingly resemble the conventional heart shape, with a droplet beneath – hence the common name.
The plant sometimes behaves as a spring ephemeral, becoming dormant in summer.Lamprocapnos#cite note-RHSAZ-3|

Habitat

In Korea, L. spectabilis behaves as a shade-loving chasmophyte, growing in rock crevices at low altitudes in the mountains of the central and southern parts of the country.

Distribution

Lamprocapnos spectabilis is native to Northeast Asia, specifically Northeast China and the Korean peninsula; however, L. spectabilis has been cultivated as an ornamental species for so long in this region that it has become hard to determine exactly which regions it is native and in which it is introduced.

History

It is one of those plants of which the Chinese Mandarins in the north of China are so fond and which they cultivate with so much pride in their little fairy gardens.
Robert Fortune
personal communication May 20, 1847
Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society

The plant was first introduced to England from Asia in the year 1810 and, unfortunately, was lost, but was subsequently reintroduced in 1846 by the Scottish botanist and plant hunter Robert Fortune, who sent specimens to the RHS, having found the plant already in cultivation "in the Grotto Garden on the Island of Chusan, growing among artificial rocks near the beautiful Weigela rosea".

Cultivation

In a moist and cool climate, it will grow in full sun, but in warmer and drier climates it requires some shade.
Aphids, slugs and snails sometimes feed on the leaves.
Clumps remain compact for many years and do not need dividing. They have brittle roots which are easily damaged when disturbed. Root cuttings should be taken in spring.
Seeds with whitish elaiosomes are borne in long pods. They must be sown while fresh. Division should be done in the late fall or early spring.

Cultivars

The following cultivars have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit:
  • Lamprocapnos spectabilis
  • 'Alba'
  • "Valentine"
The cultivar 'Gold Heart', introduced from Hadspen Garden, England, in 1997, has yellow leaves.

In Chinese culture and traditional medicine


玲珑奇巧涎欲滴,Delicate and quaint, with pendent drop of yearning unashamed
色彩绚丽若紫云;Bright as rosy clouds of eventide.
传言古时洛阳镇,Tis said that, long ago, near ancient Luoyang town,
镇上玉女慧且纯;There dwelt a jade-bright maiden, wise and pure,
无奈情郎充军去,Whose secret love was called away to war,
只得寄情绣包存;Each month a wondrous purse embroidered she to hang upon the bough,
荷包香美已成串,Drawstring pulled tight upon sweet fragrance pent within.
可惜思君不见君。Pity the girl who pictured daily thus her pining heart.
王文英
Poems of a Hundred Flowers: number 70 - Purse Peony

Jade Maiden Si Jun and the "Purse Peony"

The short poem by modern Chinese poet Wáng Wényīng presented above alludes to a traditional tale concerning the etiology of the "purse peony". The goddess/fairy name Yunü employed in line four refers specifically to 玉女思君 Jade Maiden Si Jun, a literary inflection of a character originally a minor deity, although the name Yunü here designates, in a familiar trope, a virtuous and faithful young woman. The name 思君 translates as "thinks-of-her-lord", reflecting the behaviour of the young woman in the legend.
The legend of Si Jun relates that in ancient times, some 200 miles to the southeast of Luoyang City in the province of Henan, there was a prefecture called Rǔzhōu, in the West of which lay Miaoxia, a small town nestled in a paradisal valley hemmed in by mountains. Here there lived Si Jun, a girl so beautiful, virtuous and wise that she was besieged by legions of eager suitors, whom she nonetheless rebuffed, because she had a secret love. This handsome young man had enlisted as a soldier and had been encamped far away beyond Wànlǐ Chángchéng for two years, forbidden to communicate with his beloved. Despite the fact that he could not reply to the letters that she sent him or receive her gifts, she waited patiently for his return, easing her yearning for him by embroidering once a month a purse dedicated to him and hanging it upon a branch of the tree peony that grew outside her window. Such was her talent for embroidery that the beautiful flowers that she created so skilfully with her needle fooled the very butterflies and bees, who would try to pollinate them, believing them to be real. This state of affairs continued for so long that the peony bush, though not actually in flower, appeared to have burst forth in strange, purse-shaped blooms, so many were the little embroidered pouches that Si Jun had created in honour of her absent lover. At last the immortals rewarded her patience by transmuting the purse-decked peony into a new kind of plant with foliage like that of a peony but with curious little flowers shaped like lucky, bridal purses - the hébāo mǔdān. To this very day a gift of purse peonies is considered in China the quintessential love token or proposal of marriage in the language of flowers, with much the same connotations as the red rose in Europe.

Traditional Chinese medicine

In Traditional Chinese medicine the root is employed for detoxification, to improve blood circulation, and as an analgesic. It is recorded in the "Lingnan Medicine Collection" that Lamprocapnos root can disperse blood, eliminate sores, eliminate "wind", and "harmonize the blood". The medicinal qualities are described as pungent, bitter and warm, and are believed to replenish jing in the liver. Oral administration is used to treat sores and abdominal pain, while topical application is used to treat bruises and swellings.
Caution is, however urged regarding overdose: the juice of the plant can cause tingling paresthesias after contact with exposed skin and oral overdose can give rise to vomiting, diarrhea and, in serious cases of poisoning, even respiratory failure, and cardiac paralysis.

Toxicity

Contact with the plant can cause skin irritation in certain individuals, due to its containing isoquinoline alkaloids, including protopine, while consumption of the leaves can give rise to neurological symptoms, including confusion and irritability.

Case of accidental poisoning in Korea

Jeong et al. reported a case of poisoning in Korea in 2015: a party of four dining out at a local restaurant suffered symptoms of varying severity after consuming a dish of crucian carp and Korean radish greens to which a careless or inexperienced chef had added leaves of L. spectabilis, which he may have mistaken for radish leaves, while gathering pot-herbs to cook with the fish. They note that the severity of poisoning could be correlated with the amount of the poisoned dish consumed; the only individual with symptoms requiring hospitalisation being a middle-aged man, already in poor health, who had eaten the most. All those poisoned complained of lethargy, dizziness, palpitation, and dry mouth half an hour after consuming the meal.
The authors conclude that the clinical manifestations in this poisoning case suggest anticholinergic syndrome and speculate that the mental changes in the victims were attributable to the effects on the CNS of the alkaloids scoulerine and corydine which can evoke narcotic effects. They note also that the neurologic effects of the alkaloid protopine are qualitatively comparable to those of the well-known delirient tropane alkaloid atropine.
The 45-year-old male admitted to A&E suffering from Lamprocapnos poisoning had a history of hypertension and chronic kidney disease and presented with a confused mental state, elevated blood pressure, tachycardia, mild fever, dry mouth and facial flushing. Neurological examination revealed his confusion to be intermittent and associated with irritability, and an inability to comprehend and obey commands. His motor function, however was normal and he showed no abnormal reflexes. Furthermore, his pupils were not anisochoric and were responsive to light. His mental state began to return to normal 19 hours after admission to A&E, although his intermittent confusion persisted. He finally regained alert mentation 28 hours after admission.