Lomelosia


Lomelosia is a genus of flowering plant in the family Caprifoliaceae and the subfamily of Dipsacoideae.
The genus includes over 50-63, perennial and annual species, diffused around the Mediterranean Sea, with the greatest diversity of species concentrated in the eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East, and also has a few species reaching as far east as China.
Morphologically, the genus accommodates all Scabiosa taxa with a pitted epicalyx. resembling an outer calyx.
Some older books still list them under Scabiosa. or list both names together. Such as Scabiosa sicula .

Taxonomy

Lomelosia was first published and described by french botanist Rafinesque in Flora Telluriana Vol.4 on page 95 in 1838, with a general description of Lomelosia stellata
The name Lomelosia is derived from the Greek word Loma meaning 'the edge or the border' which refers to the membranous border of the flower.

History

It was included in Scabiosa for quite a long time,
Earlier researchers had considered that the annual species of Scabiosa to be derived within Lomelosia and hypothesized that this was responsible for the successful colonization of the Eastern Mediterranean, ; and Verlaque, 1986b.
For very many years Lomelosia caucasica was known as Scabiosa caucasica as well as several other species of Scabiosa. Then following a comprehensive study of the family Dipsacaceae by Verlaque in 1983, and by Devesa in 1984, the Scabioseae subfamily were then split into several genera, with S. caucasica placed in Lomelosia . López González in 1987 agreed with the split.
Greuter and Raus in 1985 divided Iranian species of Scabiosa into two genera as Lomelosia and Scabiosa s. str.. Asterocephalus was later classed as a synonym of Scabiosa.
Soják in 1987 also transferred several species of Scabiosa taxa found in Asia, to the Lomelosia genus. Including Lomelosia flavida, Lomelosia gumbetica, Lomelosia isetensis, Lomelosia leucactis, Lomelosia macrochaete, Lomelosia olgae, Lomelosia rhodantha, Lomelosia speciosa,, Lomelosia songarica and Lomelosia ucranica.
There are 22 species of Scabiosa recorded in the Flora Iranica by Rechinger in 1989, as he had not accepted the new term Lomelosia and had stated that species were later divided into two subgenera and three sections including Scabiosa, Asterocephalus and Olivierianae. He had used Scabiosa sect. Olivierianae to hold some of the annual species of Scabiosa subg. Asterocephalus.
New species from Iran and Asia were also added to these three sections.
Molecular data demonstrated that Lomelosia form a clade distinct from Scabiosa and palynological studies by Mayer & Ehrendorf in 1999, have confirmed that Lomelosia was a separate genus from Scabiosa, which has been further substantiated by later data from molecular phylogenetics.
The annual Lomelosia brachiata was resolved to be a genetic sister to the rest of Lomelosia and Pycnocomon in 2009.
In 2010, the Dipsacoideae subfamily was divided into 2 genetic DNA clades; Knautia–''CephalariaDipsacusSuccisella clade and the ScabiosaPterocephalusLomelosia clade.
In 2011, 4 more species from the
Scabiosa genus with a pitted epicalyx transferred to Lomelosia, Lomelosia deserticola, Lomelosia poecilocarpa, Lomelosia schimperiana, and Lomelosia transcaspica.
In 2013, V. Mayer and Ehrend established
Lomelosieae, a subgenus within Lomelosia''.

Description

Lomelosia is made up of perennial and annual, herbaceous species, examples include; Lomelosia persica is an annual species, while Lomelosia caucasica is a perennial.
They are sometimes suffruticose, unarmed, without prickles. Leafy or scapiform stems, which have short hairs. It has sessile or petiolate leaves. They are whole and toothed. They can be pinnatifid, pinnatipartite or pinnatisect. The basal leaves are sometimes in a rosette, persistent or not at anthesis. They have hemispheric chapters at anthesis which are globose or ovoid at the time of fruiting. It has numerous free bracts, arranged in 1-2 rows. They are entire or pinnatifid, receptacle at first hemispherical and then conical or cylindrical, hairy, with herbaceous-scarious bracteoles. They have hermaphroditic, pentamerous flowers, which are subactinomorphic or zygomorphic. They are almost equal or the peripheral ones of the larger chapter. The secondary involucre is homomorphous, sessile, without basal elasome, shaped like a cylindrical tube, with no apparent nerves or ribs and is densely hirsute. They have 8 foveolae in the distal half. It has a campanulate crown, which is scarious and hyaline, with ± scalloped edge. They are traversed by numerous smooth or scabrid nerves, sometimes excurrent. The midriff is scarious and hairy. It consists of 8 adnate tabs and with a cylindrical projection that surrounds the calyx stipe. The calyx is pateniform, pentagonal, ± stipitate, with glanduliferous or eglandulous hairs. It has 5 subulate or widened edges at the base, they are ± scabrid, erect-patent or patent and persistent. The corolla has 5 lobes, that of the peripheral flowers are often zygomorphic, with very unequal lobes. As 3 are bigger than the other 2 lobes. The central is major, so that of the flowers in the center are subactinomorphic. They come in shades of pink, violet-pink or blue-like. The androecium is made of 4 stamens. The stigma is capitate, bilobate and oblique. The fruit is an achene which is glabrous or hairy..
They are generally have involucral bracts not connate, entire and radiant, the epicalyx is cylindrical and the corona can be large.

Species

63 Accepted species by Plants of [the World Online] :
GRIN only accepts 12 species: Lomelosia argentea, Lomelosia calocephala, Lomelosia caucasica, Lomelosia cretica, Lomelosia divaricata, Lomelosia graminifolia, Lomelosia micrantha, Lomelosia minoana, Lomelosia palaestina, Lomelosia prolifera, Lomelosia speciosa and Lomelosia stellata.

Distribution

Lomelosia is described as an Old World genus and it is distributed from the Mediterranean region to Central Asia.
It is found in the European countries of Albania, the Balearic Islands, Bulgaria, Cyprus, East Aegean Islands, France, Greece, Italy, Crete, Portugal, Romania, Sardinia, Sicily, Spain, Switzerland, Ukraine and Yugoslavia.
In Russia,, Crimea, East European Russia, South European Russia and West Siberia.
In Northern Africa within Algeria, Egypt, Tunisia, Libya and Morocco.
In the Middle East, within Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Lebanon, Syria, Oman, Pakistan, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey.
In central Asia within Kazakhstan, Kirghistan, North Caucasus, Tajikistan, Transcaucasus, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and West Himalaya.
Also in eastern Asia in Xinjiang.

Habitat

Lomelosia species like a range of habitats.
For example, Lomelosia cyprica is found on dry slopes in garigue and open pine forests at altitudes of above sea level.
While L. argentea likes arid meadows and garigue, L. crenata likes detrital slopes and L. graminifolia likes stony slopes.
Lomelosia minoana is Greek and Crete native rock-dwelling plant.
While Lomelosia deserticola is found in deserts of Syria, Jordan, Iraq and Pakistan and Lomelosia schimperiana is found in open environments in Iran.

Ecology

The flowers of Lomelosia are insect pollinated, mainly by bees and bumblebees, as the plants give them a reward of nectar and pollen. Other insects are occasional visitors, such as long-tongues hoverflies, moths, Lepidoptera .

Uses

Lomelosia hymettia is considered as a medicinal plant, with antimicrobial properties.
Several species of Lomelosia are grown as ornamentals in Europe. Jäger & al. cites L. caucasica, L. graminifolia, L. prolifera and 'L. stellata. Matthews even cites 12 additional species that are cultivated in European gardens. One of these, L. stellata, has been recorded as a casual escape in Belgium.
While L. graminifolia , L. hymettia and L. cretica are xerophytes used in landscaping designs. L. prolifera has been used as part of green roof plantations.

Cultivation

Successful propagation in various species of Lomelosia has been reported both via seed growing and by vegetative methods. Propagation with cuttings for species Lomelosia hymettia was carried out using Indole-3-butyric acid with results to a high rate of rooting during autumn, compared to 50-67.5% during the spring . In-vitro propagation has also been successfully employed for Lomelosia argentea .