Nicotiana
Nicotiana is a genus of herbaceous plants and shrubs in the family Solanaceae that is indigenous to the Americas, Australia, Southwestern Africa and the South Pacific. Various Nicotiana species, commonly referred to as tobacco plants, are cultivated as ornamental garden plants. N. tabacum is grown worldwide for the cultivation of tobacco leaves that are used for manufacturing and producing tobacco products, including cigars, cigarillos, cigarettes, chewing tobacco, dipping tobacco, snuff, snus, etc.
Taxonomy
Species
The 79 accepted and known species include:- Nicotiana acuminata Hook. – manyflower tobacco or many-flowered tobacco
- Nicotiana africana Merxm.
- Nicotiana alata Link & Otto – jasmine tobacco, sweet tobacco, winged tobacco, Persian tobacco, tanbaku
- Nicotiana attenuata Torrey ex S. Watson – coyote tobacco
- Nicotiana benthamiana Domin – benth, benthi
- Nicotiana bilybara M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana candelabra M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana clarksonii M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana clevelandii A. Gray – Cleveland's tobacco
- Nicotiana erytheia M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana gascoynica M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana glauca Graham – tree tobacco, Brazilian tree tobacco, shrub tobacco, wild tobacco, tobacco plant, tobacco bush, tobacco tree, mustard tree
- Nicotiana glutinosa L.
- Nicotiana hoskingii M.W.Chase, Palsson & Christenh.
- Nicotiana insecticida M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana karara M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana karijini M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana langsdorffii Weinm. – Langsdorff's tobacco
- Nicotiana latifolia M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana latzii M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana longiflora Cav. – longflower tobacco or long-flowered tobacco
- Nicotiana murchisonica M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana mutabilis Stehmann & Semir – color-changing tobacco, flowering tobacco
- Nicotiana notha M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana occidentalis H.-M. Wheeler – native tobacco
- Nicotiana obtusifolia M. Martens & Galeotti – desert tobacco, punche, "tabaquillo"
- Nicotiana olens M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana otophora Griseb.
- Nicotiana pila M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana plumbaginifolia Viv. – Tex-Mex tobacco
- Nicotiana quadrivalvis Pursh – Indian tobacco
- Nicotiana rupestris M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana rustica L. – Aztec tobacco, strong tobacco, mapacho
- Nicotiana salina M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana scopulorum M.W.Chase & Christenh.
- Nicotiana suaveolens Lehm. – Australian tobacco
- Nicotiana sylvestris Speg. & Comes – woodland tobacco, flowering tobacco, South American tobacco
- Nicotiana tabacum L. – common tobacco, domesticated tobacco, cultivated tobacco, commercial tobacco
- Nicotiana tomentosiformis Goodsp.
- Nicotiana walpa M.W.Chase, Dodsworth & Christenh.
- Nicotiana yandinga M.W.Chase & Christenh.
Manmade hybrids
- Nicotiana × didepta – N. forsteri × N. tabacum
- Nicotiana × digluta – N. glutinosa × N. tabacum
- Nicotiana × sanderae Hort. ex Wats. – N. alata × ''N. forgetiana''
Formerly placed here
- Petunia axillaris Britton et al. – large white petunia, wild white petunia, white moon petunia
Etymology
Ecology
Despite containing enough nicotine and/or other compounds such as germacrene and anabasine and other pyridine alkaloids to deter most herbivores, a number of such animals have evolved the ability to feed on Nicotiana species without being harmed.Some species have become established as invasive species in some places.
In the 19th century, young tobacco plantings came under increasing attack from flea beetles, causing the destruction of half the United States tobacco crop in 1876. In the years afterward, many experiments were attempted and discussed to control the potato flea beetle. By 1880, it was discovered that covering young plants with a frame covered with thin fabric would effectively protect the plants from the beetle. This practice spread until it became ubiquitous in the 1890s.
Tobacco, alongside its related products, can be infested by parasites such as the tobacco beetle and the tobacco moth, which are the most widespread and damaging pests in the tobacco industry. Infestation can range from the tobacco cultivated in the fields to the leaves used for manufacturing cigars, cigarillos, cigarettes, chewing tobacco, dipping tobacco, snuff, snus, etc. Both the grubs of Lasioderma serricorne and the caterpillars of Ephestia elutella are considered major pests.
Other moths whose caterpillars feed on Nicotiana include:
- Black cutworm, greasy cutworm, or floodplain cutworm, dark sword-grass or ipsilon dart
- Turnip moth
- Mouse moth
- Clover cutworm, nutmeg
- Endoclita excrescens
- Hawaiian tobacco hornworm or Hawaiian tomato hornworm, Blackburn's sphinx moth
- Tobacco hornworm or Goliath worm, tobacco hawkmoth or Carolina sphinx moth
- Tomato hornworm, five-spotted hawkmoth
- Cabbage moth
- Angle shades
- Setaceous Hebrew character
- Cabbage looper
- Fall armyworm
- Tobacco spitworm, potato tuber moth
- South American tomato pinworm, tomato pinworm or tomato leafminer, South American tomato moth
- Eggplant leafroller moth or nightshade leaftier
- Eggplant webworm moth
Cultivation
Several species of Nicotiana, such as N. sylvestris, N. alata 'Lime Green' and N. langsdorffii are grown as ornamental plants, often under the name of flowering tobacco. They are popular vespertines ; their sweet-smelling flowers opening in the evening to be visited by hawkmoths and other pollinators. In temperate climates, they behave as annuals.The hybrid cultivar 'Lime Green' has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.
Garden varieties are derived from N. alata and more recently from Nicotiana × sanderae.
The tobacco budworm has proved to be a massive "pest" of many species in the genus, and has resisted many attempts at management.