Avena
Avena is a genus of Eurasian and African plants in the grass family. Collectively known as the oats, they include some species which have been cultivated for thousands of years as a food source for humans and livestock. They are widespread throughout Europe, Asia and northwest Africa. Several species have become naturalized in many parts of the world, and are regarded as invasive weeds where they compete with crop production. All oats have edible seeds, though they are small and hard to harvest in most species.
Ecology
Avena species, including cultivated oats, are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species, including rustic shoulder-knot and setaceous Hebrew character.For diseases of oats, see List of oat diseases.
Species
Cultivated oats
One species is of major commercial importance as a cereal grain. Four other species are grown as crops of minor or regional importance.- Avena sativa – the common oat, a cereal crop of global importance and the species commonly referred to as "oats"
- Avena abyssinica – the Ethiopian oat, native to Ethiopia, Eritrea, + Djibouti; naturalized in Yemen + Saudi Arabia
- Avena byzantina, a minor crop in Greece and Middle East; introduced in Spain, Algeria, India, New Zealand, South America, etc.
- Avena nuda – the naked oat or hulless oat, which plays much the same role in Europe as does A. abyssinica in Ethiopia. It is sometimes included in A. sativa and was widely grown in Europe before the latter replaced it. As its nutrient content is somewhat better than that of the common oat, A. nuda has increased in significance in recent years, especially in organic farming.
- Avena strigosa – the lopsided oat, bristle oat, or black oat, grown for fodder in parts of Western Europe and Brazil
Wild oats
- Avena aemulans – European Russia
- Avena barbata – slender wild oat – from Portugal + Morocco to Tajikistan
- Avena brevis – short oat – central + southern Europe
- Avena chinensis – Germany, Austria; introduced in China, Belarus
- Avena clauda – Balkans, Middle East, Central Asia
- Avena eriantha – North Africa, Middle East, Central Asia, Caucasus
- Avena fatua – common wild oat – Europe, Asia, North Africa; naturalized in Australia, the Americas, various islands
- Avena longiglumis – North Africa, Israel, Spain, Portugal, Sardinia
- Avena maroccana – Moroccan oat – Morocco
- Avena murphyi – Morocco, Spain
- Avena prostrata – Morocco, Spain
- Avena saxatilis – Sicily and small nearby islands
- Avena sterilis – winter wild oat – Mediterranean, East Africa; temperate Asia; introduced in northern Europe, Australia, New Zealand, the Americas
- Avena strigosa – Spain, France, Portugal; introduced in other parts of Europe as well as in scattered locations in Australia, New Zealand, the Americas
- Avena vaviloviana – Eritrea, Ethiopia
- Avena ventricosa – North Africa, Middle East
- Avena volgensis – European Russia
Species formerly included