Jasione montana

Jasione montana is a low-growing plant in the family Campanulaceae found in rocky places and upland regions of Europe and western Asia. Common names include sheep's-bit, blue bonnets, blue buttons, blue daisy and iron flower. Due to the similarity of the common name of "sheep's-bit" with that of devil's-bit scabious (Succisa pratensis), it is sometimes called "sheep's-bit scabious" or "sheep scabious", but it is not related to the scabiouses (Dipsacoideae, Caprifoliaceae).

Sheep's bit
Bombus soroeensis on sheep's-bit
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Campanulaceae
Genus: Jasione
Species:
J. montana
Binomial name
Jasione montana
Synonyms
  • Alepidea ciliaris La Roche
  • Jasione corymbosa Poir.
  • Jasione montana var. corymbosa (Poir.) Greuter & Burdet

Distribution and habitat

This plant is found in the north temperate zone of Europe, west Asia and north Africa. It is a plant growing on heaths and moors in rocky or sandy districts, coastal cliffs, quarries and natural escarpments where the soil is thin.[1] It prefers acid soils and is absent from limestone regions. It is often found on coastal cliffs in association with thrift and kidney vetch and blooms from May to September.[2]

Description

Jasione montana

Sheep's bit scabious is a low biennial or occasionally annual plant growing up to about one foot tall with suberect stems that branch near the base. The leaves are linear, lanceolate, narrow at the base, sinuate, stiffly hairy and forming a rosette. The small violet-blue flowers are in small heads. The bracts are smooth or hairy and the petals have narrow lobes. There are 5 oblong anthers which unite at the base forming a tube, a feature that differentiates this plant from true scabiouses.[1]

The individual florets open successively. The anthers ripen first and later the styles elongate and the two-lobed stigmas are displayed. This make self-pollination less likely. There are nectaries in the upper part of the ovaries and many insects visit the flowers. Some fifty species of bees and wasps, thirty species of fly, thirty species of butterflies and moths and several beetles have been recorded as visiting the flowers,[1] and therefore this plant is characterized by a generalized pollination syndrome.[3]

The flowers are visible under ultraviolet light and it is believed that this makes them attractive to pollinating insects. They do not show a traditional bull's-eye pattern to guide the insect but the ultraviolet reflectance of the petals is very high.[4]

gollark: Yes.
gollark: These are continuous distributions, so there's technically an infinitesimal probability that it's any particular value (handwavily) but you can integrate over a region of it to determine the probability that a sample falls within that region.
gollark: Since probabilities sum to 1.
gollark: Yes. The only constraint for a probability distribution is that the area under the entire thing is 1.
gollark: That is the image I sent you, congratulations.

References

  1. Harwood, A. R. British Wild Flowers In Their Natural Haunts Vol 5-6.
  2. First Nature
  3. Van Der Kooi, C. J.; Pen, I.; Staal, M.; Stavenga, D. G.; Elzenga, J. T. M. (2015). "Competition for pollinators and intra-communal spectral dissimilarity of flowers". Plant Biology. 18: 56–62. doi:10.1111/plb.12328. PMID 25754608.
  4. Ultraviolet flowers
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.