Linaria

This article is about the plant genus. For the bird genus, see Linaria (bird). For the Sporadic town, see Skyros.
Linaria
Common toadflax (Linaria vulgaris)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Plantaginaceae
Tribe: Antirrhineae
Genus: Linaria
Mill.
Species

see text

Linaria is a genus of 150 species of herbaceous annuals and perennials and the largest genus in the Antirrhineae tribe of the plantain family Plantaginaceae.

Taxonomy

Linaria was traditionally placed in the figwort family Scrophulariaceae. Phylogenetic analysis has now placed it in the vastly expanded family Plantaginaceae.

Closely related genera include the Nuttallanthus (American toadflaxes, recently split from Linaria), Antirrhinum (snapdragons) and Cymbalaria (Ivy-leaved toadflaxes).

Species

  • Linaria aeruginea
  • Linaria algarviana
  • Linaria alpina
  • Linaria amethystea
  • Linaria amoi
  • Linaria angustissima
  • Linaria anticaria
  • Linaria arenaria
  • Linaria arvensis
  • Linaria badalii
  • Linaria biebersteinii
  • Linaria bipartita
  • Linaria bipunctata
  • Linaria bungei
  • Linaria buriatica
  • Linaria caesia
  • Linaria capraria
  • Linaria cavanillesii
  • Linaria chalepensis
  • Linaria clementei
  • Linaria coutinhoi
  • Linaria cretacea
  • Linaria dalmatica (syn. Linaria genistifolia)
  • Linaria debilis
  • Linaria depauperata
  • Linaria diffusa
  • Linaria elegans
  • Linaria farsensis
  • Linaria faucicola
  • Linaria ficalhoana
  • Linaria filicaulis
  • Linaria flava
  • Linaria glauca
  • Linaria glacialis
  • Linaria glauca
  • Linaria golestaniensis
  • Linaria grandiflora
  • Linaria hellenica
  • Linaria heterophylla
  • Linaria hirta
  • Linaria huteri
  • Linaria incarnata
  • Linaria incompleta
  • Linaria japonica
  • Linaria karajiensis
  • Linaria khorasaniensis
  • Linaria kulabensis
  • Linaria lamarckii
  • Linaria latifolia
  • Linaria laxiflora
  • Linaria lilacina
  • Linaria loeselii
  • Linaria longicalcarata
  • Linaria macroura
  • Linaria maroccana
  • Linaria mazandaraniensis
  • Linaria micrantha
  • Linaria microsepala
  • Linaria nevadensis
  • Linaria nigricans
  • Linaria nivea
  • Linaria oblongifolia
  • Linaria odora
  • Linaria oligantha
  • Linaria pedunculata
  • Linaria pelisseriana
  • Linaria peloponnesiaca
  • Linaria pinifolia
  • Linaria platycalyx
  • Linaria propinqua
  • Linaria pseudolaxiflora
  • Linaria purpurea
  • Linaria reflexa
  • Linaria repens
  • Linaria reticulata
  • Linaria ricardoi
  • Linaria sabulosa
  • Linaria sagittata
  • Linaria saturejoides
  • Linaria saxatilis
  • Linaria silenifolia
  • Linaria simplex
  • Linaria spartea
  • Linaria supina
  • Linaria thibetica
  • Linaria thymifolia
  • Linaria tonzigii
  • Linaria triornithophora
  • Linaria triphylla
  • Linaria tristis
  • Linaria uralensis
  • Linaria ventricosa
  • Linaria verticillata
  • Linaria viscosa
  • Linaria vulgaris
  • Linaria yunnanensis

Some of the more familiar Linaria include:

Etymology

The members of this genus are known in English as toadflax, a name shared with several related genera. The scientific name Linaria means "resembling Linum" (flax), which the foliage of some species superficially resembles.

Distribution and habitat

The genus is native to temperate regions of Europe, northern Africa and Asia, with the highest species diversity in the Mediterranean region.

Ecology

Some Linaria are regarded as noxious weeds. They are likely toxic to livestock, but ruminants generally avoid them.[2]

Uses

Toadflaxes are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species, including the Mouse Moth (Amphipyra tragopoginis) and the Common Buckeye (Junonia coenia). L. vulgaris has been used as a medicinal herb for the treatment of many illnesses and conditions, including cancer, hepatitis, hemorrhoids, scrofula, and scurvy. It has been used as an astringent, an emollient, and a laxative.[3]

References

  1. Dalmatian Toadflax (Linaria dalmatica). National Invasive Species Information Center, United States National Agricultural Library.
  2. Sing, S. E. and R. K. Peterson. (2011). Assessing environmental risks for established invasive weeds: Dalmatian (Linaria dalmatica) and yellow (L. vulgaris) toadflax in North America. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 8(7) 2828-53.
  3. Duke, J. A. Ethnobotanical uses: Linaria vulgaris. Dr. Duke's Phytochemical and Ethnobotanical Databases.

Bibliography

Article DOI: 10.1086/668790

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