Limonium binervosum

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Rock Sea Lavender
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Core eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Plumbaginaceae
Genus: Limonium
Species: L. binervosum
Binomial name
Limonium binervosum

Limonium binervosum, commonly known as the Rock Sea Lavender, is an aggregate species in the family Plumbaginaceae.

Despite the common name, Rock Sea Lavender is not related to the lavenders or to rosemary but is a perennial herb with small violet-blue flowers with five petals in clusters.[1]

Eight Rock Sea Lavenders are endemic to Britain and Guernsey[2] and the taxonomy was reviewed in 1986 to include a range of subspecies.[3]

Growing 10–70 cm tall from a rhizome, Limonium binervosum flourishes in saline soils, so are therefore common near the western coasts and in salt marshes, and also on saline, gypsum and alkaline soils such as found on Flat Holm island in Wales, UK

Subspecies

Limonium binervosum on Flat Holm island UK
  • Limonium binervosum subsp. anglicum
  • Limonium binervosum subsp. cantianum
  • Limonium binervosum subsp. saxonicum
  • Limonium britanicum subsp. britanicum
  • Limonium britanicum subsp. combense
  • Limonium binervosum subsp. pseudotranswallianum
  • Limonium dodartiforme
  • Limonium loganicum
  • Limonium recurvum

References

  1. Barnes, Richard (1979). Coasts and Estuaries. Hodder & Stoughton Ltd. pp. 92–93. 
  2. http://web.guernsey.net/~cdavid/botany/files/limonium%20binervosum/index.html Guernsey web site accessed 2008-05-03
  3. http://www.wirral.gov.uk/LGCL/100006/200029/745/content_0000643.html Wirral web site accessed 2008-05-03

External links

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