Cruciata laevipes

crosswort
smooth bedstraw
Cruciata laevipes
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Gentianales
Family: Rubiaceae
Genus: Cruciata
Species: C. laevipes
Binomial name
Cruciata laevipes
Opiz
Synonyms[1]
  • Valantia cruciata L.
  • Galium cruciata (L.) Scop.
  • Galium cruciata var. laevipes (Opiz) W.D.J.Koch
  • Rubia cruciata (L.) Baill.
  • Valantia hirsuta Gilib.
  • Aparine latifolia Moench
  • Galium valantia G.Gaertn., B.Mey. & Scherb.
  • Valantia ciliata Opiz ex J.Presl & C.Presl
  • Galium glabrifolium Rochel
  • Galium cruciata var. mucronata Peterm.
  • Cruciata ciliata Opiz
  • Cruciata hirsuta Fourr.
  • Galium luteocruciatum St.-Lag.
  • Valantia crucialis Bubani

Cruciata laevipes is a species of flowering plant in the Rubiaceae family. It is commonly known as crosswort, smooth bedstraw or Luc na croise in Gaelic.[2] The Latin epithet laevipes refers to the smooth stalk.

Description

This perennial sprawling plant can grow to a height of 15–70 cm, spreads by seeds and stolons and has, unusually amongst this group, yellow hermaphrodite flowers. The inner flowers are male and soon fall off, whilst the outer are bisexual and produce the fruit. The flowers smell of honey. Of the whorls of four leaves, only two in each group are real leaves, the other two being stipules.[3] It is associated with arbuscular mycorrhiza that penetrate the cortical cells of the roots.

Distribution and habitat

Cruciata laevipes is found in most of Europe as well as from northern Turkey, Iran, the Caucasus, and the western Himalayas.[1] It is also reportedly naturalized in Ontario County in New York State.[4] Cruciata laevipes is found in meadows, road verges, riverbanks, scrub and open woodland, generally on well-drained calcareous soils.[5]

Uses

Cruciata laevipes is little used in herbal medicine today, but it was once recommended as a remedy for rupture, rheumatism and dropsy.[6] Bald's Leechbook recommended crosswort as a cure for headaches.[7] In Romanian folklore, it is called sânziana and it is linked to the Sânziene fairies and their festival on June 24.

References

  1. 1 2 Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families Cruciata laevipes
  2. ITIS Report
  3. Hutchinson, John (1955). British Wild Flowers. Harmondsworth : Penguin. V. 1. p. 211.
  4. Biota of North America Program, Cruciata laevipes
  5. The Flora of Derbyshire
  6. Medicinal plants
  7. Robert Lacey and Danny Danziger August:The Year 1000: What Life Was Like at the Turn of the First Millennium Little, Brown, 2000 ISBN 0-316-51157-9
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