Asarum

Asarum
Asarum caudatum (western wild ginger)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Magnoliids
Order: Piperales
Family: Aristolochiaceae
Genus: Asarum
L.
Species
See text

Asarum is a genus of plants in the birthwort family Aristolochiaceae, commonly known as wild ginger.

Asarum is the genitive plural of the Latin āsa (an alternate form of āra) meaning altar or sanctuary.

Description

Asarum is a genus of low-growing herbs distributed across the temperate zones of the Northern Hemisphere, with most species in East Asia (China, Japan, and Vietnam) and North America, and one species in Europe. Biogeographically, Asarum originated in Asia.

They have characteristic kidney-shaped leaves, growing from creeping rhizomes, and bear small, axillary, brown or reddish flowers.

The plant is called wild ginger because the rhizome tastes and smells similar to ginger root, but the two are not particularly related. However, the FDA warns against consuming Asarum, as it is nephrotoxic and contains the potent carcinogen aristolochic acid.[1][2] [3] The birthwort family also contains the genus Aristolochia, known for carcinogens.

Wild ginger favors moist, shaded sites with humus-rich soil. The deciduous, heart-shaped leaves are opposite, and borne from the rhizome which lies just under the soil surface. Two leaves emerge each year from the growing tip. The curious jug-shaped flowers, which give the plant an alternate name, little jug, are borne singly in spring between the leaf bases.

Wild ginger can easily be grown in a shade garden, and makes an attractive groundcover.

Taxonomy

Traditionally, the genus Asarum was considered as a single genus with about 85 species. However, a trend exists among botanists to segregate the genus into separate genera, based on considerations of chromosome number and floral morphology :

Study of the internal transcribed spacer region (ITS) of nuclear ribosomal DNA, combined with morphological data, has yielded a better-resolved phylogenetic hypothesis, confirming the distinctiveness of the above-named genera.[4]

However, many botanists still treat these segregated genera as sections of Asarum sensu lato, especially Hexastylis.[6]

Species

  • Asarum arifolium
  • Asarum bashanense
  • Asarum campaniflorum
  • Asarum canadense
  • Asarum caudatum
  • Asarum caudigerellum
  • Asarum caudigerum
  • Asarum caulescens
  • Asarum chengkouense
  • Asarum chinensis
  • Asarum controversum
  • Asarum crassisepalum
  • Asarum crassum
  • Asarum crispulatum
  • Asarum debile
  • Asarum delavayi
  • Asarum dimidiatum (synonym of Asiasarum dimidiatum)
  • Asarum epigynum (synonym of Geotaenium epigynum)
  • Asarum europaeum
  • Asarum forbesii (synonym of Heterotropa forbesii)
  • Asarum fukienense
  • Asarum geophilum (synonym of Geotaenium geophilum)
  • Asarum gusuk
  • Asarum hartwegii
  • Asarum hayatanum
  • Asarum heterotropioides (synonym of Asiasarum heterotropiodes)
  • Asarum himalaicum
  • Asarum hongkongense
  • Asarum hypogynum
  • Asarum ichangense
  • Asarum inflatum
  • Asarum insignis
  • Asarum kooyanum
  • Asarum lemmonii
  • Asarum leptophyllum
  • Asarum longerhizomatosum
  • Asarum macranthum
  • Asarum magnificum
  • Asarum majale
  • Asarum marmoratum
  • Asarum maruyamae
  • Asarum maximum
  • Asarum mikuniense
  • Asarum mitoanum
  • Asarum nanchuanense
  • Asarum nobilissimum
  • Asarum petelotii
  • Asarum porphyronotum
  • Asarum pulchellum
  • Asarum renicordatum
  • Asarum sagittarioides
  • Asarum senkakuinsulare
  • Asarum sieboldii (synonym of Asiasarum sieboldii)
  • Asarum splendens
  • Asarum taipingshanianum
  • Asarum tohokuense
  • Asarum tongjiangense
  • Asarum wagneri
  • Asarum wulingense
  • Asarum yunnanense (synonym of Geotaenium yunnanse)


References

  1. Schaneberg BT, Applequist WL, Khan IA (October 2002). "Determination of aristolochic acid I and II in North American species of Asarum and Aristolochia". Pharmazie. 57 (10): 686–9. PMID 12426949.
  2. "Aristolochic Acid: FDA Warns Consumers to Discontinue Use of Botanical Products that Contain Aristolochic Acid". U.S. Food and Drug Administration. April 11, 2001.
  3. Health Canada advising not to use products labelled to contain Aristolochia Archived February 16, 2006, at the Wayback Machine..
  4. H.L. Blomquist (1957). "A revision of Hexastylis of North America". Brittonia. 8 (4): 255–281. doi:10.2307/2804978. JSTOR 2804978.
  5. "Hexastylis". USDA - GRIN. 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-14.

External links

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