WO Rik & Mon's
Nature.Guide

Addersmeat

Stellaria holostea
Carnation family (Caryophyllaceae)


(all credits and rights of the Wikipedia source apply)

Rabelera holostea, known as greater stitchwort, greater starwort, and addersmeat, is a perennial herbaceous flowering plant in the family Caryophyllaceae. It was formerly placed in the genus Stellaria, as Stellaria holostea, but was transferred to the genus Rabelera in 2019 based on phylogenetic analyses. It is the only species in the genus Rabelera. Greater stitchwort is native to Western and Central Europe, including the British Isles.

Greater stichwort can be found in woodlands, edges, and open fields and is sometimes grown in gardens.

Description

Greater stitchwort can grow up to 60 cm (24 in) in height, with roughly 4-angled stems. The long, narrow (lanceolate) leaves are greyish green, hairless, sessile, opposite, and decussate (the successive pairs borne at right angles to each other).: 460 : 90 

The flowers are white, 2–3 cm (0.79–1.18 in) across, with five petals split to about halfway the length of the petal. The sepals are much shorter than the petals.

Taxonomy

Etymology

The specific epithet holostea comes from the Greek holosteon, meaning 'entire bone'; a reference to the brittleness of the weak stems of this plant.

Common names

The common name stitchwort is a reference to a herbal remedy in which this plant is used allegedly to cure side stitch, which afflicts many people when they try to run without stretching first. Other common names for Rabelera holostea include: daddy's-shirt-buttons, poor-man's buttonhole, brassy buttons, wedding cakes, star-of-Bethlehem, and snapdragon. Many of these names are in reference to the stems, which easily break.

References


Where?

Family(10)

WWW info


Continu searching
Size Shape Colour Ranging
Size  Middle      Shape  Roset       Colour Ranging  Branched
Middle Roset Branched
0 LookAlikes (LA):
Addersmeat
Grote muur
Große Sternmiere
Langue d'oiseau
Stellaria holostea [L.]
Estrellada
Stellaria holostea [L.]



Set ecozone (biogeographic region)
select a region
© Copyright Nature.Guide The Netherlands 2024 by RikenMon unless otherwise noted.