Bryonia

Bryonia
For the Royal Navy ships, see HMS Bryony.
Bryonia
Red Bryony (B. dioica)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Rosids
Order: Cucurbitales
Family: Cucurbitaceae
Subfamily: Cucurbitoideae
Tribe: Benincaseae
Subtribe: Benincasinae
Genus: Bryonia
L.
Diversity
12 species

Bryonia is a genus of flowering plant in the cucumber family. Bryony (play /ˈbr.əni/) is its most well-known common name. They are native to western Eurasia and adjacent regions, such as North Africa, the Canary Islands and South Asia.

Male flower of White Bryony (B. alba)

Contents

Description and ecology

Bryonies are perennial, tendril-climbing, diclinous or dioecious herbs with palmately lobed leaves and flowers in axillary clusters. The fruit is a smooth, globular berry.

The only English species, B. dioica (White Bryony), grows in hedgerows as far north as Yorkshire.

Bryonia is used as a food plant by the larvae of some Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths), including the tortrix moth Phtheochroa rugosana (recorded on Red Bryony, B. dioica) and the Cabbage Moth (Mamestra brassicae).

Use by humans

Bryonies are occasionally grown in gardens, sometimes accidentally, sometimes deliberately so. Some species find use in herbal medicine. Generally however, these plants are poisonous, some highly so, and may be fatal if ingested.

Variants of the plants' name, such as Briony, Bryonie and Bryony, are used in some cultures as female given names. They were quite popular in the 18th century.

The Royal Navy named two ships HMS Bryony after the plant.

Species

The toxic berries of Red Bryony (B. dioica)

Twelve species are presently accepted by the USDA:[1] Ten of these are supported in a molecular-phylogenetic analysis: [2]

  • Bryonia acuta Desf. (formerly sometimes included in B. cretica)
  • Bryonia alba L. – White Bryony
  • Bryonia aspera Steven ex Ledeb.
  • Bryonia cretica L. – Cretan Bryony
  • Bryonia dioica Jacq. – White or Red Bryony (formerly sometimes included in B. cretica)
  • Bryonia lappifolia Vassilcz.
  • Bryonia marmorata E.M.A.Petit
  • Bryonia melanocarpa Nabiev
  • Bryonia monoica Aitch. & Hemsl.
  • Bryonia multiflora Boiss. & Heldr.
  • Bryonia syriaca Boiss.
  • Bryonia verrucosa Aiton

Formerly placed here

  • Many species of Cayaponia ("American bryonies")
  • Several species of Cucumis, Solena and Zehneria
  • Coccinia abyssinica
  • Corallocarpus epigaeus
  • Diplocyclos palmatus
  • Kedrostis africana
  • Melothria pendula (as B. guadalupensis)
  • Trichosanthes ovigera (as B. cucumeroides)

See also

  • Black Bryony (Dioscorea communis), an unrelated but similar-looking plant of the Dioscoreaceae [3]
  • Bryonopsis (meaning "looks like bryony"), a now-invalid genus currently assigned to close (Diplocyclos) and somewhat more distant (Kedrostis) relatives of Bryonia

Footnotes

  1. ^ USDA (2009)
  2. ^ Volz and Renner (2009)
  3. ^ Renner et al. (2008)

References

  • United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) (2009): Germplasm Resources Information NetworkBryonia. Version of 2009-MAY-15. Retrieved 2010-APR-15.
  • Volz, S. M., and S. S. Renner (Volz and Renner) 2009. Phylogeography of the ancient Eurasian medicinal plant genus Bryonia (Cucurbitaceae) inferred from nuclear and chloroplast sequences. Taxon 58(2): 550-560.
  • Renner S. S., Scarborough J., Schaefer H., Paris H.S., and J. Janick. (Renner et al. (2008) Dioscorides’s bruonia melaina is Bryonia alba, not Tamus communis, and an illustration labeled bruonia melaina in the Codex Vindobonensis is Humulus lupulus not Bryonia dioica. Pp. 273-280 in Pitrat, M., ed., Cucurbitaceae 2008, https://w3.avignon.inra.fr/dspace/handle/2174/218

External links


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Bryonia — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda ? Bryonia Bryonia alba Clasificació …   Wikipedia Español

  • Bryonia — Bryonia …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bryonĭa — L. (Zaunrübe), Gattung der Kukurbitazeen, kletternde Kräuter mit einjährigen Trieben. fünfeckigen oder drei bis fünflappigen Blättern, rübenartigem Wurzelstock, kleinen gelblichen Blüten in Trauben oder Büscheln und kleinen, saftigen Beeren. Von… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Bryonia — Bryonĭa L., Zaun oder Gichtrübe, Pflanzengattg. der Kukurbitazeen, rankende Pflanzen mit handförmig gelappten Blättern. In Deutschland: B. alba L., einhäusig, mit schwarzen Beeren (Hundskirschen), B. dioĭca Jacq. [Abb. 285], zweihäusig, mit roten …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Bryonia — Zaunrübe Bryonia dioica, Zeichnung aus Deutschlands Flora in Abbildungen von Johann Georg Sturm Systematik …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Bryonia — Bryonia …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Bryonia — brienė statusas T sritis vardynas apibrėžtis Moliūginių (Cucurbitaceae) šeimos augalų gentis (Bryonia). atitikmenys: lot. Bryonia angl. bryony vok. Zaunrübe rus. бриония; переступень lenk. przestęp …   Dekoratyvinių augalų vardynas

  • bryonia — brīˈōnēə noun Etymology: New Latin, from Latin, bryony, from Greek bryōnia, bryōonē; akin to bryon moss more at bry 1. capitalized : a s …   Useful english dictionary

  • Bryonia — Hierba trepadora perenne con zarcillos, de la familia de las Cucurbitaceas. De hojas palmadas y lobuladas. Las flores nacen arracimadas en las axilas de los tallos. Los frutos son lisas bayas globulares. NUEZA (Bryonia dioica) Su jugo aplicado… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • bryonia — bry·o·nia brī ō nē ə n 1) cap a small genus of perennial Old World tendril bearing vines (family Cucurbitaceae) with red or black fruit see BRYONY 2) the dried root of a bryony (Bryonia alba or B. dioica) used as a cathartic * * * Bry·o·nia (bri… …   Medical dictionary

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