Stachys byzantina
Stachys byzantina (syn. S. lanata), the lamb's-ear[2] (lamb's ear)[3] or woolly hedgenettle,[4] is a species of flowering plant in the mint family Lamiaceae, native to Turkey, Armenia, and Iran.[5][6] It is cultivated over much of the temperate world as an ornamental plant, and is naturalised in some locations as an escapee from gardens. Plants are very often found under the synonym Stachys lanata or Stachys olympica.
Lamb's-ear | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Clade: | Asterids |
Order: | Lamiales |
Family: | Lamiaceae |
Genus: | Stachys |
Species: | S. byzantina |
Binomial name | |
Stachys byzantina | |
Synonyms[1] | |
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Lamb's-ear flowers in late spring and early summer; plants produce tall spike-like stems with a few reduced leaves. The flowers are small and light purple. The plants tend to be evergreen but can "die" back during cold winters and regenerate new growth from the crowns.
Description
Lamb's-ears are herbaceous perennials, usually densely covered with gray or silver-white, silky-lanate hairs. They are named lamb's ears because of the leaves' curved shape and white, soft, fur-like hair coating. Flowering stems are erect, often branched, and tend to be 4-angled, growing 40–80 cm tall. The leaves are thick and somewhat wrinkled, densely covered on both sides with gray-silver colored, silky-lanate hairs; the undersides are more silver-white in color than the top surfaces. The leaves are arranged oppositely on the stems and 5 to 10 cm long. The leaf petioles are semiamplexicaul (the bases wrapping halfway around the stem) with the basal leaves having blades oblong-elliptic in shape, measuring 10 cm long and 2.5 cm wide (though variation exists in cultivated forms). The leaf margins are crenulate but covered with dense hairs, the leaf apexes attenuate, gradually narrowing to a rounded point.
Flowers
The flowering spikes are 10–22 cm long, producing verticillasters that each have many flowers and are crowded together over most of the length on the spike-like stem. The leaves produced on the flowering stems are greatly reduced in size and subsessile, the lower ones slightly longer than the interscholastic and the upper ones shorter than the verticillasters. The leaf bracteoles are linear to linear-lanceolate in shape and 6 mm long.
The flowers have no pedicels (sessile) and the calyx is tubular-campanulate in shape, being slightly curved and 1.2 cm long. The calyx is glabrous except for the inside surface of the teeth, having 10 veins with the accessory veins inconspicuous. The 2–3 mm long calyx teeth are ovate-triangular in shape and are subequal or the posterior teeth larger, with rigid apices. The corollas have some darker purple tinted veins inside; they are 1.2 cm long with silky-lanate hairs but bases that are glabrous. The corolla tubes are about 6 mm long with the upper lip ovate in shape with entire margins; the lower lips are subpatent with the middle lobe broadly ovate in shape, lateral lobes oblong. The stamen filaments are densely villous from the base to the middle. The styles are exserted much past the corolla. There are immature nutlets without hairs, brown in color and oblong in shape.[7][8]
Cultivation
Lamb's-ear is a commonly grown plant for children's gardens, as it is easy to grow and the thick felt-like leaves are fun to touch. It is also used as an edging plant. In Brazil it is used as an edible herb, called peixinho-da-horta prepared battered and deep-fried sprinkled with lemon juice and said to taste fish-like. It has sometimes been used as a medicinal plant.
A number of cultivars exist including white flowering forms, plants with shorter habit and plants that do not bloom as much:
- 'Big Ears' - leaves very large, up to 25 cm long.
- 'Cotton Boll' - a sterile cultivar that does not produce flowering stems. Asexually propagated.
- 'Primrose Heron' - leaves yellow in spring; flowers pink
- 'Sheila Macqueen' - sterile; low-growing; leaves large.
- 'Silky Fleece' - grows 25 cm tall with lilac-plum flowers, produce smaller white-woolly foliage. Seed propagated.
- 'Silver Carpet' - sterile; leaves grey. Asexually propagated.
- 'Striped Phantom' - leaves variegated.
Lamb's Ear is quite popular for a multitude of insects and Hummingbirds but in particular bees. One special type of bee known as the Wool Carder Bee collects the fuzz off of the Lamb's-Ears leaves to use for making nests in decayed wood. It has also been documented that bumble bees like to congregate in morning hours to collect water in the form of condensation that collects on the fuzz of the Lamb's-Ears leaves.[9][10]
Antibacterial activity
Stachys byzantina extract has shown antimicrobial activity against Staphylococcus aureus that is resistant to vancomycin.[11]
Gallery
- Foliage
- Young green leaves
- Closeup of a young green fuzzy leaf
- Flower closeup
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Stachys byzantina. |
References
- The Plant List: A Working List of All Plant Species, retrieved 19 November 2015
- "BSBI List 2007". Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland. Archived from the original (xls) on 2015-01-25. Retrieved 2014-10-17.
- "Stachys byzantina". RHS. Retrieved 6 August 2020.
- "Stachys byzantina". Natural Resources Conservation Service PLANTS Database. USDA. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
- Euro+Med Plantbase: Stachys byzantina
- Huxley, A., ed. (1992). New RHS Dictionary of Gardening. Macmillan ISBN 0-333-47494-5.
- Stachys lanata in Flora of China @ efloras.org
- Missouriplants.com
- "A non-threatening water source for bees". Honey Bee Suite. 2017-06-17. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
- Bradbury, Kate (2016-07-29). "Plant lambs' ears and keep wool carder bees happy". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
- Jamshidi M., Gharaei Fathabad E., Eslamifar M.,"Antibacterial activity of some medicinal plants against antibiotics." Planta Medica. Conference: 59th International Congress and Annual Meeting of the Society for Medicinal Plant and Natural Product Research Antalya Turkey. Conference Publication: (var.pagings). 77 (12) , 2011
- Pink, A. (2004). Gardening for the Million. Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.