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Antirrhinum

 
Annuals Dictionary: Antirrhinum

Snapdragon family
Scrophulariaceae

An-tir-ry'num. About 40 species of hardy, herbaceous perennials or annuals, natives of the northern hemisphere.

Description
Erect or spreading, sometimes covered with short, sticky hairs. Leaves alternate, lance-shaped or ovalish, with heart-shaped base, sometimes bluntly lobed. Flowers solitary or in long terminal racemes, the individual flower growing from the axil of a small, leafy bract, white, yellow, pink, red, or purple. Calyx of 5 sepals. Corolla tubular, pouched, forming a mouth, the upper lip 2-lobed, the lower lip 3-lobed, the lips turning outward. 5 stamens: 4 fertile, 1 sterile, growing inside the corolla tube.

How to Grow
Start seeds indoors. Move seedlings outside when planting bed can be worked. Plant 6-12 in. (15-30 cm) apart in full sun. In long-season areas a fine crop of late fall snaps can be grown from seeds sown in a shaded nursery bed in Aug. or Sept. Prefers cool weather.

Antirrhinum majus
Common Snapdragon ; Toad's-Mouth . To 3 ft. (90 cm) high. Flowers reddish-purple, red, white, yellow, orange, or pink, to 1 in. (4 cm) long, in long terminal racemes. Mediterranean region. Choose a rust-resistant variety. Will survive a slight frost. 'Little Darling', semidwarf form, has pink flowers. Perennial grown as a half-hardy annual.



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Gardener's Dictionary: Antirrhinum
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The botanical name for snapdragon.

WordNet: Antirrhinum
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: a genus of herbs of the family Scrophulariaceae with brightly colored irregular flowers
  Synonym: genus Antirrhinum


Wikipedia: Antirrhinum
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Antirrhinum
Snapdragon
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Plantaginaceae
Genus: Antirrhinum
L.
Species

This list is currently incomplete

Section Antirrhinum
Antirrhinum australe
Antirrhinum barrelieri
Antirrhinum boissieri
Antirrhinum braun-blanquetii
Antirrhinum charidemi
Antirrhinum graniticum
Antirrhinum grosii
Antirrhinum hispanicum
Antirrhinum latifolium
Antirrhinum lopesianum
Antirrhinum majus
Antirrhinum meonanthum
Antirrhinum microphyllum
Antirrhinum molle
Antirrhinum onubensis
Antirrhinum pertegasii
Antirrhinum pulverulentum
Antirrhinum rupestre
Antirrhinum sempervirens
Antirrhinum siculum
Antirrhinum spurium
Antirrhinum valentinum
Section Orontium
Antirrhinum calycinum
Antirrhinum orontium
Section Saerorhinum
Antirrhinum breviflorum
Antirrhinum confertiflorum
Antirrhinum cornutum
Antirrhinum costatum
Antirrhinum coulterianum
Antirrhinum fernandezcasasii
Antirrhinum filipes
Antirrhinum kelloggii
Antirrhinum kingii
Antirrhinum leptaleum
Antirrhinum multiflorum
Antirrhinum nuttalianum
Antirrhinum ovatum
Antirrhinum subcordatum
Antirrhinum vexillo-calyculatum
Antirrhinum virga
Antirrhinum watsonii

Antirrhinum is a genus of plants commonly known as snapdragons from the flowers' fancied resemblance to the face of a dragon that opens and closes its mouth when laterally squeezed (thus the 'snap'). The antirrhinums used to be treated as the family Scrophulariaceae, but studies of DNA sequences have led to the inclusion of Antirrhinum in a vastly enlarged family Plantaginaceae.

Contents

Taxonicky

The taxonomy of this genus is disputed at present. At one extreme, ITIS recognises only the Old World species of sect. Antirrhinum in the genus, listing only the Garden Snapdragon A. majus (the only species in the section naturalised in North America). At the other, Thompson (1988) places 36 species in the genus; many modern botanists accept this circumscription. New species also continue to be discovered (see e.g. Romo et al., 1995).

Recent research in the molecular systematics of this group, and related species, by Oyama and Baum (2004), has confirmed that the genus as described by Thompson is monophyletic, provided that one species (A. cyathiferum) is removed to a separate genus, and two others (previously listed as Mohavea confertiflora and M. breviflora) are included. The species list at the right follows these conclusions. It is widely agreed that this broad group should be subdivided into three or four subgroups, but the level at which this should be done, and exactly which species should be grouped together, remain unclear. Some authors continue to follow Thompson in using a large genus Antirrhinum, which is then divided into several sections; others treat Thompson's genus as a tribe or subtribe, and divide it into several genera.

If the broad circumscription is accepted, its sections are as follows:

  • Section Antirrhinum: about 20 Old World species of perennial plants, the type Antirrhinum majus, mostly native to the western Mediterranean region with a focus on the Iberian Peninsula.
  • Section Orontium: two to six species, also Mediterranean. The species in this section, including the type Lesser Snapdragon A. orontium, are often treated in the genus Misopates.
  • Section Saerorhinum: about 16 New World species, mostly annual plants and mostly native to California, though species are found from Oregon to Baja California Sur and as far east as Utah. Like other authors, Thompson placed A. cyathiferum in this section, but Oyama and Baum, following earlier authors, suggest that it should be reclassified in genus Pseudorontium, while Mohavea confertiflora and M. breviflora should be included. Some authors classify the species in this section into the genera Sairocarpus, Howelliella and Neogaerrhinum.

The Garden Snapdragon is an important garden plant; cultivars of this species have showy white, crimson, or yellow bilabiate flowers. It is also important as a model organism in botanical research, and its genome has been studied in detail.

While Antirrhinum majus is the plant that is usually meant if the word "snapdragon" is used on its own, many other species in the genus, and in the family Scrophulariaceae more widely, have common names that include the word "snapdragon".

Growth

Snapdragons are perennial plants often sold as cold-season annual plants and do best in full or partial sun. They are available in a range of heights: dwarf (6-8 inches), medium (15-30 inches) and tall (30-48 inches). Plant them in a soil that drains well to prevent the roots from rotting.

Genetic studies

Snapdragon is a typical example of incomplete dominance by the red allele with the anthocyanin pigment. Any cross between red-flowered and white-flowered snapdragons, give an intermediate and heterozygous phenotype with pink flowers, that carries both the dominant and recessive alleles. [1]

Several species of Antirrhinum are self-incompatible, meaning that a plant cannot be fertilised by its own pollen[2]. Self-incompatibility in the genus has been studied since the early 1900s[2]. Self-incompatibility in Antirrhinum species is controlled gametophytically and shares many important features with self-incompatibility systems in Rosaceae and Solanaceae[3].

The Antirrhinum majus genetic and phenotypic database is located at: http://www.antirrhinum.net [1]

Notes

  1. ^ Hartl, Daniel L.; Elizabeth W. Jones (2005). Genetics : analysis of genes and genomes (sixth edition). Jones & Bartlett publishers. pp. 3.6 Incomplete Dominance and Epistasis. ISBN 0763715115. http://books.google.be/books?id=3E_0H6dEvfQC&dq=Antirrhinum+%22incomplete+dominance%22&source=gbs_summary_s&cad=0. 
  2. ^ a b Xue, Yongbiao; Rosemary Carpenter, Hugh G. Dickinson, Enrico S. Coen (May 1996). "Origin of allelic diversity in Antirrhinum S locus RNases". The Plant Cell (American Society of Plant Physiologists) 8: 805-814. PMID 8672882. 
  3. ^ Takayama, Seiji; Akira Isogai (2005). "Self-incompatibility in plants". Annual Review of Plant Biology (Annual Reviews) 56: 467-489. PMID 15862104. 

References

  • Oyama, R. K., & Baum, D. A. (2004). Phylogenetic relationships of North American Antirrhinum (Veronicaceae). American Journal of Botany 91: 918-925.
  • Romo, A., Stubing, G., & Peris, J. B. (1995). A new species of Antirrhinum (Scrophulariaceae) from North Morocco. Annales Botanici Fennici 32: 165-168.
  • Thompson, D. M. (1988). Systematics of Antirrhinum (Scrophulariaceae) in the New World. Systematic Botany Monographs 22.
  • D. C. Albach, H. M. Meudt and B. Oxelman - Piecing together the "new" Plantaginaceae; American Journal of Botany. 2005;92:297-315.

External links


 
 
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Copyrights:

Annuals Dictionary. Taylor's Guide for Annuals, by Norman Taylor, revised and edited by Gordon P. DeWolf, Jr. Copyright © 1986 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Gardener's Dictionary. Taylor's Dictionary for Gardeners, by Frances Tenenbaum. Copyright © 1997 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Antirrhinum" Read more