Scorzonera
| Scorzonera | |
|---|---|
 ![]()  | |
| Scorzonera purpurea | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae | 
| (unranked): | Angiosperms | 
| (unranked): | Eudicots | 
| (unranked): | Asterids | 
| Order: | Asterales | 
| Family: | Asteraceae | 
| Tribe: | Cichorieae[1] | 
| Genus: |  Scorzonera L.  | 
| Synonyms[1] | |
  | |
Scorzonera is a genus of flowering plants in the dandelion tribe within the daisy family. [2][3]
They are distributed in Europe, Asia,[3] and Africa.[4] Its center of diversity is in the Mediterranean.[5] Well-known species include the edible black salsify (Scorzonera hispanica). Scorzonera tau-saghyz is a source of natural rubber.[6][7][8]
Scorzonera is recorded as a food plant for the larva of the Nutmeg, a species of moth.
- Scorzonera acanthoclada
 - Scorzonera acantholimon
 - Scorzonera acuminata
 - Scorzonera adilii
 - Scorzonera affinis
 - Scorzonera alaica
 - Scorzonera alba
 - Scorzonera albertoregelia
 - Scorzonera albicans
 - Scorzonera albicaulis
 - Scorzonera amasiana
 - Scorzonera angustifolia
 - Scorzonera aragatzi
 - Scorzonera araneosa
 - Scorzonera argyrea
 - Scorzonera aristata
 - Scorzonera aucheriana
 - Scorzonera austriaca
 - Scorzonera baetica
 - Scorzonera baldshuanica
 - Scorzonera biebersteinii
 - Scorzonera boissieri
 - Scorzonera bracteosa
 - Scorzonera bungei
 - Scorzonera bupleurifolia
 - Scorzonera bupleuroides
 - Scorzonera caespitosa
 - Scorzonera callosa
 - Scorzonera calyculata
 - Scorzonera capito
 - Scorzonera chantavica
 - Scorzonera charadzeae
 - Scorzonera cinerea
 - Scorzonera circumflexa
 - Scorzonera codringtonii
 - Scorzonera communis
 - Scorzonera crassifolia
 - Scorzonera cretica
 - Scorzonera crispa
 - Scorzonera crocifolia
 - Scorzonera czerepanovii
 - Scorzonera darreana
 - Scorzonera davisii
 - Scorzonera divaricata
 - Scorzonera doriae
 - Scorzonera drarii
 - Scorzonera dzhawakhetica
 - Scorzonera elata
 - Scorzonera elongata
 - Scorzonera ensifolia
 - Scorzonera eriophora
 - Scorzonera euphratica
 - Scorzonera fengtiensis
 - Scorzonera ferganica
 - Scorzonera filifolia
 - Scorzonera flaccida
 - Scorzonera franchetii
 - Scorzonera gageoides
 - Scorzonera glabra
 - Scorzonera gorovanica
 - Scorzonera gracilis
 - Scorzonera graminifolia
 - Scorzonera grubovii
 - Scorzonera helodes
 - Scorzonera hieraciifolia
 - Scorzonera hispanica – black salsify, Spanish salsify, viper's-grass, black oyster plant
 - Scorzonera hispida
 - Scorzonera hissarica
 - Scorzonera hondae
 - Scorzonera hotanica
 - Scorzonera humifusa
 - Scorzonera humilis – viper's grass
 - Scorzonera ikonnikovii
 - Scorzonera iliensis
 - Scorzonera inaequiscapa
 - Scorzonera incisa
 - Scorzonera inconspicua
 - Scorzonera intricata
 - Scorzonera isophylla
 - Scorzonera ispahanica
 - Scorzonera joharchii
 - Scorzonera kandavanica
 - Scorzonera karabelensis[10]
 - Scorzonera karataviensis
 - Scorzonera ketzkhovelii
 - Scorzonera ketzkhowelii
 - Scorzonera koelpinioides
 - Scorzonera kotschyi
 - Scorzonera kozlowskyi
 - Scorzonera kuhistanica
 - Scorzonera lacera
 - Scorzonera laciniata
 - Scorzonera lamellata
 - Scorzonera lanata
 - Scorzonera lasiocarpa
 - Scorzonera latifolia
 - Scorzonera leptophylla
 - Scorzonera libanotica
 - Scorzonera limnophila
 - Scorzonera lindbergii
 - Scorzonera lipskyi
 - Scorzonera litwinowii
 - Scorzonera longiana
 - Scorzonera longifolia
 - Scorzonera longipapposa
 - Scorzonera luntaiensis
 - Scorzonera luristanica
 - Scorzonera mackmeliana
 - Scorzonera manshurica
 - Scorzonera mariovoensis
 - Scorzonera microcalathia
 - Scorzonera mirabilis
 - Scorzonera mollis
 - Scorzonera mongolica
 - Scorzonera mucida
 - Scorzonera multifida
 - Scorzonera muriculata
 - Scorzonera musili
 - Scorzonera nivalis
 - Scorzonera ovata
 - Scorzonera pachycephala
 - Scorzonera pamirica
 - Scorzonera papposa
 - Scorzonera paradoxa
 - Scorzonera parviflora
 - Scorzonera persepolitana
 - Scorzonera persica
 - Scorzonera petrovii
 - Scorzonera phaeopappa
 - Scorzonera pisidica
 - Scorzonera polyclada
 - Scorzonera praetuberosa
 - Scorzonera pratorum
 - Scorzonera pseudodivaricata
 - Scorzonera psychrophila
 - Scorzonera pubescens
 - Scorzonera pulchra
 - Scorzonera pygmaea
 - Scorzonera racemosa
 - Scorzonera raddeana
 - Scorzonera radians
 - Scorzonera radiata
 - Scorzonera ramosissima
 - Scorzonera rawii
 - Scorzonera renzii
 - Scorzonera reverchonii
 - Scorzonera rigida
 - Scorzonera rugulosa
 - Scorzonera rumicifolia
 - Scorzonera rupicola
 - Scorzonera safievii
 - Scorzonera sahnea
 - Scorzonera sandrasica
 - Scorzonera schweinfurthii
 - Scorzonera scopariiformis
 - Scorzonera scyria
 - Scorzonera seidlitzii
 - Scorzonera semicana
 - Scorzonera sericea
 - Scorzonera sericeo-lanata
 - Scorzonera serpentinica
 - Scorzonera sinensis
 - Scorzonera stenocephala
 - Scorzonera stricta
 - Scorzonera subacaulis
 - Scorzonera subaphylla
 - Scorzonera suberosa
 - Scorzonera sublanata
 - Scorzonera syriaca
 - Scorzonera tadshikorum
 - Scorzonera tau-saghyz
 - Scorzonera tenax
 - Scorzonera tenuisecta
 - Scorzonera tianshanensis
 - Scorzonera tomentosa
 - Scorzonera tortuosissima
 - Scorzonera tragapogonoides
 - Scorzonera transiliensis
 - Scorzonera troodea
 - Scorzonera tuberculata
 - Scorzonera tuberosa
 - Scorzonera tunicata
 - Scorzonera turkestania
 - Scorzonera ulrichii
 - Scorzonera undulata
 - Scorzonera usbekistanica
 - Scorzonera veratrifolia
 - Scorzonera veresczaginii
 - Scorzonera verrucosa
 - Scorzonera villosa
 - Scorzonera violacea
 - Scorzonera virgata
 - Scorzonera wendelboi
 - Scorzonera woronowii
 - Scorzonera xylobasis
 - Scorzonera yemensis
 - Scorzonera yildirimlii[4]
 
- formerly included
 
species once considered members of Scorzonera but now regarded as better suited to other genera: Avellara Crepis Epilasia Hymenonema Hypochaeris Lactuca Lasiospora Launaea Leontodon Microseris Podospermum Pterachaenia Pyrrhopappus Reichardia Scorzoneroides Sonchus Takhtajaniantha Tragopogon
Etymology
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scorzonera. | 
One possible origin of the genus name is the French scorzonère ("viper’s grass").[3]
Secondary metabolites
Some Scorzonera species contain lactones, including the sesquiterpene lactones known as guaianolides.[11] Flavonoids found in Scorzonera include apigenin, kaempferol, luteolin, and quercetin.[12] Other secondary metabolites reported from the genus include caffeoylquinic acids, coumarins, lignans, stilbenoids, and triterpenoids.[13] One unique class of stilbenoid derivative was first isolated from Scorzonera humilis. They were named the tyrolobibenzyls after Tyrol in the eastern Alps, where the plant was collected.[14]
References
- 1 2 3 Flann, C (ed) 2009+ Global Compositae Checklist
 - ↑ Bremer, K. (1994). Asteraceae: Cladistics and Classification. Timber Press, Portland. ISBN 978-0881922752.
 - 1 2 3 Scorzonera. Flora of North America.
 - 1 2 Duran, A. and E. Hamzaoglu. (2004). A new species of Scorzonera (Asteraceae) from South Anatolia, Turkey. Biologia-Bratislava 59(1), 47-50.
 - ↑ Karaer, F. and F. Celep. (2007). Rediscovery of Scorzonera amasiana Hausskn. and Bornm. – A threatened endemic species in Turkey. Bangladesh Journal of Botany 36(2), 139-44.
 - ↑ Buranov, A. U. and B. J. Elmuradov. (2010). Extraction and characterization of latex and natural rubber from rubber-bearing plants. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 58(2), 734-43.
 - ↑ Flora of China Vol. 20-21 Page 198 鸦葱属 ya cong shu Scorzonera Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 2: 790. 1753.
 - ↑ Altervista Flora Italiana, genere Scorzonera includes photos and distribution maps
 - ↑ "The Plant List". Retrieved 22 June 2014.
 - ↑ Parolly, G. and N. Kilian. (2003). Scorzonera karabelensis (Compositae), a new species from SW Anatolia, with a key to the subscapigerous Scorzonera species in Turkey. Willdenowia 33 327-35.
 - ↑ Zidorn, C. (2010). "Sesquiterpene lactones and their precursors as chemosystematic markers in the tribe Cichorieae of the Asteraceae". Phytochemistry (Amsterdam, The Netherlands). 69: 2270–96. doi:10.1016/j.phytochem.2008.06.013. ISSN 0031-9422.
 - ↑ Sareedenchai, V. and C. Zidorn (2010). "Flavonoids as chemosystematic markers in the tribe Cichorieae of the Asteraceae". Biochemical Systematics and Ecology (Amsterdam, The Netherlands). 38: 935–57. doi:10.1016/j.bse.2009.09.006. ISSN 0305-1978.
 - ↑ Jehle, M. et al. (2010). "Natural products from Scorzonera aristata (Asteraceae)". Natural Product Communications (Westerville, OH; USA). 5: 725–27. ISSN 1934-578X.
 - ↑ Zidorn, C. et al. (2000). "Tyrolobibenzyls ‒ Novel secondary metabolites from Scorzonera humilis". Helvetica Chimica Acta (Zürich; Switzerland). 83: 2920–25. ISSN 0018-019X.
 

