Nigella damascena explained

Nigella damascena, love-in-a-mist, or devil in the bush, is an annual garden flowering plant, belonging to the buttercup family Ranunculaceae. It is native to southern Europe (but adventive in more northern countries of Europe), north Africa and southwest Asia, where it is found on neglected, damp patches of land.

The specific epithet damascena relates to Damascus in Syria.[1] The plant's common name "love-in-a-mist" comes from the flower being nestled in a ring of multifid, lacy bracts.

Description

It grows to 20- tall, with pinnately divided, thread-like, alternate leaves. The flowers, blooming in early summer, are most commonly different shades of blue, but can be white, pink, or pale purple, with 5 to 25 sepals. The actual petals are located at the base of the stamens and are minute and clawed. The sepals are the only colored part of the perianth. The four to five carpels of the compound pistil have each an erect style.[2]

The fruit is a large and inflated capsule, growing from a compound ovary, and is composed of several united follicles, each containing numerous seeds. This is rather exceptional for a member of the buttercup family. The capsule becomes brown in late summer. The plant self-seeds, growing on the same spot year after year.[3]

Cultivation

This easily grown plant has been a familiar subject in English cottage gardens since Elizabethan times, admired for its ferny foliage, spiky flowers and bulbous seed-heads. It is now widely cultivated throughout the temperate world, and numerous cultivars have been developed for garden use. 'Persian Jewels' is a mixture of white, pink, lavender and blue flowers. 'Persian Rose' is pale pink. Other cultivars are 'Albion', 'Blue Midget', 'Cambridge Blue', 'Mulberry Rose', and 'Oxford Blue'. 'Dwarf Moody Blue' is around 15cm (06inches) high. The pale blue ‘Miss Jekyll’[4] and the double white-flowered 'Miss Jekyll Alba' have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[5] [6]

Related species

The related Nigella sativa (and not N. damascena) is the source of the spice variously known as nigella, kalonji or black cumin.

Alkaloids

Damascenine is a toxic alkaloid found in Nigella damascena seed.[7]

However, an in vivo study in mice and in vitro assessment on human cell lines has not shown any toxicity.[8]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Harrison, Lorraine. RHS Latin for gardeners. 2012. Mitchell Beazley. United Kingdom. 9781845337315. 224.
  2. Book: Brickell . Christopher . The Royal Horticultural Society A-Z Encyclopedia of Garden Plants . 2008 . 726 . Dorling Kindersley . United Kingdom . 9781405332965.
  3. Web site: Nigella damascena . Encyclopedia of Life . 13 April 2018.
  4. Web site: RHS Plantfinder - Nigella damascena 'Miss Jekyll' . 13 April 2018.
  5. Web site: RHS Plant Selector - Nigella damascena 'Miss Jekyll Alba'. 23 February 2020.
  6. Web site: AGM Plants - Ornamental . July 2017 . 69 . Royal Horticultural Society . 13 April 2018.
  7. Margout. Delphine. Kelly. Mary T.. Meunier. Sylvie. Auinger. Doris. Pelissier. Yves. Larroque. Michel. Morphological, microscopic and chemical comparison between Nigella sativa L. cv (black cumin) and Nigella damascena L. cv. Journal of Food, Agriculture and Environment. 2013. 11. 1. 132–138.
  8. Damascenine induced hepatotoxicity and nephrotoxicity in mice and in vitro assessed human erythrocyte toxicity. Yacine. Bouguezza. Bachra. Khettal. Lydia. Tir. Souad. Boudrioua. September 2, 2015. Interdisciplinary Toxicology. 8. 3. 118–124. 10.1515/intox-2015-0018. 27486370. 4961907.