Lamium Explained
Lamium (dead-nettles) is a genus of about 30 species of flowering plants in the family Lamiaceae,[1] of which it is the type genus. They are all herbaceous plants native to Europe, Asia, and northern Africa, but several have become very successful weeds of crop fields and are now widely naturalised across much of the temperate world.[2] [3]
Description
The genus includes both annual and perennial species; they spread by both seeds and stems rooting as they grow along the ground. They have square stems[4] and coarsely textured pairs of leaves, often with striking patterns or variegation. They produce double-lipped flowers in a wide range of colours.
Taxonomy
, Plants of the World Online accepted the following species:
- Lamium album L. – (white dead-nettle) – widespread across Europe + northern Asia from Spain + Norway to Japan + Kamchatka; naturalised in New Zealand + North America
- Lamium amplexicaule L. – (henbit dead-nettle) – widespread across Europe and northern Asia from Spain + Norway to Japan + Kamchatka, as well as North Africa, Ethiopia, Azores, Madeira, Canary Islands; naturalised in New Zealand, Hawaii, South America + North America
- Lamium bakhtiaricum Jamzad – Iran
- Lamium bifidum Cirillo – Mediterranean from Portugal to Romania
- Lamium bilgilii Celep – Turkey
- Lamium cappadocicum Celep & Karaer – Turkey
- Lamium caucasicum Grossh. – Caucasus (southern European Russia, Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan)
- Lamium confertum Fr. – (northern dead-nettle) – northern Europe from Ireland to northern Russia; naturalised in Greenland + Iceland
- Lamium coutinhoi J.G.García – Portugal
- Lamium cyrneum Paradis – Corsica
- Lamium demirizii A.P.Khokhr. – Turkey
- Lamium eriocephalum Benth. – Turkey
- Lamium flexuosum Ten. – Spain, France, Italy, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia
- Lamium galactophyllum Boiss. & Reut. – Turkey
- Lamium galeobdolon (L.) L. – (yellow archangel) – northern + central Europe and western Asia from Spain + Denmark east to Iran + Western Siberia; naturalised in North America, New Zealand, Madeira
- Lamium garganicum L. – Mediterranean + western Asia from Portugal to Kazakhstan + Saudi Arabia
- Lamium gevorense (Gómez Hern.) Gómez Hern. & A.Pujadas – Spain, Portugal, Corsica
- Lamium glaberrimum (K.Koch) Taliev – Crimea
- Lamium × holsaticum Prahl – central Europe (L. album × L. maculatum)
- Lamium hybridum Vill. – (cut-leaved dead-nettle) – Europe, Macaronesia, North Africa
- Lamium macrodon Boiss. & A.Huet – Turkey, Caucasus, Syria, Iran, Iraq
- Lamium maculatum (L.) L. – (spotted dead-nettle) – Europe + Middle East from Portugal to Turkey; also Gansu + Xinjiang Provinces of western China
- Lamium moschatum Mill. – eastern Mediterranean (Greece, Turkey, Syria, Palestine, Cyprus)
- Lamium multifidum L. – Turkey, Caucasus
- Lamium orientale (Fisch. & C.A.Mey.) E.H.L.Krause – Turkey, Syria, Palestine
- Lamium orvala L. – Austria, Italy, Hungary, Slovenia
- Lamium purpureum L. (red dead-nettle) – northern + central Europe and western Asia from Spain + Denmark east to Caucasus + Siberia; naturalised in Korea, Taiwan, North America, New Zealand, Argentina, Falkland Islands
- Lamium taiwanense S.S.Ying – Taiwan
- Lamium × schroeteri Gams – France, Switzerland, Hungary
- Lamium tomentosum Willd. – Turkey, Caucasus, Iran, Iraq
- Lamium tschorochense A.P.Khokhr. – Turkey
- Lamium vreemanii A.P.Khokhr. – Turkey
Several closely related genera were formerly included in Lamium by some botanists, including Galeopsis (hemp-nettles) and Leonurus (motherworts).
Etymology
The generic name Lamium was used by Pliny the Elder in the first century AD. The name comes from the Greek laimos, which means "gullet", a reference to the gaping throat-like appearance of the corolla.[5]
The common name "dead-nettle" has been derived from the German Taubnessel ("deaf nettle", or "nettle without a kernel"),[6] and refers to the resemblance of Lamium album[7] to the very distantly related stinging nettles, but unlike those, they do not have stinging hairs and so are harmless or apparently "dead".
Cultivation
Lamium species are widely cultivated as groundcover, and numerous cultivars have been selected for garden use.[8] They are frost hardy and grow well in most soils. Flower colour determines planting season and light requirement: white- and purple-coloured flowered species are planted in spring and prefer full sun. The yellow-flowered ones are planted in fall (autumn) and prefer shade. They often have invasive habits and need plenty of room.
Ecology
Lamium species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including angle shades, setaceous Hebrew character and the Coleophora case-bearers C. ballotella, C. lineolea and C. ochripennella.
Bibliography
- DeFelice . Michael S. . Henbit and the Deadnettles, Lamium spp.: Archangels or Demons? . Weed Technology . 2005 . 19 . 3 . 768–774 . 10.1614/WT-05-072.1 . 3989505.
- Book: Gledhill . David . The Names of Plants . 2008 . 4th . Cambridge University Press . 978-0-521-86645-3.
Notes and References
- Web site: Lamium L..
- http://luirig.altervista.org/flora/taxa/floraspecie.php?genere=Lamium Altervista Flora Italiana, Genere Lamium
- http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=117535 Flora of China Vol. 17 Page 157 野芝麻属 ye zhi ma shu Lamium Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 2: 579. 1753.
- Parnell, J. and Curtis, T. 2012. Webb's An Irish Flora. p. 355. Cork University Press.
- Web site: Lamium galeobdolon . Missouri Botanical Garden . 29 March 2024.
- Wedgwood. Hensleigh. Hensleigh Wedgwood. On False Etymologies. Transactions of the Philological Society. 1855. 6. 70.
- Brown. V. K.. Lawton, J. H. . Grubb, P. J. . Herbivory and the Evolution of Leaf Size and Shape [and Discussion]. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 29 August 1991. 333. 1267. 265–272. 10.1098/rstb.1991.0076. ... appearance of vegetative plants of white dead-nettles (Lamium album) (Labiatae) bear a close resemblance to stinging nettles (Urtica dioica) (Urticaceae). Stinging hairs deter soft-muzzled, grazing mammals, suggesting that dead-nettles are harmless Batesian mimics. However, many other labiates that do not closely mimic nettles have ovate leaves with serrate margins, so if this is a case of true mimicry, it may have involved rather little modification in leaf shape. ....
- Book: RHS A-Z encyclopedia of garden plants. 2008. Dorling Kindersley. United Kingdom. 978-1405332965. 1136.