Difference between revisions of "Scilla"
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+ | {{SPlantbox | ||
+ | |familia=Hyacinthaceae | ||
+ | |genus=Scilla | ||
+ | |common_name=Bluebell, Squill | ||
+ | |habit=bulbous | ||
+ | |habit_ref=Flora - A Gardener's Encyclopedia | ||
+ | |lifespan=perennial | ||
+ | |life_ref=Flora - A Gardener's Encyclopedia | ||
+ | |Temp Metric=°F | ||
+ | |jumpin=If this plant info box on watering; zones; height; etc. is mostly empty you can click on the edit tab and fill in the blanks! | ||
+ | |image=Scilla siberica0.jpg | ||
+ | |image_width=240 | ||
+ | |image_caption=Siberian Squill (''Scilla siberica'') | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | '''''Scilla''''' ({{pron-en|ˈsɪlə}}; '''Squill'''),<ref>''Sunset Western Garden Book,'' 1995:606–607</ref> is a [[genus]] of about 50<ref>[http://americanrecordexpress.com/Key/Plantae/Scilla_Genus.asp ZipcodeZoo]</ref> [[bulb]]-forming [[perennial plant|perennial]] [[herbaceous plant|herbs]] in the [[Hyacinthaceae|hyacinth family]] native to woodlands, subalpine meadows, and seashores throughout [[Europe]] and [[Asia]]. Their [[flower]]s are usually blue, but white, pink, and purple types are known; most flower in early spring, but a few are autumn-flowering. | ||
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+ | Many species, notably ''S. siberica'', are grown in [[garden]]s for their attractive early spring flowers. | ||
+ | |||
{{Inc| | {{Inc| | ||
Scilla (the old Greek name used by Hippocrates: I injure, according to Miller, alluding to the poisonous bulbs). Liliaceae. Squill. Wild Hyacinth. Bluebell. Perennial bulbous plants remarkable for easy culture, quick growth and beautiful blue, rose, or white flowers, blooming early in the spring (some in autumn), and therefore desirable plants for the wild-garden, rock-garden, or border; they are very useful in pots for midwinter flowers for window-boxes and for room-decoration; some are stove plants; some of the South African forms have handsome spotted foliage. | Scilla (the old Greek name used by Hippocrates: I injure, according to Miller, alluding to the poisonous bulbs). Liliaceae. Squill. Wild Hyacinth. Bluebell. Perennial bulbous plants remarkable for easy culture, quick growth and beautiful blue, rose, or white flowers, blooming early in the spring (some in autumn), and therefore desirable plants for the wild-garden, rock-garden, or border; they are very useful in pots for midwinter flowers for window-boxes and for room-decoration; some are stove plants; some of the South African forms have handsome spotted foliage. | ||
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The trade names are considerably confused. Many of the so-called horticultural species and races may be united as mere varieties of species that have been defined botanically. The following names are thought to include all those in the American trade, but other species are known to fanciers. | The trade names are considerably confused. Many of the so-called horticultural species and races may be united as mere varieties of species that have been defined botanically. The following names are thought to include all those in the American trade, but other species are known to fanciers. | ||
− | S. axillaris, C. H. Wright. Of robust habit: lvs. 1 ft. long, 2 1/2 in. broad: raceme many-fld.: perianth-segms. white outside with green keel, bright violet edged with white inside. Hab.(?).—S. cilicica, Siehe. Bulb bluish violet: lvs. 4-8 in. long, about 1/2 in. broad at apex: scape slightly taller than lvs.: pedicels one-half as long as fls.: fls. 2-6, bright blue, often tinged with violet; filaments white, thread-like. Asia Minor. G.C. III. 44:194, desc. | + | S. axillaris, C. H. Wright. Of robust habit: lvs. 1 ft. long, 2 1/2 in. broad: raceme many-fld.: perianth-segms. white outside with green keel, bright violet edged with white inside. Hab.(?).—S. cilicica, Siehe. Bulb bluish violet: lvs. 4-8 in. long, about 1/2 in. broad at apex: scape slightly taller than lvs.: pedicels one-half as long as fls.: fls. 2-6, bright blue, often tinged with violet; filaments white, thread-like. Asia Minor. G.C. III. 44:194, desc.{{SCH}} |
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− | + | ==Cultivation== | |
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− | + | ===Propagation=== | |
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− | + | ===Pests and diseases=== | |
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− | + | ==Species== | |
− | + | {{col-begin}} | |
− | * ''[[Scilla amoena]]'' | + | {{col-break}} |
− | * '' | + | * ''[[Scilla amoena]]''<br /><small>Star Squill, Star Hyacinth</small> |
− | * ''[[Scilla bifolia]]'' | + | * ''Scilla autumnalis''<br /><small>Autumn Squill: see ''[[Prospero autumnale]]''</small> |
− | * ''[[Scilla bithynica]]'' | + | * ''[[Scilla bifolia]]''<br /><small>Alpine Squill</small> |
+ | * ''[[Scilla bithynica]]''<br /><small>Bithynian Squill</small> | ||
* ''[[Scilla buekkensis]]'' | * ''[[Scilla buekkensis]]'' | ||
* ''[[Scilla cilicica]]'' | * ''[[Scilla cilicica]]'' | ||
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* ''[[Scilla hyacinthoides]]'' | * ''[[Scilla hyacinthoides]]'' | ||
* ''[[Scilla kladnii]]'' | * ''[[Scilla kladnii]]'' | ||
− | * ''[[Scilla liliohyacinthus]]'' | + | * ''[[Scilla liliohyacinthus]]''<br /><small>Pyrenean Squill</small> |
− | * ''[[Scilla | + | * ''[[Scilla pratensis]]''<br /><small>Amethyst Meadow Squill: syn. ''Scilla amethystina'', ''Scilla litardieri''</small> |
− | * ''[[ | + | * ''Scilla maritima''<br /><small>Sea Squill: see ''[[Urginea maritima]]''</small> |
* ''[[Scilla messeniaca]]'' | * ''[[Scilla messeniaca]]'' | ||
− | * ''[[Scilla mischtschenkoana]]'' | + | {{col-break}} |
+ | * ''[[Scilla mischtschenkoana]]''<br /><small>Tubergen Squill</small> | ||
* ''[[Scilla monophyllos]]'' | * ''[[Scilla monophyllos]]'' | ||
* ''[[Scilla natalensis]]'' | * ''[[Scilla natalensis]]'' | ||
+ | * ''[[Scilla nutans]]''<br /><small>[[common bluebell]] (''Hyacinthoides non-scripta'')]''</small> | ||
* ''[[Scilla persica]]'' | * ''[[Scilla persica]]'' | ||
− | * ''[[Scilla peruviana]]'' | + | * ''[[Scilla peruviana]]''<br /><small>[[Portuguese Squill]], Corymbose Squill, Cuban Lily</small> |
* ''[[Scilla puschkinioides]]'' | * ''[[Scilla puschkinioides]]'' | ||
+ | * ''[[Scilla ramburei]]'' | ||
* ''[[Scilla rosenii]]'' | * ''[[Scilla rosenii]]'' | ||
* ''[[Scilla scilloides]]'' | * ''[[Scilla scilloides]]'' | ||
− | * '' | + | * ''Scilla siberica''<br /><small>[[Siberian squill]]</small> |
− | * ''[[ | + | * ''Scilla siehei''<br /><small>Glory-of-the-snow: see ''[[Chionodoxa siehei]]''</small> |
* ''[[Scilla spetana]]'' | * ''[[Scilla spetana]]'' | ||
− | * ''Scilla verna'' | + | * ''[[Scilla verna]]''<br /><small>Spring Squill</small> |
* ''[[Scilla vindobonensis]]'' | * ''[[Scilla vindobonensis]]'' | ||
+ | {{col-end}} | ||
− | + | ==Gallery== | |
− | + | <gallery perrow=5> | |
− | == | + | Image:Upload.png| photo 1 |
− | + | Image:Upload.png| photo 2 | |
+ | Image:Upload.png| photo 3 | ||
+ | </gallery> | ||
− | + | ==References== | |
+ | <references/> | ||
+ | *[[Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture]], by L. H. Bailey, MacMillan Co., 1963 | ||
+ | <!--- xxxxx *Flora: The Gardener's Bible, by Sean Hogan. Global Book Publishing, 2003. ISBN 0881925381 --> | ||
+ | <!--- xxxxx *American Horticultural Society: A-Z Encyclopedia of Garden Plants, by Christopher Brickell, Judith D. Zuk. 1996. ISBN 0789419432 --> | ||
+ | <!--- xxxxx *Sunset National Garden Book. Sunset Books, Inc., 1997. ISBN 0376038608 --> | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
− | {{ | + | *{{wplink}} |
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− | + | {{stub}} | |
− | + | __NOTOC__ |
Latest revision as of 13:51, 22 May 2010
Habit | bulbous
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Lifespan: | ⌛ | perennial |
Scilla > |
If this plant info box on watering; zones; height; etc. is mostly empty you can click on the edit tab and fill in the blanks!
Scilla (pronounced /ˈsɪlə/; Squill),[1] is a genus of about 50[2] bulb-forming perennial herbs in the hyacinth family native to woodlands, subalpine meadows, and seashores throughout Europe and Asia. Their flowers are usually blue, but white, pink, and purple types are known; most flower in early spring, but a few are autumn-flowering.
Many species, notably S. siberica, are grown in gardens for their attractive early spring flowers.
Read about Scilla in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture
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Scilla (the old Greek name used by Hippocrates: I injure, according to Miller, alluding to the poisonous bulbs). Liliaceae. Squill. Wild Hyacinth. Bluebell. Perennial bulbous plants remarkable for easy culture, quick growth and beautiful blue, rose, or white flowers, blooming early in the spring (some in autumn), and therefore desirable plants for the wild-garden, rock-garden, or border; they are very useful in pots for midwinter flowers for window-boxes and for room-decoration; some are stove plants; some of the South African forms have handsome spotted foliage. Bulb tunicated, large or small: lvs. radical, 1 to several in number, linear, loriform, lanceolate, oblong or nearly ovate, in Scilla autumnalis appearing after the fls.: scape 1 to several, simple, leafless: fls. in racemes, which are several- to many-fld., open, compact or spicate; bracts small, sometimes minute, hyaline: pedicels short or long, sometimes filiform: fls. small or middle-sized (1 in. across), segms. of perianth distinct, perianth blue, porcelain-blue, rose-colored or whitish, open-rotate, cylindric-campanulate, or open-campanulate, segms. persistent for some time; stamens 6, affixed at base or below the middle of the segms.; anthers ovate or oblong, dehiscing longitudinally, introrse; ovary sessile, stigma small, capitate; ovules 2 in each locule, rarely 8-10, ascending: caps. globose; seeds 1-2 in each cell, rarely more; testa black, appressed; embryo small in albumen. —About 80 species, widely distributed in Eu., Asia, and Afr. in temperate districts. The genus is distinguished from Ornithogalum chiefly by the color of the fls. and deciduous perianth, from Hyacinthus by the segms. distinct from the base or very nearly so. Great Britain possesses 3 species of Scilla, S. verna, S. autumnalis, and S. nonscripta, while Germany has, in addition to S. autumnalis, 3 others, viz., S. amoena, S. bifolia, and S. italica. For S. Fraseri, see Camassia. Among the early flowers there is none more valuable than the scillas. They vary considerably in form of flower and foliage, and although typically they have blue or blue-purple flowers, most, if not all, of the species in cultivation have white and red-purple forms. S. sibirica and S. bifolia are the earliest to flower, and of these forms the Asia Minor or Taurian kinds are in advance. The form of S. sibirica known as multiflora is nearly past before the usual type begins to expand. There is also sometimes cultivated in the garden a pleasing white scilla, with hyacinth-like flowers, known to the trade as S. amoena. But these white forms are mostly oddities; the effective ones are the blue-flowering kinds. Occasional hybrids between scillas and chionodoxas are met with (see page 749). Chionoscilla Alleni is the accepted name for a natural hybrid between Chionodoxa Luciliae and Scilla bifolia, first obtained by Mr. Allen, of England, in 1891. None of the hardy squills requires special culture, and if planted where they can remain undisturbed for a series of years, they seldom disappoint one if the soil is occasionally enriched by top-dressings of manure. The writer has grown them distributed in the grass of the lawn for a number of years with considerable success. The bulbs should be planted as early as possible in autumn. The varieties may be increased by offsets taken after the foliage has matured. For the cool greenhouse or conservatory, many of the scillas are ideal subjects. For this culture, five or six bulbs may be put in a 5-inch pot and the vessel afterward transferred to a coldframe and covered until growth commences. Up to this period very little water will be required, but as the flower-cluster appears the quantity should be increased and the pots transferred to the greenhouse, giving them a position near the glass. The foliage matured, the bulbs may be shaken out of the soil and stored. More attention should be paid to the propagation of the scillas by commercial dealers, for these bulbs should become one of the features of the wild-garden in early spring. The Urginea Scilla, sometimes called Scilla maritima, needs to be mentioned in this connection on account of its yielding a medicine for many centuries held in esteem. Almost everyone is familiar with sirup of squills, and has obtained relief from its use in severe colds. The scales of the bulb contain mucilage, sinistrin, sugar, and crystals of calcium oxalate (stated by botanists to ward off snails); the active principles are scillipicrin, scillitoxin, and scillin (the latter producing numbness, vomiting, and the like). Scilla bulbs or roots should never be used unless under proper direction, as in their fresh state they are extremely acrid, and might prove dangerous. The trade names are considerably confused. Many of the so-called horticultural species and races may be united as mere varieties of species that have been defined botanically. The following names are thought to include all those in the American trade, but other species are known to fanciers. S. axillaris, C. H. Wright. Of robust habit: lvs. 1 ft. long, 2 1/2 in. broad: raceme many-fld.: perianth-segms. white outside with green keel, bright violet edged with white inside. Hab.(?).—S. cilicica, Siehe. Bulb bluish violet: lvs. 4-8 in. long, about 1/2 in. broad at apex: scape slightly taller than lvs.: pedicels one-half as long as fls.: fls. 2-6, bright blue, often tinged with violet; filaments white, thread-like. Asia Minor. G.C. III. 44:194, desc.CH
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Cultivation
Propagation
Pests and diseases
Species
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|
Gallery
References
- ↑ Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607
- ↑ ZipcodeZoo
- Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture, by L. H. Bailey, MacMillan Co., 1963
External links
- w:Scilla. Some of the material on this page may be from Wikipedia, under the Creative Commons license.
- Scilla QR Code (Size 50, 100, 200, 500)