Difference between revisions of "Campanula"
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
C. primulaefolia and C. spicata will be found in the supplementary list, p. 650. | C. primulaefolia and C. spicata will be found in the supplementary list, p. 650. | ||
Group I. Kitchen-garden vegetable: roots radish-like: a salad plant. | Group I. Kitchen-garden vegetable: roots radish-like: a salad plant. | ||
+ | C. abietina, Griaeb. Rare tufted rockery plant, with slender, wiry sts. 9-15 in. high: fls. light blue, in loose branching spikes. July, Aug. E. Eu.—C. acutangula, Ler. & Lev. Dwarf, with trailing sta. from a rosette of ivy-like lvs.: st.-lvs. small, rounded and toothed: fls. solitary on each St., rather large and star-like, purple-blue. N.Spain. G.C.III. 50:220.—C. amabilis, Leicht.=C. phyctidocalyx.-C. Beaverdiana, Fomine. Slender, to 2 ft., glabrous or finely hairy: lower lvs. oblong-ovate to broadly ovate, obtuse, crenate-serrate: fls. few or solitary, slender-pedicelled, blue, 1¼ in. across. B.M. 8299. Caucasus.—C. calycanthema, Hort.=C. Medium var. calycanthema.—C. cenisia. Linn. A rare rock-plant from Mt. Cenis and other mts. of the Alps, with solitary deep blue fls. on sts. 2 in. high. Root-lvs. obovate, obtuse; st.-lvs. ovate-oblong; all lvs. sessile-entire: calyx hirsute, the lobes linear-lanceolate, a half shorter than the deeply 5-cut, spreading corolla.—-C. grandiflora, Jacq.=Platycodon.—C. Hederacea. Linn.=Wahlenbergia.—C. imeretina, Rupr. Dwarf, branching, resembling C. sibirica: lvs. small: fls. violet-blue. Caucasus.— C. incurva, Aucher= C. Leutweinii.—C. kolenatiana, Mey. Perennial, 9 in. or less: lvs. mostly radical ovate, about 1 in. long: fls. in long-stalked raceme, bluish violet, 1 in. long, inside hairy. Caucasus.—C. laciniata, Linn. Robust much-branched biennial, 2 ft., somewhat pubescent: lower lvs. 8 in. long by 2½ in. broad, deeply cut: fls. about 2 in. across, upwards of 1 in. long, pale blue. Greece. G.C. III. 40:165. —C. Leutweinii, Heldr. (C. incurva, Aucher). Perennial, simple, 1 ft. or more: lvs. cordate, white-downy, crenate, rounded at apex: fls. pale blue, 1 ½ in. long. Greece.—C. Marieaii, Hort.=Platycodon.—C. michauxoidet, Boiss. Tall-growing: fls. bluish white,the segma. recurved. Asia Minor.—C. Lamarckii, D. Dietr.= Adenophora Lamarckii.—C. nitida, Ait.=C. planiflora.—C. petraea. Linn. Biennial, with ascending st., hairy, 6-12 in.: lower lvs. lance-oblong, narrowed to the base, toothed; upper lvs. ovate and sessile: fls. small, pale yellow, in dense terminal and axillary heads. N. Italy.—C. phyctidocalyx, Boiss. & Noe (C. amabilis, Leicht.). Like C. Rapunculus in habit, 2-2½ ft.: lvs. lanceolate or cordate: fls. 10-12 in raceme, dark blue with black styles, resembling those of C. persicifolia. Armenia.—C. planiflora. Lam. (C. nitida, Ait.). Glabrous: height 3-9 in.: st. simple: lvs. sessile, leathery, shining; root-lvs. crowded in a dense rosette, ovate or obovate-obtuse, crenulate, 1½ in. long; st.-lvs. linear-lanceolate, acute, nearly entire: fls. blue or white, with double varieties, in spicate racemes; calyx-lobes ovate, acute, broad, erect. a third shorter than the broadly bell-shaped or saucer-shaped corolla. Not American, though commonly so stated. Habitat unknown. J.H. III. 33:283.—Rock-plant, for sunny position.—C. primulaefolia, Brot. St. hairy, simple, 1-3 ft.: lowest lvs., lanceolate, st.-lvs. oblong: fls. blue, downy at bottom, nearly rotate. Portugal. B.M. 4879.—-C. Raddeana, Trautv. Perennial, glabrous, 1 ft.: lvs. cordate, long-stalked: fls. large, dark purple. Caucasus.—C. speciosa, Pourr., is a rare species. Most of the plants passing under this name are likely to be C. glomerata. B.M. 2649 is C. glomerata var. speciosa. C. thyrsoidea, Lapeyr., is referred here.—C. Speculum, Linn.=Specularia.—-C. spicata, Linn. Biennial, 1-2 ft.: lvs. very narrow, nearly or quite entire: fls. 1-3, sessile, in a long interrupted spike, blue. Eu. J.H. III. 47:267.—C. sulphurea, Boiss. Annual: fls. size of those of C. rotundifolia, pale straw-color out-aide and sulfur-yellow inside. Palestine.—C. urticifolia. This name is now abandoned. Plants are likely to be C. Trachelium. | ||
+ | Wilhelm Miller. | ||
+ | L. H. B. | ||
+ | |||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 17:14, 22 May 2009
Read about Campanula in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture
|
---|
{{{1}}} The above text is from the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture. It may be out of date, but still contains valuable and interesting information which can be incorporated into the remainder of the article. Click on "Collapse" in the header to hide this text. |
Origin: | ✈ | N Hemisphere, esp. Med. to Caucasus |
---|
Exposure: | ☼ | sun to light shade"sun to light shade" is not in the list (sun, part-sun, shade, unknown) of allowed values for the "Exposure" property. |
---|
Campanula is one of several genera of in the family Campanulaceae with the common name bellflower. The genus includes about 300 species and several subspecies. Distributed across temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere, with greatest diversity from the Mediterranean region east to the Caucasus.
The species include annual, biennial and perennial plants, and vary in habit from dwarf arctic and alpine species under 5 cm high, to large temperate grassland and woodland species growing to 2 m tall.
Cultivation
Campanula calendar? | ||
---|---|---|
January: | ||
February: | ||
March: | sow | |
April: | transplant | |
May: | flowering | |
June: | flowering | |
July: | flowering | |
August: | flowering | |
September: | flowering | |
October: | divide | |
November: | ||
December: | ||
Notes: |
Propagation
Seed in spring in cold frame, or from cuttings. Sow alpine in cold frame in fall. For true offspring, you must take cuttings in the spring, or divide the plants in spring or fall.
Pests and diseases
Campanula species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Common Pug (recorded on Harebell), Dot Moth, Ingrailed Clay (recorded on Harebell), Lime-speck Pug and Mouse Moth.
Species
Well-known species include the northern European Campanula rotundifolia, commonly known as Harebell in England and Bluebell in Scotland, and the southern European Campanula medium, commonly known as Canterbury Bells, which is a cultivated garden plant in the United Kingdom. As well as several species occurring naturally in the wild in northern Europe, there are many cultivated garden species. The species Campanula rapunculus, commonly known as Rampion Bellflower, Rampion, or Rover Bellflower, is an annual vegetable and a popular garden plant, though sometimes considered too invasive. There are blue, purple and white varieties.
Selected species:
Gallery
References
- w:Campanula. Some of the material on this page may be from Wikipedia, under the Creative Commons license.
- Campanula QR Code (Size 50, 100, 200, 500)