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{{otheruses}}
{{Taxobox
| color = lightgreen
| name = Fuchsia
| image = Fuchsia magellanica.jpg
| image_width = 250px
| image_caption = ''Fuchsia magellanica'' shoots with <br>flowers (above) and fruits (below)
| regnum = [[Plant]]ae
| divisio = [[Flowering plant|Magnoliophyta]]
| classis = [[Magnoliopsida]]
| ordo = [[Myrtales]]
| familia = [[Onagraceae]]
| genus = '''''Fuchsia'''''
| genus_authority = [[Charles Plumier|'''Plum'''.]]
| subdivision_ranks = Species=| subdivision =
About 100; see text
}}

'''''Fuchsia''''' is a [[genus]] of flowering [[plant]]s, mostly [[shrub]]s, which were identified by [[Charles Plumier]] in the late 17th century, and named by [[Plumier]] in 1703 after the [[Germany|German]] botanist [[Leonhart Fuchs]] (1501–1566). The English vernacular name Fuchsia is the same as the scientific name.

== Description ==

There are about 100–110 species of Fuchsia. The great majority are native to [[South America]], but with a few occurring north through [[Central America]] to [[Mexico]], and also several on [[New Zealand]], and [[Tahiti]]. One species, ''Fuchsia magellanica'', extends as far as the southern tip of South America on [[Tierra del Fuego]] in the cool [[temperate]] zone, but the majority are [[tropical]] or [[subtropical]]. Most fuchsias are shrubs from 0.2–4 m tall, but one [[New Zealand]] species, Kotukutuku (''[[Fuchsia excorticata]]''), is unusual in the genus in being a [[tree]], growing up to 12–15 m tall.

Fuchsia [[leaf|leaves]] are opposite or in whorls of 3–5, simple lanceolate and usually have serrated margins (entire in some species), 1–25 cm long, and can be either [[deciduous]] or [[evergreen]] depending on the species. The [[flower]]s are very decorative pendulous "eardrop" shape, borne in profusion throughout the summer and autumn, and all year in tropical species. They have four long, slender, sepals and four shorter, broader, petals; in many species the sepals are bright red and the petals purple (colours that attract the [[hummingbird]]s that pollinate them), but the colours can vary from white to dark red, purple-blue, and orange. A few have yellowish tones, and recent hybrids have added the color white in various combinations. The [[fruit]] is a small (5–25 mm) dark reddish green, deep red, or deep purple edible [[berry]] containing numerous very small seeds. Many people describe the fruit as having a subtle [[grape]] flavor spiced with [[black pepper]].


== Species ==
Felix Munz in his ''The Genus Fuchsia'' classified the genus into seven sections of 100 species. The majority of species, 94 of them, originate in Central and South America, West Indies, Haiti and Cuba. The other 6 species were found in New Zealand and Tahiti.

The vast majority of garden hybrids have descended from a few parent species.<ref>Puttock, A. G., ''Lovely Fuchsias'', Gifford, London, 1959</ref>

=== Section 1: Quelusia ===
[[Image:Fuchsia regia - blossom (aka).jpg|thumb|left|''Fuchsia regia'']]
Species in this section have the nectary fused to the base of the hypanthium (tube). The hypanthium is cylinder shaped and is generally no longer than the sepals. The stamens are long and extend beyond the corolla (petals) (exserted).

*''[[Fuchsia Bracelinae]]''
*''[[Fuchsia coccinea]]''
*''[[Fuchsia Compos-Portoi]]''
*''[[Fuchsia hybrida]]''
*''[[Fuchsia magellanica]]''
*''[[Fuchsia regia]]''
*''F. r. 'alpestris''' syn ''[[Fuchsia alpestris]]''

=== Section 2: Eufuchsia ===
Eufuchsia is the largest section of fuchsias. Flowers are perfect with convolute petals erect stamens that may or may not project beyond the corolla, the stamens opposite the petals are shorter. The fruit has many seeds.
[[Image:Fuchsia boliviana 3.jpg|thumb|right|190px|''Fuchsia boliviana'']]
{{col-start}}
{{col-break}}
*''[[Fuchsia abrupta]]''
*''[[Fuchsia andrei]]''
*''[[Fuchsia asperifolia]]''
*''[[Fuchsia aspaiziu]]''
*''[[Fuchsia asplundii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia austromontana]]''
*''[[Fuchsia ayavacensis]]''
*''[[Fuchsia boliviana]]''
*''[[Fuchsia canescens]]''
*''[[Fuchsia confertifolia]]''
*''[[Fuchsia cordifolia]]''
*''[[Fuchsia
corymbiflora]]''
*''[[Fuchsia cuatresasasii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia decussata]]''
{{col-break}}
*''[[Fuchsia denticulata]]''
*''[[Fuchsia fischeri]]''
*''[[Fuchsia fufuraceae]]''
*''[[Fuchsia gehringeri]]''
*''[[Fuchsia glaberrima]]''
*''[[Fuchsia hartwegii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia hirtella]]''
*''[[Fuchsia hypoleuca]]''
*''[[Fuchsia jahnii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia Lehmanii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia leptopoda]]''
*''[[Fuchsia llewelynii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia loxensis]]''
{{col-break}}
*''[[Fuchsia macrophylla]]''
*''[[Fuchsia macrostigma]]''
*''[[Fuchsia magdalinae]]''
*''[[Fuchsia matthewsii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia munzii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia osgoodii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia ovalis]]''
*''[[Fuchsia pallescens]]''
*''[[Fuchsia petiolaris]]''
*''[[Fuchsia pilosa]]''
*''[[Fuchsia pltypteala]]''
*''[[Fuchsia polyantha]]''
*''[[Fuchsia pringsheimii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia putumayensis]]''
{{col-break}}
*''[[Fuchsia rivularis]]''
*''[[Fuchsia sanctae-rosae]]''
*''[[Fuchsia scabriscaula]]''
*''[[Fuchsia sessilifolia]]''
*''[[Fuchsia simplisicaulis]]''
*''[[Fuchsia smithii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia splendens]]''
*''[[Fuchsia storkii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia sylvatica]]''
*''[[Fuchsia tincta]]''
*''[[Fuchsia Townsendii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia triphylla]]''
*''[[Fuchsia venusta]]''
*''[[Fuchsia verrucosa]]''
*''[[Fuchsia woytkowskii]]''
{{col-end}}
=== Section 3: Kierschlegeria ===

This section possesses a single species. This species has pedicels which are in the axils and are pendulous. The leaves are sparse and the sepals are reflexed and slightly shorter than the tube.

*''[[Fuchsia lycioides]]''

=== Section 4: Skinnera ===

The main characteristics of this section include a floral tube that is swollen above the ovary (future fruit). The sepals curve back on themselves and the petals are small or near absent.

*''[[Fuchsia colensoi]]''
*''[[Fuchsia cyrtahdroides]]''
*''[[Fuchsia excorticata]]''
*''[[Fuchsia kirkii]]''
*''[[Fuchsia perscandens]]''
*''[[Fuchsia procumbens]]''

=== Section 5: Hemsleyella ===

The species in this section are characterised by a nectary that is fused with the base of the flower tube with petals that are partly or completely lacking.
{{col-start}}
{{col-break}}
*''[[Fuchsia apetala]]''
*''[[Fuchsia cestroides]]''
*''[[Fuchsia decidua]]''
*''[[Fuchsia garleppiana]]''
*''[[Fuchsia hirsuta]]''
*''[[Fuchsia juntasensis]]''
{{col-break}}
*''[[Fuchsia macrantha]]''
*''[[Fuchsia membranaceae]]''
*''[[Fuchsia salicifolia]]''
*''[[Fuchsia tuberosa]]''
*''[[Fuchsia tunariensis]]''
*''[[Fuchsia unduavensis]]''
{{col-end}}

=== Section 6: Schufia ===

Plants in this section have flowers that are erect on the plant in a [[corymb]] like [[panicle]].

*''[[Fuchsia arborescens]]''

=== Section 7: Engliandra ===

Flowers on species in this section have flat petals, short stamens and are reflexed into the tube. Fruits contain few seeds.
{{col-start}}
{{col-break}}
*''[[Fuchsia bacillaris]]''
*''[[Fuchsia colimae]]''
*''[[Fuchsia cyclindracea]]''
*''[[Fuchsia encliandra]]''
{{col-break}}
*''[[Fuchsia hemsleyana]]''
*''[[Fuchsia mexiae]]''
*''[[Fuchsia michoacanensis]]''
*''[[Fuchsia microphylla]]''
{{col-break}}
*''[[Fuchsia mimmiflora]]''
*''[[Fuchsia minutiflora]]''
*''[[Fuchsia pringlei]]''
*''[[Fuchsia skutchiana]]''
{{col-break}}
*''[[Fuchsia striolata]]''
*''[[Fuchsia tacanensis]]''
*''[[Fuchsia tetradactyla]]''
*''[[Fuchsia thymifolia]]''
{{col-end}}

==Cultivation==
[[Image:Fuchsia magellanica2.jpg|thumb|right|250px|''Fuchsia magellanica'']]
Fuchsias are popular garden shrubs, and once planted will gives years of pleasures for minimal amount of care. The British Fuchsia Society maintain a list of "hardy" fuchsias that have been proven to survive and number of winters throughout Britain and to be back in flower each year by July. Enthusiasts report that hundreds and even thousands of hybrids survive and prospers throughout the Brisish Isles.

Fuchsias from sections Quelusia (F magellanica and variants, F regia, etc), encliandra (and some encliandra hybrids will flower 365 days continuously), Skinnera (F excorticata, F perscandens) and Procumbentes (F procumbens makes a great groundcover pla
nt) are proven to be hardy in widespread area of Britain. Some of the more temperate species will survive outdoors in the more temperate areas, though may not always flower in the average British summer.

==Diseases==
{{Main|List of fuchsia diseases}}

==Pronunciation==
While the original pronunciation from the word's German origin is ''"fook-sya"'' {{IPA|/ˈfʊksja/}}, most English speakers tend to say ''"fyew'sha"'' {{IPA|/ˈfjuːʃə/}}. As a result, the word is often subjected to misspellings such as "fushcia" or "fuschia". In English, the other acceptable pronunciation is ''"fyewk'see-ah"'', which is somewhat truer to the word's origin.

== History ==
[[Image:Leonhart.fuchs.farbig.jpg|right|thumb|180px|[[Leonhart Fuchs]] (1501-1566) (Farbig)]]
[[Leonhart Fuchs]] was born in 1501. He occupied the chair of Medicine at the [[Tübingen University]] from the age of 34 until his death, on the 10th May 1566. Besides his medical knowledge, according to his record of activities which was extensive for the time, he studied plants. This was natural, for most of the remedies of the time were [[herbal]] and the two subjects were often inseperable.

In the course of his career Fuchs wrote ''De Historia Stirpium'', which was published in ''1542''. In honour of Fuchs' work the fuchsia received its name shortly before 1703 by [[Charles Plumier]]. It was Plumier who compiled his ''Nova Plantarum Americanum'', which was published in [[Paris]] in 1703, based on the results of his plant-finding trip to [[Americas|America]] in search of new [[genera]].

The fuchsia was in England in the 18th century when Plumier took some [[seeds]] there after his expedition. The ''species'' he took was ''Fuchsia triphylla flore coccinea'' where specimens appeared in [[France]]. This may account for its reference under the name of "[[Thiles]]" in the ''Journal des Obervations Botaniques''in 1725. Thiles was the name by which the plant was known in southern [[Chile]] where Plumier discovered it.

Professor [[Philip Munz]], in his ''A Revision of the Genus Fuchsia'', 1793 says, however, that the fuchsia was first introduced into England by a sailor who grew it in a window where it was observed by a nurseryman from [[Hammersmith]], a Mr. Lee, who succeeded in buying it and propagating it for the trade. This was one of the short tubed species such as ''magellanica'' or ''coccinea''.
[[Image:Plumier Charles.jpg|left|thumb|180px|[[Charles Plumier]] (1646-1704), discovered the genera in c.1704]]
This report is further embellished in various publications where Captain Firth, a sailor, brought the plant back to England from one of his trips to his home in Hammersmith where he gave it to his wife. Later on [[James Lee]] of St. Johns Wood, nurseryman and an astute businessman, heard of the plant and purchased it for £80. He then [[propagated]] as many as possible and sold them to the trade for prices ranging from £10 to £20 each.

In the ''Floricultural Cabinet'', 1855, there is a report which varies slightly from the above. Here is says that ''F. coccinea'' was given to [[Kew]] Garden in 1788 by Captain Firth and that Lee acquired if from Kew.

By this time plant collecting fever had spread and many species of numerous genera were introduced to England, some living plants, others as seed. The following plants were recorded at Kew: ''F. lycioides'', 1796; ''F. arborescens'', 1824; ''F. microphylla'', 1827; ''F. fulgens'', 1830; ''F. corymbiflora'', 1840; and ''F. apetala'', ''F. decussata'', ''F. dependens'' and ''F. serratifolia'' in 1843 and 1844, the last four species attributable to Messrs. Veitch of Exeter.

With the increasing numbers of differing species in England plant breeders began to immediately develop [[hybrids]] to develop more desirable garden plants. The first recorded experiments date to 1825 as ''F. arborescens'' Χ ''F. macrostemma'' and ''F. arborescens'' X ''F. coccinea'' where the quality of the resultant plants was unrecorded.

Between 1835 and 1850 there was a tremendous influx to England of both hybrids and varieties, the majority of which hav
e been lost.

In 1848 Monsieur [[Felix Porcher]] published the second edition of his book ''Le Fuchsia son Histoire et sa Culture''. This described 520 species. In 1871 in later editions of M. Porchers book reference is made to [[James Lye]] who was to become famous as a breeder of fuchsias in England. In 1883 the first book of English fuchsias was published.

Between 1900 and 1914 many of the famous varieties were produced which were grown extensively for [[Covent Garden]] market by many growers just outside [[London]]. During the period between the world wars fuchsia growing slowed down as efforts were made towards crop production until after 1949 where plant and hybrid production resumed on a large scale.<ref>Puttock, A. G., ''Lovely Fuchsias'', Gifford, London, 1959</ref>

==Further Information and Advice==
There are many national societies and even more local societies throughout the world who's purpose is to encourage the cultivation and hybridisation of the genus Fuchsia. Enthusiasts and beginners alike will find a warm welcome on the Bristish Fuchsia Society website [http://www.thebfs.org.uk].

<gallery>
<!-- Unsourced image removed: Image:Fuchsia_in_full_bloom.jpg|''Fuchsia magellanica'' grown in Ireland -->
Image:Fuchsia paniculata0.jpg|''Fuchsia paniculata''<!--Why doesn't this species show up in the species list? -->
Image:Fuchsia X Hybrida2.jpg|''Fuchsia x hybrida'', grafted standard specimen
Image:Fuchsia X Hybrida1.jpg|''Fuchsia x hybrida'', flowers
Image:Fuchsia1web.jpg|''Fuchsia sp''., flower
Image:DoubleFuchsias wb.jpg|''Fuchsia sp.'' Flowers, double (more petals than species specimen)
Image:25-05-06 (55).JPG|''Fuchsia x hybrida'', flower
Image:Fuschia.jpg|''Fuchsia x hybrida'' flower, grown in Canada
Image:Moonglow0.jpg|'''Fuchsia''' '''"Moonglow"''', flowers, grown in California, 2004.
</gallery>

== References ==
{{Reflist}}
== External links ==
* Pictures of [http://www.chilebosque.cl/shrb/flyci.html ''Fuchsia lycioides''] and [http://www.chilebosque.cl/shrb/fmage.html ''Fuchsia magellanica''] in Chile.

{{commons|Fuchsia}}

[[Category:Myrtales]]
[[Category:Garden plants]]
[[Category:Flowers]]