Atriplex

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style="background:#Template:Taxobox colour;"|Atriplex
Desert Holly (Atriplex hymenelytra) leaves and bracts
style="background:#Template:Taxobox colour;" | Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked) Eudicots
(unranked) Core eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Amaranthaceae
Subfamily: Chenopodioideae
Genus: Atriplex
L.
Species

About 100-200, see text

Synonyms

Armola (Kirschl.) Montandon
Blackiella Aellen
Cremnophyton
Halimus Wallr.
Haloxanthium Ulbr.
Morrisiella Aellen
Neopreissia Ulbr.
Obione Gaertn.
Pachypharynx Aellen
Senniella Aellen
Theleophyton (Hook.f.) Moq.[1]

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

Overview

Atriplex (/[invalid input: 'icon']ˈætr[invalid input: 'ɨ']plɛks/[2] Á-tri-plex) is a plant genus of 100-200 species, known by the common names of saltbush and orache (or orach). The genus is quite variable and widely distributed. It includes many desert and seashore plants and halophytes, as well as plants of moist environments. The goosefoot subfamily (Chenopodioideae) of the Amaranthaceae, in which the genus Atriplex is placed in the APG II system, was formerly considered a distinct family (Chenopodiaceae).

The generic name originated in Latin and was applied by Pliny the Elder to the edible oraches.[3]

Saltbushes are extremely tolerant of salt content in the ground: their name derives from the fact that they retain salt in their leaves, which makes them of great use in areas affected by soil salination.

Atriplex species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species; see the list of Lepidoptera which feed on Atriplex. For spiders such as Phidippus californicus and other arthropods, saltbush plants offer opportunities to hide and hunt in habitat that is otherwise often quite barren.

File:Atriplex hortensis cleaned Sturm.png
Garden Orache (A. hortensis)
From Sturm & Sturm (1796): Deutschlands Flora in Abbildungen.

Use by humans

Many species are edible. However, the favored species for human consumption is Garden Orache (A. hortensis). Use of Atriplex as food is known since at least the late Epipaleolithic (Mesolithic). The Ertebølle culture presumably used Common Orache (A. patula) as a vegetable (A. patula is attested as an archaeophyte in northern Europe). In the biblical Book of Job, mallûḥa (מַלּ֣וּחַ, probably Mediterranean Saltbush, A. halimus, the major culinary saltbush in the region) is mentioned as food eaten by social outcasts (Template:Bibleverse[4]). Grey Saltbush (A. cinerea) is used as bushfood in Australia since prehistoric times. Chamiso (A. canescens) and Shadscale (A. confertifolia) were eaten by Native Americans, and Spearscale (A. hastata) was a food in rural Eurasia.

The Garden Orache (A. hortensis), also called Red Orach, Mountain Spinach, or French Spinach, is an annual leaf vegetable with a salty, spinach-like taste.

File:Atriplex elegans.jpg
Atriplex elegans
File:Atriplex latifolia.jpg
Atriplex latifolia
File:Starr 050516-1394 Atriplex lentiformis.jpg
Silvery Saltbush
Atriplex lentiformis
File:Atriplex nummularia.JPG
Old Man Saltbush
Atriplex nummularia

The plant grows 1–2 m (3–6 ft) in height and the leaves are used cooked or in salads. It was commonly grown in Mediterranean regions from early times until spinach became the more favored leaf vegetable. The leaves can come in red, white and green varieties. The green leaves were once used to color pasta in Italy. Another common use of orach is to balance out the acidic flavor of sorrel.[5]

Meat from sheep which have grazed on saltbush has surprisingly high levels of vitamin E, is leaner and more hydrated than regular lamb and has consumer appeal equal to grain-fed lamb.[citation needed] The vitamin E levels could have animal health benefits while extending the shelf-life and maintaining the fresh red colour of saltbush lamb. This effect has been demonstrated for Old Man Saltbush (A. nummularia) and River Saltbush (A. amnicola). For reasons unknown, sheep seem to prefer the more fibrous, less nutritious River Saltbush.[6]

Saltbushes are also used as an ornamental plant in landscaping and can be used to prevent soil erosion in coastal areas. Old Man Saltbush has also been successfully used to rehabilitate old mining sites around Lightning Ridge (Australia).

Selected species

Template:Col-1-of-2Template:Col-2-of-2
File:Atriplex prostrata seeds atpr 001 php.jpg
Spear-leaved Orache (Atriplex prostrata) seeds
File:Starr 040125-0020 Chenopodium murale.jpg
Atriplex suberecta

Formerly placed here

Footnotes

  1. "Genus: Atriplex L." Germplasm Resources Information Network. United States Department of Agriculture. 2007-10-05. Retrieved 2010-10-30.
  2. Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607
  3. Quattrocchi, Umberto (2000). CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names. I: A-C. CRC Press. p. 232. ISBN 978-0-8493-2675-2.
  4. Mistranslated as "mallows" in the King James Bible and as Nesseln (nettles) in the Luther Bible
  5. Davidson (1999)
  6. Norman et al. (2004), Pearce & Jacob (2004)
  7. Tasmanian name, also transcribed trucanini, trucaninny, trugannini, trugernanna, etc. The plant was the namesake for Truganini, among the last of her people.
  8. Gudrun Kadereit, Evgeny V. Mavrodiev, Elizabeth H. Zacharias & Alexander P. Sukhorukov: Molecular phylogeny of Atripliceae (Chenopodioideae, Chenopodiaceae): Implications for systematics, biogeography, flower and fruit evolution, and the origin of C4 Photosynthesis. - American Journal of Botany 97(10): 1664-1687, 2010.
  9. 9.0 9.1 "GRIN Species Records of Atriplex". Germplasm Resources Information Network. United States Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 2010-10-30.

External links and references

Template:Wikispecies

  • Template:Aut (1999): Orach. In: Oxford Companion to Food: 556. ISBN 0-19-211579-0
  • Everitt, J.H. (2007). Weeds in South Texas and Northern Mexico. Lubbock: Texas Tech University Press. Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (help) ISBN 0-89672-614-2
  • Template:Aut (2004): Saltbush lifts sheep meat vitamin content. Farming Ahead 153(October): 63. PDF fulltext
  • Template:Aut (2004): Variation within and between two saltbush species in plant composition and subsequent selection by sheep. Aust. J. Agr. Res. 55(9): 999–1007. doi:10.1071/AR04031 (HTML abstract)

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