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- This article is about the plant, for other uses see Thistle (disambiguation).
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Thistle is the common name of a group of flowering plants characterised by leaves with sharp prickles on the margins, mostly in the plant family Asteraceae. Prickles often occur all over the plant - on surfaces such as those of the stem and flat parts of leaves. These are an adaptation to protect the plant against herbivorous animals, discouraging them from feeding on the plant. Typically, an involucre with a clasping shape of a cup or urn subtends each of a thistle's flowerheads.
The term thistle is sometimes taken to mean exactly those plants in the tribe Cynareae (synonym: Cardueae)1, especially the genera Carduus, Cirsium, and Onopordum2. However, plants outside this tribe are sometimes called thistles, and if this is done thistles would form a polyphyletic group.
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Taxa
Genera in the Asteraceae with the word thistle often used in their common names include:
- Arctium – Burdock
- Carduus – Musk Thistle and others
- Carlina – Carline Thistle
- Centaurea – Star Thistle
- Cicerbita – Sow Thistle
- Cirsium – Common Thistle, Field Thistle and others
- Cnicus – Blessed Thistle
- Cynara – Artichokes, Cardoon
- Echinops – Globethistle
- Notobasis – Syrian thistle
- Onopordum – Cotton Thistle, also known as Scots or Scotch Thistle
- Scolymus – Golden Thistle or Oyster Thistle
- Silybum – Milk Thistle
- Sonchus – Sow Thistle
Plants in families other than Asteraceae which are sometimes called thistle include:
- Salsola – Saltwort, Tumbleweed, or Russian Thistle (family Chenopodiaceae)
Heraldry
In the language of flowers, the thistle (like the burr) is an ancient Celtic symbol of nobility of character as well as of birth, for the wounding or provocation of a thistle yields punishment. For this reason the thistle is the symbol of the Order of the Thistle, a high chivalric order of Scotland.
Another story is that a Viking attacker stepped on one at night and cried out, so alerting the defenders of a Scottish castle.3 Whatever the justification, the national flower of Scotland is Scots Thistle, Onopordum acanthium. It is found in many Scottish symbols and as the name of several Scottish football clubs.
Place names
Carduus is the Latin term for a thistle (hence cardoon), and Cardonnacum is the Latin word for a place with thistles. This is believed to be the origin of name of the Burgundy village of Chardonnay, Saône-et-Loire, which in turn is thought to be the home of the famous Chardonnay grape variety.
Ecology
Thistle flowers, along with bugle and brambles flowers, are favourite nectar sources of the Pearl-bordered Fritillary, Small Pearl-bordered Fritillary, High Brown Fritillary, and Dark Green Fritillary butterflies.4
Literary references
Hugh MacDiarmid's poem A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle is an extended meditation on themes which are in part derived from the position of the plant in secular Scottish iconography.
Notes and references
- ^ "Cardueae (“thistles”)". BioImages: The Virtual Field-Guide (UK). Retrieved on 2007-11-30.
- ^ "thistle". Merriam-Webster's online dictionary. Retrieved on 2007-11-30.
- ^ "Scotch thistle". Washington State Noxious Weed Control Board. Retrieved on 2007-10-16.
- ^ Bracken for Butterflies leaflet c0853 by Butterfly Conservation, January 2005
Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 15 November 2008, at 17:08.
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