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armoise, artemisia, felon-herb, herbe saint-jean, mugwort, sagebrush, sagewort, sailor's-tobacco, wormwood

Habit Annuals, biennials, or perennials (shrubs in A. californica, subshrubs in A. nesiotica); usually fibrous-rooted, sometimes taprooted, caudices sometimes woody, rhizomes sometimes present. Annuals, biennials, perennials, subshrubs, or shrubs, 3–350 cm (usually, rarely not, aromatic).
Stems

usually not wandlike (wandlike in A. californica, A. nesiotica, A. palmeri).

1–10+, usually erect, usually branched, glabrous or hairy (hairs basi- or medifixed).

Leaves

usually deciduous, rarely persistent, basal (rosettes) and/or cauline (not in fascicles).

basal or basal and cauline; alternate;

petiolate or sessile;

blades filiform, linear, lanceolate, ovate, elliptic, oblong, oblanceolate, obovate, cuneate, flabellate, or spatulate, usually pinnately and/or palmately lobed, sometimes apically ± 3-lobed or -toothed, or entire, faces glabrous or hairy (hairs multicelled and filled with aromatic terpenoids and/or 1-celled and hollow, dolabriform, T-shaped).

Involucres

campanulate, globose, ovoid, or turbinate, 1.5–8 mm diam.

Receptacles

glabrous (paleate in A. palmeri).

flat, convex, or conic (glabrous or hairy), epaleate (except paleate in A. palmeri).

Florets

usually peripheral 3–20 pistillate and fertile (0 pistillate in A. nesiotica, A. palmeri);

central (or all) 14–70 bisexual and fertile;

corollas funnelform.

Ray florets

0 (peripheral pistillate florets in disciform heads usually 1–20, their corollas filiform; corollas of 1–3 pistillate florets in heads of A. bigelovii sometimes ± 2-lobed, weakly raylike).

Disc florets

2–20(–30+), bisexual and fertile, or functionally staminate;

corollas (glabrous or ± hirtellous) usually pale yellow, rarely red, tubes ± cylindric, throats subglobose or funnelform, lobes 5, ± deltate.

Phyllaries

persistent, 2–20+ in 4–7 series, distinct, (usually green to whitish green, rarely stramineous) ovate to lanceolate, unequal, margins and apices (usually green or white, rarely dark brown or black) ± scarious (abaxial faces glabrous or hairy).

Heads

usually disciform (discoid in A. nesiotica and A. palmeri).

usually discoid, sometimes disciform (subradiate in A. bigelovii), in relatively broad, paniculiform arrays, or in relatively narrow, racemiform or spiciform arrays.

Cypselae

(brown) fusiform, ribs 0 (and faces finely striate) or 2–5, faces glabrous or hairy (not villous), often gland-dotted (pericarps sometimes with myxogenic cells, without resin sacs; embryo sac development monosporic);

pappi usually 0 (coroniform in A. californica and A. papposa, sometimes on outer in A. rothrockii).

x

= 9.

Artemisia subg. Artemisia

Artemisia

Distribution
Widespread in Northern Hemisphere; especially North America; Europe; and central and northern Asia; sporadic in South America and northern Africa
from USDA
Mostly Northern Hemisphere (North America, Eurasia); some in South America and Africa
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Species ca. 220 (27 in the flora).

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

species ca. 350–500 (50 in the flora)

As circumscribed here, there are five subgenera in Artemisia; four are represented in the flora area.

Etymologies of the common names used for Artemisia species provide glimpses of their uses and demonstrate the rich diversity within the genus. The common name ‘mugwort’ is from the Old English mucgwyrt, mucg meaning ‘midge,’ and refers to the use of Old World herbaceous species in repelling flies and midges. Artemisia was called Motherwort in nineteenth century Maine (as an indication of the high esteem for this otherwise rather pedestrian plant), and in the herbal by R. Banckes (1525): “This herb helpeth a woman to conceyve a chylde, and clenseth the mother, and maketh a woman to have her flowers.” Early settlers in North America brought European plants of A. dracunculus, A. vulgaris, A. absinthium, and A. abrotanum into their herb gardens for seasoning and medicinal uses; they would also have learned about aboriginal uses of Artemisia species native to North America, uses that included fertility rites (sagebrush in western North America) and antihelminthics (wormwoods of grasslands and mountain habitats). Immigrants used A. annua (sweet Annie) in potpourris and later recognized its utility as an anti-malarial drug, a use that was well known in oriental medicine. ‘Bulwand’ is the local name used for herbaceous wormwoods in Scotland, and ‘green-ginger’ and ‘Sailor’s tobacco’ are local names in England (T. Coffey 1993). Use of the names ‘sagewort’ and ‘sagebrush’ in North America arise from the familiar aroma of culinary sage, Salvia officinalis (Lamiaceae). Because true sages (Salvia) and sagewort/sagebrushes (Artemisia) are in separate families, the chemical similarities are an example of convergent evolution. The intense aroma and bitter taste of the plants from terpenoids and sesquiterpene lactones discourages herbivory and undoubtedly has contributed to the remarkable evolutionary success (measured by abundance as well as diversity) of species in this genus.

Members of Artemisia are wind-pollinated and their heads and florets are exceptionally small (even for composites) and, consequently, difficult to examine and assess. Nevertheless, the sexual constitution of floral heads is important in recognition of subgenera. Plant habits and ornamentations of receptacles have also figured in arriving at subgeneric circumscriptions; additional characteristics are enumerated in the descriptions.

Artemisia has a well-deserved reputation for being taxonomically difficult. The number of subgenera varies from four to five in modern treatments, and the number of taxa recognized at the species or subspecific levels varies between 250 and 500 (K. Bremer and C. J. Humphries 1993; H. M. Hall and F. E. Clements 1923; Y. R. Ling 1982, 1995; P. P. Poljakov 1961; M. Torrell et al. 1999). In this treatment, I recognize four native subgenera; subg. Seriphidium is endemic to Asia. In the flora area, the greatest diversity occurs in subg. Artemisia. Subgenus Absinthium can be segregated on the basis of hairs on the receptacle; it may be not phylogenetically distinct (L. E. Watson et al. 2002; J. Valles and E. D. McArthur 2001). Subgenus Dracunculus is clearly distinguished by molecular differences, and subg. Tridentatae is well defined with the exception of A. pygmaea.

This treatment is based on extensive fieldwork, review of recent research, and examination of thousands of specimens; taxonomic circumscriptions remain controversial. Molecular analyses have helped define subgenera but have not clarified relationships between closely related species. The morphologic characters useful in distinguishing species tend to be variable and are often hard to assess (i.e., the sexuality of microscopic florets). Users of the keys will meet with frustrations; descriptions of subgenera and illustrations will help in defining the major groupings of species.

The subgenera are arranged in approximate phylogenetic order; species are arranged alphabetically within the subgenera. Molecular studies define subg. Dracunculus as a major clade that is ancestral to the majority of Artemisia. The subgenera Absinthium, Tridentatae, and Artemisia can be classified as clades; they are weakly supported by molecular evidence.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Key
1. Subshrubs or shrubs (stems wandlike)
→ 2
1. Annuals, biennials, perennials, subshrubs, or shrubs (stems sometimes brittle, not wandlike)
→ 4
2. Plants 100–350 cm; leaves relatively deeply and coarsely pinnately lobed (lobes 3–7+; coastal California and Baja California)
A. palmeri
2. Plants 10–250 cm; leaves pinnately lobed or 3-lobed
→ 3
3. Shrubs (20–250 cm); leaves pinnately lobed (lobes 0.5–1 mm wide); California (chaparral)
A. californica
3. Subshrubs (10–60 cm, stems mostly prostrate); leaves 3-lobed (lobes 1–2 mm wide); Channel Islands, California
A. nesiotica
4. Annuals or biennials; leaves among heads (relatively deeply) lobed
→ 5
4. Perennials, subshrubs, or shrubs; leaves among heads mostly entire
→ 6
5. Annuals, 30–200(–300) cm, sweetly aromatic; leaves 2–3-pinnatifid; arrays of heads 10–20 cm diam
A. annua
5. Annuals or biennials, (10–)30–80(–150) cm, not aromatic; leaves 1–2-pinnately lobed; arrays of heads 2–4 cm diam
A. biennis
6. Perennials, subshrubs, or shrubs (not rhizomatous)
→ 7
6. Perennials (usually rhizomatous, stems sometimes woody at bases)
→ 15
7. Heads in capitate or dense, corymbiform arrays (plants cespitose)
→ 8
7. Heads in paniculiform or racemiform arrays (plants not cespitose)
→ 10
8. Leaves pinnately lobed; involucres 3–5 mm diam.; phyllaries lanceolate to ovate (margins white)
A. senjavinensis
8. Leaves 1–2-palmatifid; involucres 3.5–11 mm diam.; phyllaries lanceolate (margins brown or white)
→ 9
9. Involucres 3.5–6 × 6–11 mm; phyllaries lanceolate (margins brown); corollas yellow or reddish black, glabrous or glandular (not pilose).
A. globularia
9. Involucres 3–4 × 3.5–5 mm; phyllaries lanceolate (margins white); corollas yellow, glabrous or pilose
A. glomerata
10. Leaves entire, irregularly palmatifid, or palmately 3-lobed to 2-ternately lobed
→ 11
10. Leaves 2–3-pinnatifid
→ 13
11. Pappi coroniform; Idaho, Nevada, Oregon
A. papposa
11. Pappi 0; Alberta, British Columbia, Northwest Territories, Nunavut; Alaska, Washington
→ 12
12. Plants 15–70 cm; leaves palmately 3-lobed to 2-ternately lobed.
A. alaskana
12. Plants (5–)10–40 cm; leaves 1–3-palmately lobed
A. furcata
13. Perennials or subshrubs, 50–170 cm (widely branched, stems brittle); leaf lobes less than 1 mm wide; heads erect; involucres 1.5–3 mm diam. (gardens, waste places, much of North America)
A. abrotanum
13. Perennials, 10–50 cm (erect, stems not brittle); leaf lobes 1+ mm wide (margins coarsely toothed); heads nodding; involucres 4–10 mm diam
→ 14
14. Peduncles 0 or to 10 mm
A. laciniata
14. Peduncles to 50 mm
A. norvegica
15. Leaves entire, serrate, toothed, or lobed (sinuses to 1/2 blade widths)
→ 16
15. Leaves (relatively deeply) lobed (sinuses 1/2+ blade widths)
→ 22
16. Plants 20–50(–80, rarely more) cm
→ 17
16. Plants 50–300 cm
→ 19
17. Leaves usually entire, sometimes toothed or lobed; involucres 4–5 mm diam
A. longifolia
17. Leaves usually lobed, sometimes entire; involucres (1–)2–5 mm diam
→ 18
18. Involucres 2–4(–5.5) mm; phyllaries (gray-green) densely tomentose
A. ludoviciana
18. Involucres 3.5–4 mm; phyllaries (violet-brown) sparsely tomentose (w North America)
A. tilesii
19. Phyllaries glabrous or sparsely hairy (coast, n California to British Columbia)
A. suksdorfii
19. Phyllaries usually densely hairy
→ 20
20. Leaves densely hairy (both faces, broadly lanceolate, mostly entire, the proximal lobed; w North America, mostly inland grasslands).
A. douglasiana
20. Leaves (bicolor) hairy abaxially, glabrate or glabrous adaxially
→ 21
21. Leaves serrate (teeth ca. 2 mm; inland grasslands and barren areas, high plains)
A. serrata
21. Leaves mostly deeply lobed (lobes 4–20 mm; mostly e North America, introduced w coast)
A. vulgaris
22. Leaves not bicolor (both faces bright green or silvery), lobes acute or rounded
→ 23
22. Leaves bicolor (abaxial faces silvery, adaxial green), lobes acute
→ 25
23. Leaves silver-gray, lobes rounded (coastal dunes)
A. stelleriana
23. Leaves bright green, lobes acute (not coastal dunes)
→ 24
24. Involucres (4–)5–8 × 4–10 mm; 0–3800 m
A. norvegica
24. Involucres 2.5–3.5 × 2–4.5 mm; 100–2400 m
A. packardiae
25. Plants 30–100 cm, lemon-scented; heads usually erect (subalpine and alpine).
A. michauxiana
25. Plants 15–70 cm, not lemon-scented; heads usually nodding
→ 26
26. Perennials (widely spreading, stems brittle); garden escapes, c, e North America.
A. pontica
26. Biennials or perennials (erect)
→ 27
27. Leaves pinnatifid (lobes 3–5, 0.5–1 mm wide); grasslands or deserts, 600– 2900 m
A. carruthii
27. Leaves 2–3-pinnately lobed (lobes elliptic, 2–6 mm wide); w mountains, 2200–3100 m
A. franserioides
1. Shrubs; leaves in lateral fascicles (on vegetative shoots); heads discoid (except in A. bigelovii with, rarely, 1–2 raylike florets): florets bisexual (corollas 5-lobed); receptacles glabrous.
subg. Tridentatae
1. Annuals, biennials, perennials, or subshrubs (shrubs in A. filifolia, A. californica, and A. nesiotica); leaves not in fascicles; heads usually disciform, rarely discoid; receptacles glabrous or villous
→ 2
2. Disc florets functionally staminate (not setting fruits), corollas subglobose
subg. Drancunculus
2. Disc florets usually bisexual and fertile (sometimes functionally staminate in A. packardiae in subg. Artemisia), corollas funnelform
→ 3
3. Receptacles villous
subg. Absinthium
3. Receptacles glabrous (paleate in A. palmeri)
subg. Artemisia
Source FNA vol. 19, p. 520. FNA vol. 19, p. 503. Author: Leila M. Shultz.
Parent taxa Asteraceae > tribe Anthemideae > Artemisia Asteraceae > tribe Anthemideae
Subordinate taxa
A. abrotanum, A. alaskana, A. annua, A. biennis, A. californica, A. carruthii, A. douglasiana, A. franserioides, A. furcata, A. globularia, A. glomerata, A. laciniata, A. longifolia, A. ludoviciana, A. michauxiana, A. nesiotica, A. norvegica, A. packardiae, A. palmeri, A. papposa, A. pontica, A. senjavinensis, A. serrata, A. stelleriana, A. suksdorfii, A. tilesii, A. vulgaris
A. subg. Absinthium, A. subg. Artemisia, A. subg. Drancunculus, A. subg. Tridentatae
Synonyms A. section Abrotanum
Name authority unknown Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 2: 845. (1753): Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 367. (1754)
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