Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Fallopia sachalinensis

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Genus
  
Fallopia

Higher classification
  
Fallopia

Order
  
Caryophyllales

Family
  
Polygonaceae

Scientific name
  
Fallopia sachalinensis

Rank
  
Species

Fallopia sachalinensis Giant Knotweed Fallopia sachalinensis Synonyms Polygonum

Similar
  
Japanese knotweed, Knotweed, Cow Parsnip, Small Balsam, Black Bindweed

Fallopia sachalinensis giant knotweed berlin


Fallopia sachalinensis (giant knotweed or Sakhalin knotweed Japanese オオイタドリ ooitadori, Russian Горец сахалинский, Гречиха сахалинская; syn. Polygonum sachalinense F.Schmidt, Reynoutria sachalinensis (F.Schmidt) Nakai) is a species of Fallopia native to northeastern Asia in northern Japan (Hokkaidō, Honshū) and the far east of Russia (Sakhalin and the southern Kurile Islands).

Contents

Fallopia sachalinensis Giant Knotweed Fallopia sachalinensis Synonyms Polygonum

Fallopia sachalinensis is a herbaceous perennial plant growing to 2–4 m (79–157 in) tall, with strong, extensively spreading rhizomes forming large clonal colonies. The leaves are some of the largest in the family, up to 15–40 cm (6–15.5 in) long and 10–28 cm (4–11 in) broad, nearly heart-shaped, with a somewhat wavy, crenate margin. The flowers are small, produced on short, dense panicles up to 10 cm (4 in) long in late summer or early autumn; it is gynodioecious, with male and female (male sterile) flowers on separate plants. The species is closely related to the Japanese knotweed, Fallopia japonica, and can be distinguished from it by its larger size, and in its leaves having a heart-shaped (not straight) base and a crenate margin. Fallopia sachalinensis has a chromosome count of 2n=44.

Fallopia sachalinensis Fallopia sachalinensis giant knotweed Go Botany

Cultivation and uses

Fallopia sachalinensis Fallopia sachalinensis Nobanis

The shoots are tender and edible. It was introduced to Europe and grown in many botanic gardens. It came prominently into notice about 1893, when a drought in western Europe caused a decided shortage in forage for cattle. This plant was little affected, and since its tender shoots and leaves were eaten by stock, the plant was widely grown experimentally as a forage crop. It has proved less useful than was predicted, and its deliberate cultivation has been almost entirely abandoned. It has, however, like F. japonica, proved to be an invasive weed in several areas.

Fallopia sachalinensis wwwhabitasorgukgardenfloraimagesfallsachali

It has hybridised with Fallopia japonica in cultivation; the hybrid, Fallopia × bohemica (Chrtek & Chrtková) J.P.Bailey, is frequently found in the British Isles and elsewhere.

Extracts of this plant can be used as a plant protectants for certain fungal and bacterial diseases.

Fallopia sachalinensis FileFallopiasachalinensis0708JPG Wikimedia Commons

Fallopia sachalinensis Fallopia sachalinensis FSchmidt ex Maxim Ronse Decraene Giant

Fallopia sachalinensis Giant Knotweed Fallopia sachalinensis Synonyms Polygonum

Fallopia sachalinensis Fallopia sachalinensis

References

Fallopia sachalinensis Wikipedia


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