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Kalmia

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Kingdom
  
Family
  
Higher classification
  
Order
  
Scientific name
  
Kalmia

Rank
  
Genus

Kalmia Kalmia Wikipedia den frie encyklopdi

Lower classifications
  
Mountain‑laurel, Kalmia angustifolia, Kalmia polifolia, Kalmia procumbens

Mountain laurel more than a rhododendron kalmia latifolia


Kalmia is a genus of about 8 species of evergreen shrubs from 0.2–5 m tall, in the family Ericaceae. They are native to North America (mainly in the eastern half of the continent) and Cuba. They grow in acidic soils, with different species in wet acid bog habitats (K. angustifolia, K. polifolia) and dry, sandy soils (K. ericoides, K. latifolia).

Contents

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Kalmia was named by Linnaeus to honour his friend the botanist Pehr Kalm, who collected it in eastern North America during the mid-18th century. Earlier Mark Catesby saw it during his travels in Carolina, and after his return to England in 1726, imported seeds. He described it, a costly rarity, in his Natural History of Carolina, as Chamaedaphne foliis tini, that is to say "with leaves like the Laurustinus"; the botanist and plant-collector Peter Collinson, who had begged some of the shrub from his correspondent John Custis in Virginia, wrote, when his plants flowered, that "I Really Think it exceeds the Laurus Tinus."

Kalmia Kalmia Wikipedia

The leaves are 2–12 cm long and simple lanceolate. The flowers are white, pink or purple, in corymbs of 10-50, reminiscent of Rhododendron flowers but flatter, with a star-like calyx of five conjoined petals; each flower is 1–3 cm diameter. The fruit is a five-lobed capsule, which splits to release the numerous small seeds.

Kalmia Kalmia latifolia 39Big Boy39 Big Boy Mountain Laurel plant lust

The foliage is toxic if eaten, with sheep being particularly prone to poisoning, hence the name lambkill used for some of the species. Other names for Kalmia, particularly Kalmia angustifolia, are sheep-laurel, lamb-kill, calf-kill, kill-kid, and sheep-poison, which may be written with or without the hyphen. (See species list below.) "Kid" here refers to a young goat, not a human child, but the foliage and twigs are toxic to humans as well.

Kalmia Kalmia American Public Gardens Association

It has also been called spoonwood because Kalm was told by Dutch settlers of North America that Native Americans made spoons from the wood. Given its toxicity, this may be folklore rather than scientific fact.

Kalmia Kalmia latifolia

Kalmias are popular garden shrubs, grown for their decorative flowers. They should not be planted where they are accessible to livestock due to the toxicity.

Kalmia FileKalmia latifolia JapanJPG Wikimedia Commons

Kalmia species are used as food plants by the larvae of some lepidopteran species including Coleophora kalmiella which feeds exclusively on Kalmia.

Kalmia latifolia pollination


Species

  • Kalmia angustifolia L. - Sheep-laurel, Lambkill
  • Kalmia buxifolia (Bergius) Gift & Kron - Sandmyrtle
  • Kalmia carolina Small - Carolina Mountain-laurel
  • Kalmia cuneata Michx. - Whitewicky
  • Kalmia ericoides Wright - Cuban Kalmia
  • Kalmia hirsuta Walt. - Hairy Mountain-laurel
  • Kalmia latifolia L. - Mountain-laurel, Lambkill
  • Kalmia microphylla (Hook.) A. Heller - Alpine laurel, Alpine Bog-laurel, Alpine Mountain-laurel, sometimes considered a variety or subspecies of Kalmia polifolia
  • Kalmia occidentalis Small - Synonymous with Kalmia microphylla
  • Kalmia polifolia Wangenh. - Bog Kalmia, Bog-laurel
  • Kalmia procumbens (L.) Gift & Kron - Alpine azalea
  • The related Kalmiopsis (Kalmiopsis leachiana) is a rare shrub native to the Siskiyou Mountains of southwest Oregon.

    References

    Kalmia Wikipedia


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