Published June 30, 2015 | Version v1

Amaranthus palmeri S. Watson, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts

  • 1. Botanic Garden of Meise, Nieuwelaan 38, B- 1860 Meise,
  • 2. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University

Description

Amaranthus palmeri S.Watson, Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts, 12: 274. 1877.

© 2015 Filip Verloove, Nicola M. G. Ardenghi

(Amaranthaceae)

Naturalized neophyte new to the flora of Piemonte (Conti et al., 2005; Celesti-Grapow et al., 2009a; Iamonico et al., 2015; Iamonico, 2015).

Received: 10 th January 2015

Accepted for publication: 19 th April 2015

ITALY. Piemonte. Prov. Alessandria: Tortona, river Scrivia at railway bridge, gravelly riverbed, locally, along with A. tuberculatus, 09.09.2014, F. Verloove 11206 (BR).

A native of the southwestern U.S.A. and Mexico, Amaranthus palmeri now occurs as a weed in Europe, Asia and Australia (Mosyakin & Robertson, 2003). In Italy it was recently discovered in Emilia-Romagna, in the province of Ravenna (Iamonico et al. 2015; Iamonico, 2015). While for many decades it remained strictly casual in Europe (often associated with imported cereals or soybeans; e.g. Verloove & Vandenberghe, 1993), it managed to naturalize locally in recent times, especially in the Mediterranean area. In Spain naturalized populations were detected around Lleida in 2007 (Verloove & Sánchez Gullón, 2008) and soon afterwards it proved to have become a troublesome agricultural weed in maize fields there (Recasens et al., 2013). Elsewhere in the Mediterranean area stable populations are known from Israel and Greece (Raus & Raabe, 2006). In Ravenna province the plant was regarded as casual (Iamonico et al., 2015; Iamonico, 2015), even though the species was confirmed for at least two years consecutively in the same site (see http://www.actaplantarum.org/floraitaliae/viewtopic.php?f=106&t=67866, retrieved on December 2014); in Tortona the population is clearly naturalized.

Amaranthus palmeri is a dioecious species. In Italy a related species, A. tuberculatus (Moq.) J.D.Sauer, has been known since 1975 (Soldano, 1982). It now has become an invasive species in riparian habitats and cultivated fields (Banfi & Galasso, 2010), especially in the plain of river Po and its tributaries. Since A. palmeri is equally aggressive and occurs in the same type of habitats, similar behavior is predictable. Both species are rather alike and may have been confused. A. palmeri has much longer bracts and tepals, the inflorescence therefore being stiff and prickly in appearance. In Tortona, along Scrivia river, both grow sympatrically.

Notes

Published as part of Verloove, Filip & Ardenghi, Nicola M. G., 2015, New distributional records of non-native vascular plants in northern Italy, pp. 5-14 in Natural History Sciences 2 (1) on pages 5-6, DOI: 10.4081/nhs.2015.219, http://zenodo.org/record/12523705

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
F
Event date
2014-09-09
Verbatim event date
2014-09-09
Kingdom
Plantae
Phylum
Tracheophyta
Order
Caryophyllales
Family
Amaranthaceae
Genus
Amaranthus
Species
palmeri
Taxon rank
species

References

  • Conti F., Abbate G., Alessandrini A. & Blasi C. (eds.), 2005 - An annotated checklist of the Italian vascular flora. Palombi Editori, Roma.
  • Celesti-Grapow L., Alessandrini A., Arrigoni P. V., Banfi E., Bernardo L., Bovio M., Brundu G., Cagiotti M. R., Camarda I., Carli E., Conti F., Fascetti S., Galasso G., Gubellini L., La Valva V., Lucchese F., Marchiori S., Mazzola P., Peccenini S., Poldini L., Pretto F., Prosser F., Siniscalco C., Villani M. C., Viegi L., Wilhalm T. & Blasi C., 2009 a - Inventory of the non-native flora of Italy. Plant Biosystems, 143 (2): 386 - 430.
  • Mosyakin S. L. & Robertson K. R., 2003 - Amaranthus. In: Flora of North America north of Mexico. Flora of North America Editorial Committee (ed.). Oxford University Press, New York, Oxford, 4: 410 - 435.
  • Iamonico D., Ardenghi N. M. G., Faggi G., 2015 - Amaranthus palmeri. In: Euro + Med-Checklist Notulae, 4. Raab-Straube E. von & Raus T. (eds.). Willdenowia, 45 (1): 119 - 120.
  • Verloove F. & Vandenberghe C., 1993 - Nieuwe en in- teressante graanadventieven voor de Noordvlaamse en Noordfranse flora, hoofdzakelijk in 1992. Dumortiera, 53 - 54: 35 - 57.
  • Verloove F. & Sanchez Gullon E., 2008 - New records of interesting xenophytes in the Iberian Peninsula. Acta Botanica Malacitana, 33: 147 - 167.
  • Recasens J., Conesa J. A., Royo-Esnal A. & Torra J., 2013 - Amaranthus palmeri en Espana.? Una ame- naza inminente? Plantas invasoras resistencias a her- bicidas y deteccion de malas hierbas. XIII Congreso de la Sociedad Espanola de Malherbologia, La La- guna, Spain, 22 - 24 November 2011: 63 - 66.
  • Raus T. & Raabe U., 2006 - Amaranthus palmeri. In: Med-Checklist Notulae, 24. Greuter W. & Raus T. (eds.). Willdenowia, 36 (2): 719 - 720.
  • Soldano A., 1982 - Naturalizzazione in val Padana di " Amaranthus rudis " Sauer (Amaranthaceae) esot- ica nuova per la flora italiana. Segnalazione di al- tre specie di importazione nuove per alcune regioni dell'Italia settentrionale o per qualche provincia del Piemonte. Rivista Piemontese di storia naturale, 3: 61 - 70.
  • Banfi E. & Galasso G. (eds.), 2010 - La flora esotica lom- barda. Museo di Storia Naturale di Milano, Milano: 1 - 274 + Cd-Rom.