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   » » Wiki: Amaryllis
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Amaryllis () is the only in the Amaryllidinae (tribe ). It is a small genus of flowering , with two species. The better known of the two, Amaryllis belladonna, is a of the region of South Africa, particularly the rocky southwest area between the Olifants River Valley and Knysna.

For many years there was confusion among botanists over the generic names Amaryllis and Hippeastrum, one result of which is that the common name 'amaryllis' is mainly used for of the genus , widely sold in the winter months for their ability to indoors.

Plants of the genus Amaryllis are known as belladonna lily, Jersey lily, naked lady, amarillo, Easter lily in Southern Australia or, in South Africa, March lily due to its propensity to flower around March. This is one of numerous genera with the common name 'lily' due to their flower shape and growth habit. However, they are only distantly related to the true lily, . In the Victorian language of flowers, amaryllis means "love, beauty, and determination", and can also represent hope and achievement.


Description
Amaryllis is a plant, with each bulb being in diameter. It has several strap-shaped, hysteranthous, green with midrib, long and broad, arranged in two rows.

Each bulb produces one or two leafless, stout, persistent and erect stems tall, each of which bears at the top a cluster of two to twelve zygomorphic, funnel-shaped without a tube. Each flower is in diameter with six spreading (three outer sepals, three inner petals, with similar appearance to each other). The usual color is white with crimson veins, but pink or purple also occur naturally. are very shortly basally, declinate, unequal. Style is declinate, stigma is three-lobed. are approx. 8 per . Seeds are compressed-globose, white to pink. The number of is 2 n = 22.

(1998). 9783642083778, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg GmbH.


Taxonomy
The single genus is in Amaryllidinae, in the tribe . The taxonomy of the genus has been controversial. In 1753 created the name Amaryllis belladonna, the of the genus Amaryllis. At the time both South African and South American plants were placed in the same genus; subsequently they were separated into two different genera. The key question is whether Linnaeus's type was a South African plant or a South American plant. If the latter, Amaryllis would be the correct name for the genus , and a different name would have to be used for the genus discussed here. Alan W. Meerow et al. have briefly summarized the debate, which took place from 1938 onwards and involved botanists on both sides of the . The outcome was a decision by the 14th International Botanical Congress in 1987 that Amaryllis should be a conserved name (i.e. correct regardless of priority) and ultimately based on a specimen of the South African Amaryllis belladonna from the Clifford Herbarium at the Natural History Museum in London.


Species
, Amaryllis had only two accepted species, both native to the of South Africa:
  • Amaryllis belladonna – south-west Cape Provinces; introduced into many parts of the world, including California, Great Britain, Australia and New Zealand
  • Amaryllis paradisicola – west Cape Provinces


Phylogeny
Amaryllidinae are placed within Amaryllideae as follow:

These are phylogenetically related as follows:


Etymology
The name Amaryllis is taken from a shepherdess in 's pastoral , (from the Greek ).Linné, Carl von. 1737. Hortus Cliffortianus. p. 135

Although the 1987 decision settled the question of the scientific name of the genus, the common name 'amaryllis' continues to be used differently. Bulbs sold as amaryllis and described as "ready to bloom for the holidays" belong to the allied genus .E.g. The common name "naked lady" comes from the plant's pattern of flowering when the foliage has died down. This name is also used for other bulbs with a similar growth and flowering pattern; some of these have their own widely used and accepted common names, such as the resurrection lily ( Lycoris squamigera).


Habitat
In areas of its native habitat with mountainous , flowering tends to be suppressed until after bush fires as dense overhead vegetation prevents growth. In more open sandy areas of the Western Cape, the plant flowers annually. Plants tend to be very localized in dense concentrations due to the seeds' large size and heavy weight. Strong winds shake loose the seeds, which fall to ground and immediately start to germinate, aided by the first winter rains.


Ecology
The leaves are produced in the autumn or early spring in warm climates depending on the onset of rain and eventually die down by late spring. The bulb is then dormant until late summer. The plant is not frost-tolerant, nor does it do well in tropical environments since they require a dry resting period between leaf growth and flower spike production.

One or two leafless stems arise from the bulb in the dry ground in late summer (March in its native habitat and August in ).

The plant has a relationship with . It is also visited by at night. The relative importance of these insects as pollinators has not yet been established; however, carpenter bees are thought to be the main pollinators of amaryllis on the . The plant's main parasite is the lily borer and/or .


Cultivation
Amaryllis belladonna was introduced into cultivation at the beginning of the eighteenth century. It reproduces slowly by either bulb division or seeds and has gradually naturalized from plantings in urban and suburban areas throughout the lower elevations and coastal areas in much of the West Coast of the US since these environments mimic their native South African habitat. Hardiness zones 6–8. It is also naturalized in Australia.

There is an Amaryllis belladonna hybrid which was bred in the 1800s in Australia. No one knows the exact species it was crossed with to produce color variations of white, cream, peach, magenta and nearly red hues. The hybrids were crossed back onto the original Amaryllis belladonna and with each other to produce naturally seed-bearing crosses that come in a very wide range of flower sizes, shapes, stem heights and intensities of pink. Pure white varieties with bright green stems were bred as well. The hybrids are quite distinct in that the many shades of pink also have stripes, veining, darkened edges, white centers and light yellow centers, also setting them apart from the original light pink. In addition, the hybrids often produce flowers in a fuller circle rather than the "side-facing" habit of the "old-fashioned" pink. The hybrids are able to adapt to year-round watering and fertilization but can also tolerate completely dry summer conditions if need be.

A. belladonna has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

Amaryllis belladonna has been crossed in cultivation with to produce a hybrid called ×  Amarcrinum, which has named cultivars. Hybrids said to be between Amaryllis belladonna and Brunsvigia josephinae have been called ×  Amarygia. Neither hybrid genus name is accepted by the World Checklist of Selected Plant Families., search for "Amarcrinum" and "Amarygia"


See also
  • List of plants known as lily


Sources
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