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The docks and sorrels, Rumex, are a genus of about 200 species of , , and in the family, . Members of this genus are very common perennial herbs with a native almost worldwide distribution, and introduced species growing in the few places where the genus is not native.

Some are nuisance (and are sometimes called dockweed or dock weed), but some are grown for their edible .

(1972). 9780307243539, Golden Press. .
Rumex species are used as food plants by the of a number of species, and are the only host plants of and .


Description
They are erect plants, usually with long . The fleshy to leathery leaves form a basal rosette at the root. The basal leaves may be different from those near the . They may or may not have . Minor leaf veins occur. The leaf blade margins are entire or crenate.

The usually inconspicuous are carried above the leaves in clusters. The fertile flowers are mostly , or they may be functionally male or female. The flowers and seeds grow on long clusters at the top of a stalk emerging from the basal rosette; in many species, the flowers are green, but in some (such as sheep's sorrel, ) the flowers and their stems may be brick-red. Each seed is a three-sided achene, often with a round tubercle on one or all three sides.


Taxonomy
The genus was first described by in 1753. Within the family Polygonaceae, it is placed in the subfamily . The genus Emex was separated from Rumex by Francisco Campderá in 1819 on the basis that it was polygamous (i.e. had both bisexual and unisexual flowers on the same plant). However, some species of Rumex subg. Acetosa also have this characteristic, and most other features that are supposed to distinguish Emex are found in species of Rumex. Accordingly, in 2015, Schuster et al. demoted Emex to a subgenus of Rumex.

Within the subfamily Polygonoideae, Rumex is placed in the tribe Rumiceae, along with the two genera and Rheum. It is most closely related to Rheum, which includes .


Species
, Plants of the World Online accepted the following species. A large number of hybrids are also recorded.


Uses
These plants have many uses. Broad-leaved dock ( Rumex obtusifolius) used to be called butter dock because its large leaves were used to wrap and conserve .

Rumex hymenosepalus has been cultivated in the Southwestern US as a source of (roots contain up to 25%), for use in leather tanning, while leaves and stems are used for a -free mustard-colored .

These plants are edible. The leaves of most species contain and tannin, and many have and slightly qualities. Some species with particularly high levels of oxalic acid are called sorrels (including sheep's sorrel , common sorrel , and French sorrel ), and some of these are grown as or garden for their acidic taste.

In the United Kingdom, Rumex obtusifolius is often found growing near , owing to both species favouring a similar environment, and there is a widely held belief that the underside of the dock leaf, squeezed to extract a little juice, can be rubbed on the skin to counteract the itching caused by brushing against a nettle plant. This is not supported by any science, although it is possible that the act of rubbing may act as a distracting counterstimulation, or that belief in the dock's effect may provide a .

In traditional Austrian medicine, R. alpinus leaves and roots have been used internally for treatment of viral infections.

is also has a variety of medicinal uses in the Greater Himalayas, including in Northeastern .


Fossil record
Several fruits of Rumex sp. have been described from of the Fasterholt area near in Central , .
One [[fossil]] fruit of a ''Rumex'' species has been extracted from a [[borehole]] sample of the [[Middle Miocene]] fresh water deposits in [[Nowy Sacz]] Basin, [[West Carpathians]], [[Poland]]. This fossil fruit is similar to the fruits of the extant species ''[[Rumex maritimus]]'' and ''Rumex ucranicus'' which both have [[fossil]] records from the [[Pliocene]] and [[Pleistocene]] of [[Europe]].Macroscopic plant remains from the freshwater Miocene of the Nowy Sącz Basin (West Carpathians, Poland) by Maria Łańcucka-Środoniowa, Acta Palaeobotanica 1979 20 (1): 3-117.
     


Nutrition
Nutrition information is shown in the infobox on the right.


See also


External links

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