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Mentha, also known as mint (from μίνθα , mi-ta Palaeolexicon , Word study tool of ancient languages), is a of in the mint family, . It is estimated that 13 to 24 exist, but the exact distinction between species is unclear. Hybridization occurs where some species' ranges overlap. Many and are known.

The genus has a subcosmopolitan distribution, growing best in wet environments and moist soils.


Description
Mints are aromatic, almost exclusively . They have wide-spreading underground and overground and erect, square, branched stems. Mints will grow tall and can spread over an indeterminate area. Due to their tendency to spread unchecked, some mints are considered .

The are arranged in pairs, from to , often downy, and with a serrated margin. Leaf colors range from dark green and gray-green to purple, blue, and sometimes pale yellow.

The are produced in long bracts from leaf axils.

(2025). 9780809332083, Southern Illinois University Press. .
They are white to purple and produced in false whorls called verticillasters. The corolla is two-lipped with four lobes, the upper lobe usually the largest. The is a nutlet, containing one to four .


Taxonomy
Mentha is a member of the tribe in the subfamily . The tribe contains about 65 genera, and relationships within it remain obscure. Authors have disagreed on the circumscription of Mentha. For example, M. cervina has been placed in Pulegium and Preslia, and M. cunninghamii has been placed in . In 2004, a molecular phylogenetic study indicated that both M. cervina and M. cunninghamii should be included in Mentha. However, M. cunninghamii was excluded in a 2007 treatment of the genus.

More than 3,000 names have been published in the genus Mentha, at ranks from species to forms, the majority of which are regarded as synonyms or illegitimate names. The taxonomy of the genus is made difficult because many species hybridize readily, or are themselves derived from possibly ancient hybridization events. Seeds from hybrids give rise to variable offspring, which may spread through vegetative propagation. The variability has led to what has been described as "paroxysms of species and subspecific taxa"; for example, one taxonomist published 434 new mint taxa for central Europe alone between 1911 and 1916. Recent sources recognize between 18 and 24 species.


Species
, Plants of the World Online recognized the following species:


Other species
There are a number of plants that have mint in the common English name but which do not belong to the genus Mentha:
  • sp. – known as horse mints
  • sp. (syn. Clinopodium) – known as calamints
  • Clinopodium acinos (syn. Acinos arvensis) – known as backle mint
  • Elsholtzia ciliata – known as comb mint, crested late summer mint
  • Melissa officinalis – known as balm mint
  • sp. – known as cat mint or catnip
  • sp. – known as rock mint
  • Persicaria odorata – known as Vietnamese mint
  • – known as sider mint


Hybrids
The mint genus has a large grouping of recognized hybrids. Those accepted by Plants of the World Online are listed below. Parent species are taken from Tucker & Naczi (2007). Synonyms, along with cultivars and varieties where available, are included within the specific nothospecies.

  • Mentha × carinthiaca Host - M. arvensis × M. suaveolens
  • Mentha × dalmatica Tausch - M. arvensis × M. longifolia
  • Mentha × dumetorum Schult. - M. aquatica × M. longifolia
  • Mentha × gayeri Trautm. - M. longifolia × M. spicata × M. suaveolens
  • Mentha × gracilis Sole (syn. Mentha × gentilis) - M. arvensis × M. spicata – ginger mint, Scotch spearmint
  • Mentha × kuemmerlei Trautm. - M. aquatica × M. spicata × M. suaveolens
  • Mentha × locyana Borbás - M. longifolia × M. verticillata
  • L. - M. aquatica × M. spicata – peppermint, chocolate mint
  • Mentha × pyramidalis Ten. - M. aquatica × M. microphylla
  • Mentha × rotundifolia (L.) Huds. - M. longifolia × M. suaveolens – false apple mint
  • Mentha × suavis Guss. (syn. Mentha × amblardii, Mentha × lamiifolia, Mentha × langii, Mentha × mauponii, Mentha × maximilianea, Mentha × rodriguezii, Mentha × weissenburgensis) - M. aquatica × M. suaveolens
  • Mentha × verticillata L. - M. aquatica × M. arvensis
  • Mentha × villosa Huds. (syn. M. nemorosa) - M. spicata × M. suaveolens – large apple mint, foxtail mint, hairy mint, woolly mint, Cuban mint, mojito mint, and yerba buena in Cuba
  • Mentha × villosa-nervata Opiz - M. longifolia × M. spicata – sharp-toothed mint
  • Mentha × wirtgeniana F.W.Schultz (syn. Mentha × smithiana) - M. aquatica × M. arvensis × M. spicata – red raripila mint


Common names and cultivars
There are hundreds of common English names for species and cultivars of Mentha. These include:
  • Apple mint - Mentha suaveolens and Mentha × rotundifolia
  • Banana mint - Mentha arvensis 'Banana'
  • Bowles mint - Mentha villosa and Mentha × villosa 'Alopecuroides'
  • Canada mint - Mentha canadensis
  • Chocolate mint - Mentha × piperita 'Chocolate'
  • Corsican mint - Mentha requienii
  • Cuba mint - Mentha × villosa
  • Curly mint - Mentha spicata 'Curly'
  • Eau de Cologne mint - Mentha × piperita 'Citrata'
  • Field mint - Mentha arvensis
  • Flea mint - Mentha requienii
  • Ginger mint - Mentha × gracilis
  • Gray mint - Mentha longifolia
  • Green mint - Mentha spicata
  • Grey mint - Mentha longifolia
  • Japanese peppermint - Mentha arvensis var. piperascens
  • Japanese mint or Japanese medicine mint - Mentha spicata 'Abura'
  • Kiwi mint - Mentha cunninghamii
  • Lemon mint - Mentha × piperita var. citrata and Mentha × gentilis
  • Marsh mint - Mentha aquatica
  • Meadow mint - Mentha × gracilis and Mentha arvensis
  • Mojito mint - Mentha spicata 'Mojito'
  • Moroccan mint - Mentha spicata var. crispa 'Moroccan' and mints collected in Morocco
  • Pennyroyal - Mentha pulegium
  • Peppermint - Mentha × piperita and sometimes Mentha requienii
  • Pineapple mint - Mentha suaveolens 'Variegata' and Mentha suaveolens 'Pineapple'
  • Polemint - Mentha pulegium
  • Red raripila mint - Mentha × wirtgeniana
  • Round leaf mint - Mentha suaveolens
  • Spearmint - Mentha spicata
  • Strawberry mint - Mentha × piperita 'Strawberry'
  • Swiss mint - Mentha × piperita 'Swiss'
  • Tall mint - Mentha × wirtgeniana
  • Tea mint - Mentha × verticillata
  • Toothmint - Mentha × smithiana
  • Water mint - Mentha aquatica
  • Woolly mint - Mentha × rotundifolia


Distribution and habitat
The genus has a subcosmopolitan distribution across Europe, Africa – (Southern Africa), Asia, Australia – Oceania, North America and South America. Its species can be found in many environments, but most grow best in wet environments and moist soils.


Ecology
Mints are used as food by the larvae of some species, including moths, and by beetles, such as Chrysolina coerulans (blue mint beetle) and C. herbacea (mint leaf beetle).


Diseases

Cultivation
All mints thrive near pools of water, lakes, rivers, and cool moist spots in partial shade. In general, mints tolerate a wide range of conditions, and can also be grown in full sun. Mint grows all year round.

They are fast-growing, extending their reach along surfaces through a network of . Due to their speedy growth, one plant of each desired mint, along with a little care, will provide more than enough mint for home use. Some mint species are more than others. Even with the less invasive mints, care should be taken when mixing any mint with any other plants, lest the mint take over. To control mints in an open environment, they should be planted in deep, bottomless containers sunk in the ground, or planted above ground in tubs and barrels.

Some mints can be propagated by seed, but growth from seed can be an unreliable method for raising mint for two reasons: mint seeds are highly variable (i.e. one might not end up with what was supposedly planted) and some mint varieties are sterile. It is more effective to take and plant cuttings from the runners of healthy mints.

The most common and popular mints for commercial cultivation are ( Mentha × piperita), ( Mentha spicata), Scotch spearmint ( Mentha x gracilis), and ( Mentha arvensis); also (more recently) ( Mentha suaveolens).

Mints are supposed to make good , repelling insect pests and attracting beneficial ones. They are susceptible to and .

Harvesting of mint leaves can be done at any time. Fresh leaves should be used immediately or stored up to a few days in plastic bags in a refrigerator. Optionally, leaves can be frozen in ice cube trays. Dried mint leaves should be stored in an airtight container placed in a cool, dark, dry area.


Uses

Culinary
The leaf, fresh or dried, is the culinary source of mint. Fresh mint is usually preferred over dried mint when storage of the mint is not a problem. The leaves have a warm, fresh, aromatic, sweet flavor with a cool aftertaste, and are used in teas, syrups, candies, and ice creams, sweet foods, beverages, jellies and sauces.
(2025). 9780470421352, Wiley.
In Middle Eastern cuisine, mint is used in lamb dishes, while in and American cuisine, and mint jelly are used, respectively. Mint (pudina) is a staple in , used for flavouring curries and other dishes.

Mint is a necessary ingredient in , a popular tea in northern African and Arab countries. Alcoholic drinks sometimes feature mint for flavor or garnish, such as the and the . Crème de menthe is a mint-flavored used in drinks such as the grasshopper.

Mint and are extensively used as flavorings in breath fresheners, drinks, antiseptic mouth rinses, , , , and , such as mint (candy) and . The substances that give the mints their characteristic aromas and flavors are menthol (the main aroma of peppermint and Japanese peppermint) and (in pennyroyal and Corsican mint). The compound primarily responsible for the aroma and flavor of spearmint is L-.


Traditional medicine and cosmetics
The rubbed mint on their arms, believing it would make them stronger.
(2025). 9780415927468, Routledge.
Mint was originally used as a medicinal herb to treat and . There are several uses in traditional medicine and preliminary research for possible use of peppermint in treating irritable bowel syndrome.

Menthol from mint essential oil (40–90%) is an ingredient of many and some . Menthol and mint essential oil are also used in which may have clinical use to alleviate post-surgery .


Allergic reaction
Although it is used in many consumer products, mint may cause allergic reactions in some people, inducing symptoms such as , , , , tingling or numbing around the mouth, , or contact dermatitis.


Insecticides
Mint oil is also used as an environmentally friendly for its ability to kill some common pests such as wasps, hornets, ants, and cockroaches.


Room scent and aromatherapy
Known in Greek mythology as the herb of hospitality, one of mint's first known uses in Europe was as a room deodorizer. The herb was strewn across floors to cover the smell of the hard-packed soil. Stepping on the mint helped to spread its scent through the room. Today, it is more commonly used for aromatherapy through the use of essential oils.


Etymology of "mint"
The word "mint" descends from the word mentha or menta, which is rooted in the words μίνθα mintha, μίνθη minthē or μίντη  mintē meaning "". The plant was personified in as , a nymph who was beloved by and was transformed into a mint plant by either or .

References to "mint leaves", without a qualifier like "peppermint" or "apple mint", generally refer to spearmint leaves.

In and and , mint is known as menta. In countries, especially in , mint species are popularly known as . In many Indo-Aryan languages, it is called pudīna: , , , borrowed from پودنه pudna or پونه puna meaning "".

The taxonomic family Lamiaceae is known as the mint family. It includes many other aromatic herbs, including most of the more common cooking herbs, such as , , , , and .

As an English colloquial term, any small mint-flavored item can be called a mint.

In common usage, other plants with fragrant leaves may be called "mint", although they are not in the mint family:

  • Vietnamese mint, commonly used in cuisine is Persicaria odorata in the family , collectively known as smartweeds or pinkweeds.
  • Mexican mint marigold is in the sunflower family ().


Fossil record
Mentha pliocenica seeds have been excavated in deposits of Dvorets on the right bank of the between the cities of and , in south-eastern . The fossil seeds are similar to the seeds of and Mentha arvensis.


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