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Mistletoe is the common name for obligate in the order . They are attached to their host tree or by a structure called the , through which they extract water and nutrients from the host plant. There are hundreds of species which mostly live in tropical regions.

The name mistletoe originally referred to the species (European mistletoe, of the family in the order Santalales); it is the only species native to the and much of Europe. A related species with red fruits, rather than white, , occurs in Southwest Spain and Southern Portugal, as well as in in and in southern Africa. There is also a wide variety of species in Australia. The genus Viscum is not native to , but Viscum album was introduced to Northern California in 1900.USDA, NRCS. 2009. The PLANTS Database (http://plants.usda.gov, 28 August 2009). National Plant Data Center, Baton Rouge, LA 70874-4490 US

The eastern mistletoe native to North America, Phoradendron leucarpum, belongs to a distinct genus of the family Santalaceae.

European mistletoe has smooth-edged, oval, evergreen leaves borne in pairs along the woody stem, and waxy, white that it bears in clusters of two to six. The eastern mistletoe of North America is similar, but has shorter, broader leaves and longer clusters of ten or more berries.

Over the centuries, the term mistletoe has been broadened to include many other species of parasitic plants with similar habits, found in other parts of the world, that are classified in different and families such as the of South America and the mainly southern hemisphere tropical .


Etymology
The word 'mistletoe' derives from the older form 'mistle' adding the word tān (). 'Mistle' is from (cf. Old High German mistil, Middle High German mistel, Old English mistel, mistil). Further is uncertain, but may be related to the Germanic base for 'mash'. Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd edition, December 2000

Online Etymology Dictionary offers a similar theory, noting, "The alteration of the ending... is perhaps from a mistaking of the final -n for a after tan fell from use as a separate word, but Oxford finds it a natural evolution in West Saxon based on stress."


Groups
has evolved at least twelve times among the vascular plants.JH Westwood, JI Yoder, MP Timko, CW dePhamphilis (2010) "The evolution of parasitism in plants". Trends Plant Sci 15:227-235 Molecular data show the mistletoe habit has evolved independently five times within the Santalales—first in the , but also in the and three times in the Santalaceae (in the former Santalalean families and , and the tribe Amphorogyneae).

The largest family of mistletoes, the , has 73 genera and more than 900 species.WS Judd, CS Campbell, EA Kellogg, PF Stevens & MJ Donaghue (2002) Plant systematics: a phylogenetic approach. Sinauer Associates, Inc., Sunderland Massachusetts, USA. and have markedly more mistletoe species; Australia has 85, of which 71 are in Loranthaceae, and 14 in Santalaceae.B. A. Barlow (1983) A revision of the Viscaceae of Australia. Brunonia 6, 25–58.


Life cycle
Mistletoe species grow on a wide range of host trees, some of which experience side effects including reduced growth, stunting, and loss of infested outer branches. A heavy infestation may also kill the host plant. Viscum album successfully parasitizes more than 200 tree and shrub species.

All mistletoe species are because they do perform some for some period of their life cycle. However, in some species its contribution is very nearly zero. For example, some species, such as , that parasitize , commonly species of or , grow largely within the host plant, with hardly more than the flower and fruit emerging. Once they have germinated and attached to the circulatory system of the host, their photosynthesis reduces so much that it becomes insignificant.

(1981). 9780702112287, Juta.

Most of the Viscaceae bear evergreen that effectively, and photosynthesis proceeds within their green, fleshy stems as well. Some species, such as , are adapted to semi-arid conditions and their leaves are scales, hardly visible without detailed investigation. Therefore, their photosynthesis and transpiration only take place in their stems, limiting their demands on the water supply of their host, but also limiting their intake of for photosynthesis. Accordingly, their contribution to the metabolic balance of their host becomes trivial and the idle parasite may become quite yellow or golden as it grows, having practically given up photosynthesis.

At another extreme, other species have vigorous green leaves. Not only do they photosynthesize actively, but a heavy infestation of mistletoe plants may take over whole host tree branches, sometimes killing practically the entire crown and replacing it with their own growth. In such a tree the host is relegated purely to the supply of water and mineral nutrients and the physical support of the trunk. Such a tree may survive as a Viscum community for years; it resembles a totally unknown species unless one examines it closely, because its foliage does not look like that of any tree. An example of a species that behaves in this manner is Viscum continuum.

A mistletoe seed germinates on the branch of a host tree or shrub, and in its early stages of development it is independent of its host. It commonly has two or even four embryos, each producing its , that grows toward the bark of the host under the influence of light and gravity, and potentially each forming a mistletoe plant in a clump. Possibly as an adaptation to assist in guiding the process of growing away from the light, the adhesive on the seed tends to darken the bark. On having made contact with the bark, the hypocotyl, with only a rudimentary scrap of root tissue at its tip, penetrates it, a process that may take a year or more. In the meantime the plant is dependent on its own photosynthesis. Only after it reaches the host's conductive tissue may it begin to rely on the host for its needs. Later, it forms a that penetrates the host tissue and takes water and nutrients from the host plant.

Species more or less obligate include the leafless quintral, aphyllus, which lives deep inside the sugar-transporting tissue of a spiny cactus, appearing only to show its tubular red flowers, and the genus (dwarf mistletoe; Santalaceae) that has reduced photosynthesis; as an adult, it manufactures only a small proportion of the it needs from its own photosynthesis, but as a actively photosynthesizes until a connection to the host is established.

Some species of the largest family, Loranthaceae, have small, insect-pollinated flowers (as with Santalaceae), but others have spectacularly showy, large, flowers.

Most mistletoe seeds are spread by birds who eat the 'seeds' (in actuality ). Of the many bird species that feed on them, the is the best-known in Europe, the in southwestern North America, and in Asia and Australia. Depending on the species of mistletoe and the species of bird, the seeds are regurgitated from the crop, excreted in their droppings, or stuck to the bill and causing the bird to have to wipe it off onto a branch. The seeds are coated with a sticky material called . Some viscin remains on the seed and when it touches a stem, it sticks tenaciously. The viscin soon hardens and attaches the seed firmly to its future host, where it germinates and its haustorium penetrates the sound bark.

(2026). 9780520331334, University of California Press. .
; e-book ; reprint .

Specialist mistletoe eaters have adaptations that expedite the process; some pass the seeds through their unusually shaped digestive tracts so fast that a pause for defecation of the seeds is part of the feeding routine. Others have adapted patterns of feeding behavior; the bird grips the fruit in its bill and squeezes the sticky-coated seed out to the side. The seed sticks to the beak and the bird wipes it off onto the branch and consumes the remainder of the fruit.

(2026). 9780761472667, Marshall Cavendish. .
An example of a bird with this adapted method is the ( Sylvia atricapilla).

Biochemically, viscin is a complex adhesive mix containing strands and mucopolysaccharides.

Once a mistletoe plant is established on its host, it usually is possible to save a valuable branch by pruning and judicious removal of the wood invaded by the , if the infection is caught early enough. Some species of mistletoe can regenerate if the pruning leaves any of the haustorium alive in the wood.


Toxicity
There are 1500 species of mistletoe, varying widely in toxicity to humans; the European mistletoe ( ) is more toxic than the American mistletoe ( Phoradendron serotinum).

The primary active toxic compounds in American mistletoe are (in Phoradendron) and their effects can include , , , and , although these rarely occur. Their primary mechanism of action is through disruption of cell membranes which causes and cell death at high concentrations.

(1993). 9781461362395

In European mistletoe ( Viscum), is the more dangerous active toxin. It acts by irreversibly inhibiting protein synthesis in cells, which leads to the death of the affected cell, tissue damage in the area of exposure from mass cell death in the very short term, with the potential for organ failure and death depending on the level of exposure. Early symptoms depend mostly on the route of exposure as the first cells it contacts (thus the first to have their protein synthesis deactivated by it) will be the first to die. Its toxic effects take place through the same mechanism as and other ribosome-inactivating proteins but it enters the cells by a different mechanism than ricin and is toxic even to cultured ricin-resistant cells.

Mistletoe has been used historically in medicine for its supposed value in treating , high blood pressure, , and .


Ecological importance
Mistletoes are often considered pests that kill trees and devalue natural habitats, but some species have recently been recognized as ecological , organisms that have a disproportionately pervasive influence over their community.David M. Watson, "Mistletoe-A Keystone Resource in Forests and Woodlands Worldwide" Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 32 (2001:219–249). A broad array of animals depend on mistletoe for food, consuming the leaves and young shoots, transferring between plants and dispersing the sticky seeds. In western North America their juicy berries are eaten and spread by birds (notably the ) while in Australia the behaves similarly. When eaten with the fruit, some seeds pass unharmed through their digestive systems, emerging in extremely sticky droppings which the bird deposits on tree branches, where some may stick long enough to germinate. As the plants mature, they grow into masses of branching stems that suggest the popular name "witches' brooms".

The dense evergreen witches' brooms formed by the ( species) of western North America also make excellent locations for roosting and nesting of the northern and the . In Australia the and painted honeyeater are recorded as nesting in different mistletoes.

A study of mistletoe in concluded that more juniper berries sprout in stands where mistletoe is present, as the mistletoe attracts berry-eating birds who also eat juniper berries.Susan Milius, "Mistletoe, of All Things, Helps Juniper Trees" Science News 161.1 (January 2002:6).


Cultural importance
Mistletoe is relevant to several cultures. cultures regarded the white berries as symbols of , with the seeds resembling . The , particularly, saw mistletoe as the semen of , while the referred to mistletoe as "oak sperm". Also in Roman mythology, mistletoe was used by the hero to reach the underworld.

Mistletoe may have played an important role in in the Ritual of Oak and Mistletoe, although the only ancient writer to mention the use of mistletoe in this ceremony was Pliny the Elder. Evidence taken from bog bodies makes the Celtic use of mistletoe seem medicinal rather than ritual.Williams, Anarchy. Did the ancient Celts practice human sacrifice? Diss. University of Wales, Trinity St David, 2014, p.55 It is possible that mistletoe was originally associated with human sacrifice and only became associated with the white bull after the Romans banned human sacrifices.

The associated mistletoe with peace, love, and understanding and hung it over doorways to protect the household.

In the advent of the Christian era, mistletoe in the Western world became associated with as a decoration under which lovers are expected to , as well as with protection from witches and demons. Mistletoe continued to be associated with fertility and vitality through the Middle Ages, and by the eighteenth century it had also become incorporated into Christmas celebrations around the world. The custom of kissing under the mistletoe is referred to as popular among servants in late eighteenth-century England."When at Christmas in the hall / The men and maids are hopping, / If by chance I hear them bawl / Amongst them quick I pop in. / All the men, Jem, John, and Joe, / Cry, "What good luck has sent ye?" / And kiss beneath the mistletoe / The girl not turn'd of twenty...", song by George Colman the Younger in the musical comedy Two to One (1784)"The pendant mistletoe, hung up to view / Reminds the youth, the duty youth should do: / While titt'ring maidens, to enhance their wishes / Entice the men to smother them with kisses...", The Times (London), 24 December 1787 p.3 (poem), The Approach of Christmas.

The serving class of Victorian England is credited with perpetuating the tradition. The tradition dictated that a man was allowed to kiss any woman standing underneath mistletoe, and that bad luck would befall any woman who refused the kiss. One variation on the tradition stated that with each kiss a berry was to be plucked from the mistletoe, and the kissing must stop after all the berries had been removed.

From at least the mid-nineteenth century, Caribbean herbalists of African descent have referred to mistletoe as "god-bush".

In , diverse mistletoes are used for a variety of medical purposes, particularly for treating broken bones.

Mistletoe is the floral emblem of the U.S. state of and the flower of the UK county of . Every year, the UK town of holds a mistletoe festival and crowns a 'Mistletoe Queen'.


See also


External links

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