Aquilegia sibirica var. ircutianaFisch., C.A.Mey. & Avé-Lall.
Aquilegia sibirica var. mediaRapaics
Aquilegia sibirica var. stenopetalaRegel
Aquilegia speciosaDC.
Aquilegia speciosa var. bicolor(Ehrh.) DC.
Aquilegia speciosa var. concolorDC.
Aquilegia vulgaris var. dauricaWilld.
Aquilegia vulgaris var. sibiricaL.
Aquilegia vulgaris var. speciosaAiton
Aquilegia sibirica, the Siberian columbine, is a species of flowering plant in the family Ranunculaceae native to the north-central Asian regions of Siberia, northern Mongolia, Kazakhstan, and Xinjiang.[1][2] A hardy perennial plant, it prefers temperate environments.[1] The Siberian columbine can be between 1 foot (0.30 m) and 2 feet (0.61 m) tall with flowers that are lilac-blue and white in color.[3]
A. sibirica diverged as a separate species from Aquilegia ecalcarata–the only Aquilegia species to lack nectar spurs–between 4.5 and 6 million years ago. Crosses between the two species have been studied to determine what gene is responsible for Aquilegia nectar spurs. In Mongolia, A. sibirica is considered a medicinal herb and extracts from the plant have been determined to act as an antifungal agent.
The plant has nearly glabrous bi- and triternate leaves with leaflets that run between one and two inches across.[3] Stems are leafless, with many terminating in flowers.[9] Siberian columbine flowers are lilac-blue to white.[10] The flower is bisexual and features fruit that is indehiscent (meaning it does not split to release seeds) in the form of a follicle.[11] The plant may be between 1 foot (0.30 m) and 2 feet (0.61 m) tall in height.[3] In northern latitudes, the flower blooms between May and June.[10]
Petals on A. sibirica develop a curvature relatively early and at a shorter length–between 1 centimetre (0.39 in) and 2 centimetres (0.79 in)–than other Aquilegia species. The petals fold longitudinally. As nectar spurs of different Aquilegia species develop, they demonstrate greater variance. In the case of A. sibirica's nectar spurs, they possess greater curvature than those of A. formosa and A. chrysantha.[5]
In the 21st century, extracts from A. sibirica have been researched for and found to possess antifungal qualities. Extracts showed the presence of chlorogenic acid and caffeic acid. Extractions performed with heat and methanol extracted more of the medically relevant compounds than those performed at room temperature or with other solvents.[12]
Aquilegia sibirica var. ircutianaFisch., C.A.Mey. & Avé-Lall.
1846
variety
Aquilegia sibirica var. mediaRapaics
1909
variety
Aquilegia sibirica var. stenopetalaRegel
1856
variety
Aquilegia speciosaDC.
1817
species
Aquilegia speciosa var. bicolor(Ehrh.) DC.
1817
variety
Aquilegia speciosa var. concolorDC.
1817
variety
Aquilegia vulgaris var. dauricaWilld.
1800
variety
Aquilegia vulgaris var. sibiricaL.
1767
variety
Aquilegia vulgaris var. speciosaAiton
1789
variety
Aquilegia species evolved relatively quickly after first appearing during the Late Miocene around 6.9 million years ago in East Asia. Aquilegia species diversified quickly and spread into both Europe and North America before migrating back into Asia. As a result, they are a well-known model system in evolutionary biology but confirming an accurate phylogenetic tree showing the relationships between the species in the genus has proved difficult. A. sibirica, though native to Asia, is closely related to A. vulgaris of Central Europe.[16]
By 1892, the Siberian columbine was also identified as a close relative of the northern North American Aquilegia brevistyla, the smallflower columbine.[17] The plant's appearance is very proximate to that of Aquilegia flabellata native to the Japanese Alps.[8][18]A. sibirica is considered a member of the A. flabellataspecies complex.[19][note 2] A wild hybrid between A. sibirica and Aquilegia glandulosa, Aquilegia × gubanovii, was identified in Mongolia in 1991.[22]A. sibirica and Aquilegia ecalcarata diverged as separate species between 4.5 and 6 million years ago and remain cross-compatible.[23]Philip A. Munz identified that it had been hybridized with A. vulgaris to produce to produce A. ×garnieriana.[24]
Crosses between A. sibirica and A. ecalcarata–the only Aquilegia species that lacks nectar spurs on its petals–have been studied to identify the gene responsible for spurred petals. The nectar spurs present in Aquilegia are an unusual evolutionary trait. In order to determine the gene responsible for the trait, a 2020 paper by researchers from the University of California, Santa Barbara, Harvard University, and Stanford University utilized A. sibirica (alongside A. chrysantha and A. formosa) as a spurred Aquilegia taxa to compare against the spurless species. This research identified a gene named POPVICH (POP) as responsible for cell proliferation during the early stage of spur development. POP appeared at higher levels in the pedals of the spurred Aquilegia studied than in A. ecalcarata.[25][4][note 3]
Aquilegia daingolica is a stabilized ancient hybrid of A. glandulosa, Aquilegia oxysepala, and probably A. sibirica. It is similar in its flowers and fruit aggregates to A. glandulosa and in its dark anthers and black clublike spur tips to A. oxysepala, but the form of its spurs differentiates it from all other Asian forms of Aquilegia.[27]
Distribution
The 70 to 80 Aquilegia species are distributed in the Circumboreal Region, ranging between Eurasia and North America.[6]Aquilegia sibirica is native to the north-central Asian regions of Siberia, northern Mongolia, Kazakhstan, and Xinjiang.[1] When considered alongside the distribution of the closely related and similarly lowland species A. vulgaris, A. sibirica's current distribution suggests the possibility of a historical vegetation system that linked Central Europe with Siberia.[16] The population in Middle Siberia is considered a quaternaryrelict (a population that once possessed a broader range in an earlier geologic epoch).[28]
In open portions of the taiga in the Siberian Sayansky District, Siberian columbines and other vascular plants were found in 1921 to form a dense, two-meter-tall vegetation that can obscure the view of people traversing through these areas.[29]A. sibirica has also been found in the herb layer of the peatlands along Lake Baikal's eastern coast.[30] It generally is found in lower elevation habitats while Aquilegia glandulosa occupies higher areas in roughly the same regions.[24]
Cultivation
Siberian columbine is cultivated in gardens globally.[24] The flower was introduced to the United States by the United States Department of Agriculture in 1933; these seeds were presented to the United States by A. P. Iljinski, the chief botanist of the Botanic Garden, Leningrad, on behalf of the Soviet Union.[3][note 4] Finnish research has suggested that A. sibirica is among the Siberian and Far Eastern plants that could prove valuable for northern landscaping.[31]
Notes
^Other pollinators are more prevalent among other Aquilegia species, such as hummingbirds for A. formosa and hawk moths for A. chrysantha.[5]
^Historically, A. flabellata was considered a blue variety of the Siberian columbine with the homotypic synonymsAquilegia sibirica var. flatbellata and Aquilegia sibirica var. japonica.[18][20][21]
^ ab"Hardy Exotic Plants Suitable for the Gardens of Missouri and Adjoining States". Missouri Botanical Garden Bulletin. IX (7). Missouri Botanical Garden: 91. September 1921.
^Erst, A. S.; Shaulo, D. N.; Kuznetzov, A. A. (2013). "Aquilegia daingolica (Ranunculaceae) – новый вид из Монголии" [Aquilegia daingolica (Ranunculaceae), a new species from Mongolia]. Систематические заметки по материалам гербария имени П.Н. Крылова Томского государственного университета (in Russian). 108: 14–22. Retrieved 13 December 2024.
^Brianskaia, Elena; Schmieder, Klaus; Boecker, Reinhard; Tubanova, Dolgor; Gyninova, Ayur (October 2021). "Syntaxonomy of peatland vegetation: case study of the central zone of Lake Baikal eastern coast". Plant Biosystems. 155 (5): 1001–1012. Bibcode:2021PBios.155.1001B. doi:10.1080/11263504.2020.1810814.