Erba di San Giovanni (Hypericum perforatum L., Hypericaceae)


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Erba di San Giovanni (Hypericum perforatum L., Hypericaceae)

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#3754 - Hypericum androsaemum - Tutsan
AKA shrubby St. John's wort or sweet-amber, and repeatedly placed in it's own genus Androsaemum, and redescribed as multiple species in both. Hypericum derives from the Greek for "above pictures" refers to the practice of hanging the flower above icons to ward off evil spirits. Androsaemum comes from the Greek for "man's blood" as used to describe plants with red sap. Tutsan derives from the French phrase tout-saine, 'heal-all', in reference to the plant's alleged medicinal properties. Sweet-amber refers to the ambergris-like aroma when the red oil glands on the leaves are crushed
Native to Western Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, and a weed everywhere else where it was grown as an ornamental. The seed and leaf-tip eating moth Lathronympha strigana and the leaf-feeding beetle Chrysolina abchasica show promise as biological control agents.
Uniquely for the genus, Tutsan berries stay fleshy and turn black when ripe.
Woodhaugh Gardens, Dunedin, Aotearoa New Zealand
Common St. John's-Wort Hypericum perforatum Hypericaceae
Photograph taken on July 3, 2023, at Marmora and Lake, Ontario, Canada.
2/23/21
About 100 Hypericum species can be found in Turkey, 45 of them are endemic, many of them are used in Traditional Turkish Medicine, for example this Hypericum lydium is used to treat indigestions, stomach diseases and hemorrhoid.

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Common Saint John's Wort, Hypericum perforatum (by me)
Hypericum perforatum, Hypericaceae
If you’ve seen large clumps of bright yellow flowers in sunny and grassy locations earlier this summer, chances are it was the very common perforate St. John’s-wort, native to Europe and Western Asia, but naturalised extensively around the world. Although the flowers are not as large or showy, you can probably recognise the structure as being identical to the other species of Hypericum I wrote about, tutsan (H. androsaemum) and the hybrid Hypericum x moserianum.
It is often considered a noxious weed which can cause severe damage to livestock if consumed in large enough quantities, either fresh (although most animals avoid the plant if given a choice) or dried and mixed with hay during winter. The symptoms of poisoning range from photo-sensitivity to convulsions and death, which give an idea of the potential danger its two main active compounds, hypericin and hyperforin, can pose. These compounds are also what gives the plant the medicinal properties it’s been known since antiquity for, most notably as an antidepressant. Now, there would be a lot to write about when it comes to the ways perforate St. John’s-wort has been used, and the ailments treated by it, but, as I stated before, I won’t go to far into it due to its potential toxicity. Regardless of all the above, it is another great flower to attract wildlife to your garden.
H – Hypericum perforatum L. – Erba di San Giovanni (Hypericaceae)
Visita di Bombus hortorum (Linné, 1761)