Helosciadium Nodiflorum
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''Helosciadium nodiflorum'' (synonym: ''Apium nodiflorum''), fool's watercress, is a flowering plant found in ditches or streams, as well as fresh and brackish-water wetlands native to western Europe. It is not poisonous to humans but it could be easily confused with the allegedly poisonous
lesser water parsnip ''Berula erecta'', known as lesser water-parsnip or cutleaf waterparsnip or narrow-leaved water-parsnip, is a member of the Apiaceae, carrot family. Growing to around tall, it is found in or by water. It is widespread across much of Europe, Asia ...
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Description

''Helosciadium nodiflorum'' is a low-growing or prostrate hairless perennial up to 1 m tall, with a thick, hollow, faintly ridged stem which, when lying down (procumbent) produces roots at the nodes. It has glossy pinnate leaves, each of which has 4-6 opposite pairs of toothed, oval to lanceolate leaflets that are slightly paler green on the undersides. There are ridges at the nodes of the leaflets which are often paler than the rhachis and look like rings. (Note, this is different from lesser water-parsnip, which has a ring on the petiole.) The petioles are hollow with a distinctive single groove on upper surface, and may be streaked with red/purple lines; they are laterally inflated towards the base and clasp the stem. The crushed leaves smell of carrot.


Taxonomy

In 2010 a taxonomic revision demonstrated that the genus ''Apium'' was polyphyletic and needed to be split into three genera. Five of the 7 European species of ''Apium'' were therefore moved to the genus ''Helosciadium'', as had first been proposed by
Wilhelm Koch Wilhelm Daniel Joseph Koch (5 March 1771 – 14 November 1849) was a German physician and botanist from Kusel, a town in the Rhineland-Palatinate. Koch studied medicine at the Universities of Jena and Marburg, and afterwards was a '' Stadtphysicu ...
in 1824. ''Apium nodiflorum'' was among them, and is therefore now correctly called ''Helosciadium nodiflorum'' W.D.J. Koch. The genus is noted for the high rate of hybridization between its species, and the following hybrids have been described: * × ''Beruladium procurrens'' A.C. Leslie (''Berula erecta'' × ''H. nodiflorum'') * ''Helosciadium × moorei'' (Syme) Warren (''Helosciadium inundatum'' (L.) W.D.J. Koch ''× H. nodiflorum)'' * ''Helosciadium × longipedunculatum'' (F.W. Schultz) Desjardins (''Helosciadium repens'' (Jacq.) W.D.J. Koch ''× H. nodiflorum'') * ''Helosciadium × clandestinum'' Rita, Capó & Cursach (''
Helosciadium bermejoi ''Helosciadium bermejoi'', synonym ''Apium bermejoi'', is a critically endangered species of flowering plant in the family Apiaceae. Taxonomy It is not closely related to the wild form of celery, ''A. graveolens'', being more properly placed i ...
'' (L. Llorens) Popper & M.F. Watson × ''H. nodiflorum'')


Distribution and habitat

''Helosciadium nodiflorum'' is common throughout England, Wales and Ireland but much less so in Scotland. It often grows with watercress in wet places. It blooms in July and August and is found in wet habitats including ditches, springs, fens and ponds. The species is also widely documented from brackish estuarine/salt marsh habitats.


Uses

Wild fool's watercress has been traditionally harvested and consumed in several Mediterranean countries, including Spain, Italy, Portugal and Morocco The edible young leaves and tender shoots can be used raw in salads, boiled, or used as a condiment in soups and other dishes.


References


External links

{{Taxonbar, from=Q964806 nodiflorum Freshwater plants Flora of Europe Flora of Western Asia Flora of the Arabian Peninsula Flora of North Africa Flora of the Canary Islands