Aegilops
Aegilops is a genus of Eurasian and North American plants in the grass family, Poaceae. They are known generally as goatgrasses. Some species are known as invasive weeds in parts of North America.
Description
These are annual plants, sometimes from rhizomes. The taller species reach about 80 centimeters in maximum height. The flat leaves are linear to narrowly lance-shaped, and are up to 15 centimeters long and one wide. The inflorescence is a spike with 2 to 12 solitary spikelets each up to 1.2 centimeters long. Some spikelets have one or three awns, and some have none.
Wheat
Genus Aegilops has played an important role in the taxonomy of wheat. The familiar common wheat (Triticum aestivum) arose when cultivated emmer wheat hybridized with Aegilops tauschii about 8,000 years ago. Aegilops and Triticum are genetically similar, as evidenced by their ability to hybridize, and by the presence of Aegilops in the evolutionary heritage of many Triticum taxa. Aegilops is sometimes treated within Triticum. They are maintained as separate genera by most authorities because of their ecological characteristics, and because when united they do not form a monophyletic group.
Ecology
Some Aegilops are known as weeds. A. cylindrica, which is commonly known as jointed goatgrass, infests wheat fields, where it outcompetes wheat plants, reducing yields. Its seeds mix with wheat grains at harvest, lowering the quality of the crop. It can also harbor pests such as the Russian wheat aphid (Diuraphis noxia) and pathogenic fungi. Other Aegilops are weeds of rangeland and wildland habitat.
Prehistoric use as a wild food source
During the Mesolithic era, nomadic peoples found goatgrasses (Aegilops) growing wild, along with wild wheats and barleys, and harvested them using bone sickles inset with sharp flakes of flint. The harvested plants were left to dry for a few days, then the edible grains were separated out from the rest of the plant material by beating the plants with a wooden flail, or by rolling them against a hard surface. The seeds were then carefully singed in the embers of a fire to burn away the remaining non-edible plant material. Some grains were accidentally burnt, and since the burnt grains do not biodegrade some have been found by modern archeologists.
Etymology
The genus name Aegilops comes from the Greek aegilos, which could mean "a goat", "goatlike", "a herb liked by goats", or perhaps "a grass similar to that liked by goats".
Species
Aegilops tauschii
Accepted Species
Aegilops bicornis - Egypt, Libya, Cyprus, Lebanon, Syria, Palestine, Sinai, Jordan, Israel Kuwait
Aegilops caudata - Balkans, Middle East
Aegilops columnaris - Middle East
Aegilops comosa - Greece, Turkey
Aegilops crassa – Persian goatgrass - Middle East to Central Asia
Aegilops cylindrica – jointed goatgrass - from Czech Republic to Pakistan
Aegilops geniculata - from Portugal + Canary Islands to Iran
Aegilops × insulae-cypri - Cyprus
Aegilops juvenalis - from Turkey to Kazakhstan
Aegilops kotschyi – ovate goatgrass - from Tunisia to Uzbekistan
Aegilops longissima - Middle East, Egypt
Aegilops lorentii - from Spain + Cape Verde to Iran
Aegilops mutica - Turkey, Transcaucasus
Aegilops neglecta – three-awned goatgrass - from Portugal + Canary Islands to Kazakhstan
Aegilops peregrina - from Morocco to Iran
Aegilops searsii - Syria, Jordan
Aegilops sharonensis - Israel
Aegilops speltoides - from Greece to Iran
Aegilops tauschii - from Crimea to Henan
Aegilops triuncialis – barbed goatgrass - from Portugal + Morocco to Kazakhstan
Aegilops umbellulata - from Crimea to Iran
Aegilops uniaristata - Italy, Balkans, Turkey, Caucasus
Aegilops vavilovii - from Caucasus to Saudi Arabia
Aegilops ventricosa - from Morocco + Balearic Islands to Caucasus
Formerly included species
Species once regarded as members of Aegilops but now considered better suited to other genera: Ctenium, Dactyloctenium, Elymus, Eremochloa, Ophiuros, Parapholis, Rottboellia, and Triticum
Aegilops aromatica - Ctenium aromaticum
Aegilops ciliaris - Eremochloa pectinata
Aegilops crithodium - Triticum monococcum subsp. aegilopoides
Aegilops exaltata - Ophiuros exaltatus
Aegilops fluviatilis - Rottboellia cochinchinensis
Aegilops hordeiformis - Triticum monococcum subsp. monococcum
Aegilops hystrix - Elymus elymoides
Aegilops incurva - Parapholis incurva
Aegilops muricata - Eremochloa muricata
Aegilops saccharina - Dactyloctenium aegyptium
source - Wikipedia
if u like the post please like and shear
0 comments