Salvia yangii, previously known as Perovskia atriplicifolia (/pəˈrɒvskiəætrɪplɪsɪˈfoʊliə/), and commonly called Russian sage,[2] is a flowering herbaceousperennial plant and subshrub. Although not previously a member of Salvia, the genus widely known as sage, since 2017 it has been included within them.[3][4] It has an upright habit, typically reaching 0.5–1.2 metres (1+1⁄2–4 feet) tall, with square stems and gray-green leaves that yield a distinctive odor when crushed. It is best known for its flowers. Its flowering season extends from mid-summer to late October, with blue to violet blossoms arranged into showy, branched panicles.
It is native to the steppes and hills of southwestern and central Asia. Successful over a wide range of climate and soil conditions, it has since become popular and widely planted. Several cultivars have been developed, differing primarily in leaf shape and overall height; 'Blue Spire' is the most common. This variation has been widely used in gardens and landscaping. S. yangii was the Perennial Plant Association's 1995 Plant of the Year, and the 'Blue Spire' cultivar received the Award of Garden Merit from the Royal Horticultural Society.
The species has a long history of use in traditional medicine in its native range, where it is employed as a treatment for a variety of ailments. This has led to the investigation of its phytochemistry. Its flowers can be eaten in salads or crushed for dyemaking, and the plant has been considered for potential use in the phytoremediation of contaminated soil.
Description
Salvia yangii is a deciduousperennialsubshrub with an erect to spreading habit.[5][6] Superficially, it resembles a much larger version of lavender.[7] Multiple branches arise from a shared rootstalk,[8] growing to a height of 0.5–1.2 metres (1+1⁄2–4 feet),[8][9] with occasional specimens reaching 1.5 m (5 ft).[10] The mature plant may be 0.6–1.2 m (2–4 ft) across.[10] The rigid stems are square in cross-section,[10] and are covered by an indumentum formed by stellate, or star-shaped, trichomes and oil droplets.[6] Especially during autumn, these hairs give the stems a silvery appearance.[11]
The grayish-green leaves are arranged in opposite pairs,[5][12] and attached to the stems by a short petiole.[6] They are generally 3–5 centimetres (1+1⁄4–2 inches) long and 0.8–2 cm (1⁄4–3⁄4 in) wide,[6] although narrower in some populations.[8] The overall leaf shape is oblate, a rounded shape longer than it is wide, to lanceolate, shaped like the head of a lance.[6] They are pinnatipartite,[8] with a deeply incised leaf margin that may be either wavy or sharp-toothed; even within a single community of S. yangii, there can be considerable variation in the details of leaf shape.[6] Leaves near the top of branches may merge into bracts.[6] The foliage is aromatic, especially when crushed,[10] with a fragrance described as sage-like,[13] a blend of sage and lavender,[14] or like turpentine.[15]
The flowering season of S. yangii can be as long as June through October,[6] although populations in some parts of its range, such as China, may bloom in a much more restricted period.[8] The inflorescence is a showy panicle, 30–38 cm long (12–15 in),[10] with many branches.[16] Each of these branches is a raceme, with the individual flowers arranged in pairs called verticillasters.[8] Each flower's calyx is purple, densely covered in white or purple hairs, and about 4 millimetres (1⁄8 in) long. The corolla is tube-shaped, formed from a four-lobed upper lip and a slightly shorter lower lip; the blue or violet blue petals are about 1 cm long.[8][16] The style has been reported in both an exserted—extending beyond the flower's tube—form and one contained within the flower;[16] all known examples of S. yangii in cultivation have exserted styles.[5] Gardening author Neil Soderstrom describes the appearance of the flowers from a distance as "like a fine haze or fog".[17]
The fruits develop about a month after flowering,[8] and consist of dark brown oval nutlets, about 2 mm × 1 mm (2⁄25 in × 1⁄25 in).[16]
Nine species are recognised within Salvia subg. Perovskia.[27]S. abrotanoides shares much of the range of S. yangii, but is distinguished by its bipinnate leaves.[9][28] Hybrids between these two species may occur naturally.[6] Restricted to Turkestan in its native range, P. scrophularifolia is less upright; some forms have white flowers.[29] The flowers of P. scabiosifolia are yellow.[5]
In 2017, P. atriplicifolia was transferred to the genus Salvia.[3] The combinations Salvia atriplicifolia and Salvia pamirica, however, have already been preoccupied by distinct taxa, thus new specific epithet yangii, honouring Yang Changyou, one of the authors of P. pamirica, was given to the species.[3]
Within the family Lamiaceae, the large genus Salvia had long been believed monophyletic, based on the structure of its stamens. Several smaller genera, including Dorystaechas, Perovskia, and Meriandra were also included in tribeMentheae, but were thought to be more distantly related. In 2004, a molecular phylogenetics study based on two cpDNA genes (rbcL and trnL-F) demonstrated that Salvia is not monophyletic, but comprises three identifiable clades. Clade I is more closely related to Perovskia than to other members of Salvia.[36]
S. yangii has been the subject of subsequent studies seeking to clarify the relationships within Mentheae. Further research combined palynological analysis of pollen grains with rbcLsequencing to provide additional support for the relationship between Perovskia and Salvia clade I. It also distinguished between S. yangii and S. abrotanoides, while confirming their close relationship.[37] A subsequent multigene study (four cpDNA markers and two nrDNA markers) redrew parts of the Mentheae cladogram, making Rosmarinus a sister group to Perovskia.[35]
Cultivars
Several cultivars of S. yangii have been developed. They are primarily distinguished by the height of mature plants and the depth of the leaf-margin incisions.[5] Many of these cultivars, especially those with deeply incised leaves, may actually be hybrids of S. yangii and S. abrotanoides.[5][38] In that context, some may be referred to by the hybrid namePerovskia ×hybrida.[38][39]
'Filigran' reaches a height of 1.2 to 1.3 m (4 to 4+1⁄2 ft); this tall, sturdy cultivar's name is German for filigree, in reference to its lacy, fern-like foliage.[13][42] 'Little Spire' is shorter, with a mature height of only 0.6 m (2 ft).[14][9] 'Longin' is similar in height to 'Blue Spire' but more upright.[13]Allan Armitage established the late-flowering cultivar 'Mystery of Knightshayes' from a plant at Knightshayes Court.[42] Other cultivars include 'Blue Haze', 'Blue Mist', 'Hybrida' (also called 'Superba'), 'Lace', 'Lisslit', 'Rocketman', and 'WALPPB'.[45][46][47][48]
Distribution and habitat
Widely distributed across Asia in its native range, S. yangii grows in western China,[10] northwestern India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran,[49] Turkey, and parts of eastern Europe.[50] It is found in steppes and on hillsides,[50] and grows at higher elevations in mountainous regions, including the Himalayas.[51] It has been recorded at 10,000 ft (3,000 m) of altitude in the Karakoram.[52] In Pakistan's Quetta district, it is often found in association with the grass Chrysopogon aucheri,[53] and may serve as an indicator species for soils with low calcium carbonate and chloride availability.[54] The harsh habitats preferred by S. yangii are comparable to the sagebrush steppe of North America.[55]
Ecology
In parts of its range, such as the Harboi, these steppe ecosystems are employed as rangeland for grazing animals such as sheep and goats, although this forage is generally of poor nutritional quality. S. yangii can serve as an important source of phosphorus and zinc,[56] despite being high in poorly-digested material such as neutral detergent fiber and lignin.[57]
Cultivation
Following its introduction to the United Kingdom in 1904, the Irish gardener and author William Robinson was immediately taken with the plant, which he described as being "worth a place in the choicest garden for its graceful habit and long season of beauty."[43] The Royal Horticultural Society records the establishment of cultivars beginning with P. 'Hybrida', selected at a Hampshire nursery in the 1930s.[42] By the late 1980s and early 1990s, S. yangii had gained widespread popularity,[58] and in 1995, it was selected as the Perennial Plant Association's Plant of the Year.[59]
Russian sage is a perennial plant suitable for a wide range of conditions, at least where its tendency to spread will not be a problem. The species prefers full sun.[59] Specimens planted in partially shaded locations tend to spread or flop,[10] although this behavior can be controlled somewhat by pinching young shoots or by providing a strong-standing accompaniment that the plant can drape itself around for support.[62][63] Flowers bloom only on new growth.[64] Plants trimmed to 15–61 cm (6–24 in) in early spring provide the best subsequent growth and flowering.[5][65]
Tolerant of both heat and cold, it is grown in North America in United States Department of Agriculturehardiness zones three through nine,[10][59] although some cultivars may be better suited than others to extremes of temperature.[66][58] It is successfully grown from the southwestern United States, north and east across much of the country,[67] and across the Canada–US border into Ontario and Quebec.[68][42] In the coldest of these areas, it may require considerable protection to survive the winter.[69] In the United Kingdom, the Royal Horticultural Society has assigned it hardiness rating H4,[66] indicating that it tolerates temperatures as low as −10 to −5 °C (14 to 23 °F), hardy in most of the country through typical winters.[70]
It also tolerates a variety of soil conditions. Although young specimens perform best when planted in a mixture of peat and either sand or perlite,[71][72]S. yangii can thrive in sandy, chalky, or loamy soil,[41] or heavy clay soil with sufficient drainage.[73] It can endure a wide range of soil pH,[41] as well as exposure to salty conditions near oceans.[14] Its deep-feeding taproot makes it especially drought tolerant;[74] for this reason it has seen wide use for xeriscaping in the Intermountain West.[75] Overwatering and over-fertilization can damage its roots and lead to a rapid decline in health.[73][76]S. yangii is otherwise generally free from plant pathogens.[14] In cultivation, it is also rarely selected as forage by grazing animals, and so is considered both a deer-resistant and rabbit-resistant plant.[13][77]
Landscaping
Russian sage has been praised for its usefulness in gardens and landscaping features.[78] It is most commonly planted as an accent feature,[59] such as an "island" in an expanse of lawn,[79] but it can also be used as filler within a larger landscaping feature,[65] or to enhance areas where the existing natural appearance is retained.[79] Gardening author Troy Marden describes S. yangii as having a "see-through" quality that is ideal for borders.[80] Some experts suggest groups of three plants provide the best landscape appearance.[58] It is also suitable for container gardening.[81] It does have an undesirable tendency to spread via rhizomes beyond it original planting.
It attracts bees,[82] hummingbirds,[81] and butterflies,[13] and contributes color to gardens—both the blue of its late-season flowers,[43] and the silvery colors of its winter stalks.[83]
Propagation
Russian sage is frequently propagated by cuttings. Because its woody crown is resistant to division, softwood cuttings are taken from shoots near the base, generally in late spring.[5][69] Hardwood cuttings selected in mid-to-late summer also provide a viable propagation technique.[5][14] The plant is also grown from seed in cultivation. Such seeds require exposure to cold for 30–160 days to germinate,[59][84] and seed-raised specimens may not preserve the characteristics of named cultivars.[66] In the commercial greenhouse or nursery setting, its relatively large size and rapid growth can adversely affect quality or make plants more difficult and expensive to transport; the use of plant growth regulators such as chlormequat chloride and daminozide may be more cost-effective than large-scale pruning.[85]
Some members of the Lamiaceae can spread unchecked and become invasive plants.[86] Planting of Russian sage near wild lands has been discouraged by some gardening guides out of concern for its potential to spread,[87][88] but it is not yet considered invasive,[77] and has been suggested as a substitute for purple loosestrife for this reason.[89]
In addition to its use in folk medicine, it is sometimes used in Russia to flavor a vodka-based cocktail.[92] Its flowers are eaten in parts of Afghanistan and Pakistan, including Kashmir,[93] adding a sweet flavor to salads.
Bentham, George (1848), "Labiatæ", in Candolle, Alphonse de (ed.), Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis (in Latin), vol. 12, Victoris Masson, pp. 27–603
Breen, Pat; Zanden, Ann Marie VanDer; Hilgert, Chris (2004), "Perovskia atriplicifolia", Landscape Plants: Images, Identification, and Information, Oregon State University Department of Horticulture, retrieved August 17, 2015
Drew, Bryan T.; Sytsma, Kenneth J. (2012), "Phylogenetics, biogeography, and staminal evolution in the tribe Mentheae (Lamiaceae)", American Journal of Botany, 99 (5): 933–953, doi:10.3732/ajb.1100549, PMID22539517
Dumitraşcu, M. (2008), "Vegetative propagation of Perovskia atriplicifolia", Acta Horticulturae, 766 (766): 215–218, doi:10.17660/ActaHortic.2008.766.28
Eisenman, Sasha W.; Zaurov, David E.; Struwe, Lena, eds. (2012), Medicinal Plants of Central Asia: Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan (2013 ed.), Springer, ISBN978-1-4614-3911-0
Erdemgil, Fatma Zerrin; Ilhan, Semra; Korkmaz, Ferhan; Kaplan, Cigdem; Mercangöz, Ayse; Arfan, Mohammad; Ahmad, Shabir (2007), "Chemical composition and biological activity of the essential oil of Perovskia atriplicifolia from Pakistan", Pharmaceutical Biology, 45 (4): 324–331, doi:10.1080/13880200701212890, S2CID95671085
Gardiner, Jim (2014), The Timber Press Encyclopedia of Flowering Shrubs, Timber Press, ISBN978-1-60469-395-9
Harrison, Lorraine (2012), RHS Latin for Gardeners, Mitchell Beazley, ISBN978-1-84533-731-5
Hedge, Ian Charleson (1990), Flora of Pakistan 192, Labiatae, University of Karachi, OCLC917314877
Henehan, Rita C. (2008), The Michigan Gardener's Companion: An Insider's Guide to Gardening in the Great Lakes State, Globe Pequot, ISBN978-0-7627-4509-8
Hightower, Steven, "Perovskia", Sonoma County Master Gardeners, University of California, retrieved August 17, 2015
Kingsbury, Noel (2014), Gardening with Perennials: Lessons from Chicago's Lurie Garden, University of Chicago Press, ISBN978-0-226-11855-0
Kintzios, Spiridon E. (2000), "Preface", in Kintzios, Spiridon E. (ed.), Sage: The Genus Salvia, Harwood Academic Publishers, pp. xi–xv, ISBN978-90-5823-005-8
Mani, M. S. (1978), Ecology and Phytogeography of High Altitude Plants of the Northwest Himalaya: Introduction to High Altitude Botany, Halsted Press, ISBN978-0-412-15710-3
Perveen, Shagufta; Malik, Abdul; Tareen, Rasool Bakhsh (2009), "Structural determination of atricins A and B, new triterpenes from Perovskia atriplicifolia, by 1D and 2D NMR spectroscopy", Magnetic Resonance in Chemistry, 47 (3): 266–269, doi:10.1002/mrc.2364, PMID18991320, S2CID38462642
Perveen, Shagufta; Malik, Abdul; Tareen, Rasool Bakhsh; Afza, Nighat; Iqbal, Lubna (2014), "Atriplisides A and B, two new glycosides from Perovskia atriplicifolia", Zeitschrift für Naturforschung B, 62 (6): 863–867, doi:10.1515/znb-2007-0617
Pippen, Laurie (2015), Laurie Pippen's All Natural Colorants for Cosmetic, Culinary, and Textile Dyeing, Eiram Publishing, ISBN978-1-933039-74-9
Rose, Nancy; Selinger, Don; Whitman, John (2011), Growing Shrubs and Small Trees in Cold Climates (Revised and Updated ed.), University of Minnesota Press, ISBN978-1-4529-3305-4
Roth, Sally; Courtier, Jane (2015), Essential Perennials for Every Garden: Selection, Care, and Profiles to over 110 Easy Care Plants, i5 Publishing, ISBN978-1-62008-168-6
Roy, B.; Halder, A.C.; Pal, D.C. (1998), Plants for Human Consumption in India, Flora of India, Botanical Survey of India, OCLC41532488
Schneller, Lee (2012), The Ever-Blooming Flower Garden: A Blueprint for Continuous Color, Storey Publishing, ISBN978-1-60342-652-7
Severa, Joan (1999), Stoga, Stan (ed.), Creating a Perennial Garden in the Midwest, Big Earth Publishing, ISBN978-0-915024-73-5
Shonle, Irene (2010), Non-Native Invasive Plants, Colorado State University Cooperative Extension, retrieved September 1, 2015
Singer, Carolyn (2006), Deer in My Garden: Vol. 1: Perennials & Subshrubs, Greenleaf, ISBN978-0-9774251-0-5
Soderstrom, Neil (2009), Deer-Resistant Landscaping: Proven Advice and Strategies for Outwitting Deer and 20 Other Pesky Mammals, Rodale, ISBN978-1-60529-667-8
Squire, David (2007), The Propagation Specialist: The Essential Guide to Raising New Plants for the Home and Garden, New Holland Publishers, ISBN978-1-84537-484-6
Tarawneh, Amer; León, Francisco; Pettaway, Sara; Elokely, Khaled M.; Klein, Michael L.; Lambert, Janet; Mansoor, Arsala; Cutler, Stephen J. (2015), "Flavonoids from Perovskia atriplicifolia and their in vitro displacement of the respective radioligands for human opioid and cannabinoid receptors", Journal of Natural Products, 78 (6): 1461–1465, doi:10.1021/acs.jnatprod.5b00218, PMID26035635
Walker, Jay B.; Sytsma, Kenneth J.; Treutlein, Jens; Wink, Michael (2004), "Salvia (Lamiaceae) is not monophyletic: Implications for the systematics, radiation, and ecological specializations of Salvia and tribe Mentheae", American Journal of Botany, 91 (7): 1115–1125, doi:10.3732/ajb.91.7.1115, PMID21653467
Weiseman, Daniel; Halsey, Daniel; Ruddock, Bryce (2014), Integrated Forest Gardening: The Complete Guide to Polycultures and Plant Guilds in Permaculture Systems, Chelsea Green Publishing, ISBN978-1-60358-497-5
Winter, Norman (2009), Captivating Combinations, University Press of Mississippi, ISBN978-1-60473-475-1