Flowers in Israel | Centaurium spicatum

Centaurium spicatum, Schenkia spicata, Spiked Centaury,
Hebrew: ערבז משובל, Arabic: حشيشة العقرب

Scientific name:   Centaurium spicatum (L.) Fritsch
Synonym name:   Schenkia spicata (L.) Mansion
Common name:   Spiked Centaury
Hebrew name:   ערבז משובל
Arabic name:   حشيشة العقرب
Family:   Gentianaceae, Gentian family, ערבזיים


Schenkia spicata (L.) G.Mans. [Centaurium spicatum (L.) Fernald] D.Dodart,vol.1:t.97 (1788)[N.Robert]
http://plantillustrations.org/species.php?species=Gentiana+spicata

Life form:   Annual or biennial
Spinescence:   Non
Succulence:   Non
Stems:   Usually branched from the base or middle
Leaves:   Smooth, stalkless leaves, 1-3 cm long, elliptical or broadly or narrowly oblong to lanceolate, usually light-green, basal (sometimes forming a rosette) and in pairs on the stems.
Inflorescence:   Flowers in spiciforme cyme
Flowers:   Hermaphrodite; corolla pinkish-purple; stamens inserted at or below the ape of the corolla-tube
Fruits / pods:   Narrow-oblong capsule, enclosed by or slightly longer than, the persistent calyx.
Flowering Period:   May, June, July, August
Habitat:   Batha, Phrygana, Humid habitats
Distribution:   Mediterranean Woodlands and Shrublands,Shrub-steppes, Semi-steppe shrublands, Deserts
Chorotype:   Med-Irano-Turanian
Summer shedding:   Ephemeral
Derivation of the botanical name:

Centaurium named after the centaur Chiron, famed in Greek mythology for his skill in medicinal herbs.

spicatum, spica, spike, spicata bearing a spike.
The Hebrew word: ערבז, arbaz is named by Immanuel Löw (1854 – 1944), a Hungarian rabbi, scholar and politician, following the name of the plant in the Syrian language, in his book “The Flora of the Jews”.

  • The standard author abbreviation L. is used to indicate Carl Linnaeus (1707 – 1778), a Swedish botanist, physician, and zoologist, the father of modern taxonomy.
  • The standard author abbreviation Fritsch is used to indicate Karl Fritsch (1864 – 1934), an Austrian botanist