Dr. T. Ombrello - UCC Biology Department
Common names: Dandelion,
Common Dandelion, Lion’s Tooth, Blow Ball, Puffball, Cankerwort, Monk’s Head,
Priest’s Crown, Fairy Clock, Peasant’s Clock, Doonheadclock, Fortuneteller,
Irish Daisy, Swine Snort, Pissabed.
Scientific
name: Taraxacum
officinale
Explanation of scientific
name:
Taraxacum
– the Latin version of a native Arabian name. The name appeared over 1000 years
ago in medieval Arabic writings as taraxacon. In Greek taraxos
means disorder
and akos means remedy.
officinale
– medicinal, of the pharmacopoeia, in reference to the many historical uses of
this
species in medicine.
Mention
the word “Dandelion” to a typical gardener and you are likely to get a negative
response. This bane of the perfect lawn has been the source of suburban
neighborhood unrest, as homeowners with dandelion-free lawns demand that
neighbors with dandelion infestations do something to control the weed before
its seeds blow onto their lawns. In any horticultural setting, dandelions can be
serious competitors with other plants, so their reputation as an aggressive,
difficult to eradicate weed is well deserved. Will gardeners ever win the battle
against dandelions? Probably not! While herbicides can effectively kill them and
prevent their seeds from germinating, cultivation can cut them up, and specially
designed dandelion extraction tools can remove them, they still manage to come
back. There is no realistic hope that we will ever be able to eradicate this
species. Perhaps the best we can hope for is limited control. We are not likely
to win the battle against dandelions, and other weeds for that matter, because
they have nature on their side. A dictionary definition of a weed will read
something like “an unwanted plant” or “a plant out of place.” From the human
perspective that may be true, but from the ecological perspective they have an
important role in nature. They have been playing this role for eons of time, and
have become quite good at it. That role is the early colonizer of disturbed
sites. When a natural disaster such as a fire, flood, geologic disturbance, or
extreme weather destroys the vegetation in an area, it is the weeds of the world
that quickly re-vegetate the site. By stabilizing the soil and preventing wind
and water erosion, along with providing cover and food for animals, they make it
possible for the pre-disaster community of life to return and re-establish
itself. Once the dandelion or other weed has completed this role, it leaves only
its seeds in the ground, waiting to emerge after that next disaster. Long-term
studies, still ongoing, show that some weed seeds can remain viable in the soil
for over a century, and readily germinate once the soil is disturbed around
them. Most horticultural endeavors, from backyard gardening to large scale
farming, usually begin with destroying the existing vegetation, followed
by turning the soil over, and finally sowing plants that we want to grow
there even though they most likely are not native to the area. We create the
perfect environment for weeds to get established, and then pit them against
plants that are not as competitive unless we help them. Is it any wonder that
the weeds, as exemplified by the dandelion, often win?
Not
everyone sees the dandelion as an objectionable weed.
As the
explanation above of the dandelion’s scientific name suggests, this species has
a history of medicinal use in its native range of Europe and
The milky
latex found in dandelions, and especially their roots, has the potential to be a
source of rubber. Taraxacum officinale
can be used, but it is inferior to other species of dandelion. During World War
II several Eastern European nations grew vast fields of dandelions for rubber
production since tropical sources were unavailable. Today, several species of
dandelion are being investigated for commercial rubber production.
The
dandelion is a member of the Sunflower family of plants (Asteraceae). This huge
and diverse family contains over 22,000 species. Besides sunflowers and asters,
dandelions can count chrysanthemums, marigolds, lettuces, and artichokes as
close relatives. The dandelion is an early successional herbaceous perennial,
meaning it consists solely of soft tissue, has an indefinite lifespan, and is
commonly found on disturbed sites in nature. The plant grows in a rosette
fashion, with all the leaves arising from a very compact stem (crown) just below
the soil surface. The species’ leaf habit can be quite varied. Some plants
produce leaves that are upright and almost vertical, while others produce
ground-hugging leaves that are essentially horizontal. Leaves are spirally
arranged on the stem, typically with every sixth leaf overlapping one below it.
This affords the leaves maximum exposure to the sun. The irregular, jagged teeth
on the linear leaves led to the common name of the plant. Dandelion is derived
from the French dent de lion (tooth of
a lion). The plant is anchored by a
long, white, fleshy taproot with amazing capabilities of regeneration. If part
of a root remains underground after a plant is pulled or cut from the soil, it
usually develops one or more new crowns and leaves. The root not only stores
reserve energy for the plant, but also taps moisture and nutrition from well
below the soil surface. In a sense it improves the soil for the plant community
by breaking through compacted subsoil and moving nutrients closer to the
surface.
Dandelions
reproduce by seeds, and do so quite successfully. The plants bloom in response
to day length. Known as “short-day” plants, flower buds are usually initiated
when a growing plant experiences nights in excess of 12 hours. The dandelion’s
familiar yellow flower atop a long hollow stem is not really just a flower, but
instead an inflorescence of many small individual flowers attached to a
globe-like receptacle. Each flower produces a seed enclosed in a tiny, hard
fruit known botanically as an achene. Each of the many achenes of a dandelion
inflorescence is topped by a pappus of numerous fine hairs that when dry helps
the achene and the seed it contains become dispersed by even a slight breeze in
a parachute-like fashion. Children and adults alike enjoy picking ripe dandelion
heads and blowing the achenes into the air, inadvertently helping to spread the
plant throughout their neighborhood. Dandelion seeds can be produced by sexual
and asexual reproduction. The sexual method involves sperm within pollen grains
reaching the eggs within ovaries, often with the help of pollinating insects.
This is the method the majority of plant species employ to produce seeds, but
not dandelions. Most dandelions produce seeds by apomixis, where unfertilized
egg cells in the ovaries produce viable seeds that will germinate to become
clones of the parent plant. The plants reproducing by apomixis are polyploids
(mostly triploids) with an irregular number of chromosomes in their cells. A
population of dandelions can contain plants reproducing by both methods. This
flexibility in seed production, with both asexually and sexually reproducing
individuals in a population, allows for some diversity within each generation,
while permitting adapted asexually reproducing individuals to clone themselves.
This is just another little feature of this amazing species that makes it so
successful.