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| Practical ecological knowledge for the temperate reader. |
Cardamine Bitter-Cress
Family: Brassicaceae- Mustard Family [E-flora4]
[1]
Cardamine bellidifolia
|
[2]
Cardamine flexuosa
|
[3]
Cardamine hirsuta
|
Annual to perennial herb, from taproots, fibrous roots, or tuber-like rhizomes; hairs 0 or simple.
Leaf: alternate, opposite, or whorled; entire to palmately, pinnately lobed, or compound; cauline leaves petioled or 0, not lobed at base [lobed].
Inflorescence: elongated, bracts generally 0.
Flower: sepals erect (spreading), bases sac-like or not; petals white, pink, purple, or violet.
Fruit: silique, linear, flat parallel to septum, dehiscent, unsegmented; valves generally coiling when dehiscent; placental margins flattened. Seed: (4)10–80, in 1 row, wingless.
± 200 species: temperate, worldwide. (Greek: for cress) Some North American species (e.g., Cardamine californica, Cardamine nuttallii, Cardamine pachystigma) highly variable, more study needed; species treated conservatively here. Cardamine flexuosa With. a waif in gardens, nurseries.
Unabridged note: Some North American species (e.g., Cardamine californica, Cardamine nuttallii, Cardamine pachystigma) highly variable and numerous minor variants were recognized as varieties. C ritical studies of these complexes reveal that only a fraction of the overall continuous variation was formally recognized. Without detailed molecular and cytological studies, a broader sp. concept is adopted herein.
[Jepson2012]
"A genus of about 200 species, herbs, cosmopolitan. Dentaria should apparently be included (Sweeney & Price 2000)." [Weakley FSMAS]
Local Species;
- Cardamine angulata - angled bitter-cress [E-flora][PCBC]
- Cardamine bellidifolia - alpine bitter-cress [E-flora][PCBC]
- Cardamine breweri - Brewer's bitter-cress [E-flora][PCBC]
- Cardamine corymbosa - New Zealand bittercress [E-flora]
- Cardamine flexuosa - Wood bittercress [E-flora]
- Cardamine hirsuta - hairy bitter-cress [E-flora]
- Cardamine nuttallii - Slender toothwort [E-flora][PCBC][TSFTK]
- Cardamine occidentalis - Western Bitter-cress [E-flora][PCBC]
- Cardamine occulta - wood bitter-cress [E-flora]
- Cardamine oligosperma - little western bitter-cress [E-flora][PCBC]
- Cardamine parviflora - small-flowered bitter-cress [E-flora]
- Cardamine pensylvanica - Pennsylvanian bitter-cress [E-flora][PCBC]
- Cardamine pratensis - Cuckoo-flower [E-flora][PCBC]
- Cardamine umbellata - umbel bitter-cress [E-flora][PCBC]
Cardamine angulata - Angled Bitter-Cress
This is a Blue-Listed species in B.C. [E-flora]
-
Origin Status:
Native [E-flora]
- General: Perennial herb from slender rhizome, greater than 3 cm long, not tuberous; stems simple, 40-80 cm tall, glabrous or sparsely hairy.[IFBC-E-flora]
- Leaves: With 3-5 leaflets, long-stalked, leaflets narrowly egg-shaped to egg-shaped, widely toothed to lobed, the terminal leaflet 1.5-5 cm long, 1.2-3 cm wide, somewhat larger than the lateral ones, hairy-fringed; upper stem leaves egg-shaped, with 3-5 large teeth.[IFBC-E-flora]
- Flowers: Inflorescence a simple raceme; flower stalks 8-20 mm long, ascending, glabrous; petals white to pinkish, 8-14 mm long; sepals pale yellow-green, about 2 mm long.[IFBC-E-flora]
- Fruits: Siliques, 1.5-3.5 cm long, 1.5-2 mm wide, erect, glabrous; styles 1.5-3 mm long.[IFBC-E-flora]
Habitat / Range
- Moist woods and river banks in the lowland zone; rare on the Queen Charlotte Islands and Vancouver Island; N to S AK and S to N CA. [IFBC-E-flora]
Medicinal Use
"The Haida people used the roots of C. angulata
mixed with ‘water lily medicine’ (Nuphar lufea ssp.
polysepala) in a poultice for sores (Turner, person-
al communication)." [Mccutcheon.,1995]
Activities
"Cardamine angulata, Conocephalum conicum, and Polypodium glycyrrhiza had anti-HSV-1 activity [20]."[ModPhyt] "Caruizmiw angdata Hook. (Cruciferae) Common
name: Bitter Cress. Root extract showed activity
against bovine herpesvirus type 1." [Mccutcheon.,1995]
"This plant extract only exhibited very slight antibacterial and antifungal activity in previous
screenings, although N. lutea ssp. polysepala, the
plant that it was compounded with, had very
strong antimicrobial activity (McCutcheon et al.,
1993; 1994). No other reports of pharmacological
activity nor reports on the chemical constituents of
this plant were found in the literature." [Mccutcheon.,1995]
Cardamine bellidifolia - Alpine bitter-cress
Subtaxa Present in B.C.
Cardamine bellidifolia var. bellidifolia [E-flora4]
- Origin Status:
Native [E-flora4]
- General:
More or less tufted, perennial herb from a taproot and often a branched stem-base with somewhat rhizome-like branches, leaf bases persistent; stems several, few-leaved, 2-10 cm long, glabrous.[IFBC-E-flora4]
- Leaves:
Basal leaves in rosettes, thick, fleshy, entire or shallowly 1-3 lobed, blades 5-30 mm long, diamond-shaped to elliptic to egg-shaped, narrowed to slender stalks 2-4 times as long; stem leaves 0-3, reduced.[IFBC-E-flora4]
- Flowers:
Inflorescence a few-flowered, umbel-like raceme; flower stalks 4-10 mm long, ascending; petals white, 3-5 mm long; sepals 1.5-2 mm long.
[IFBC-E-flora4]
- Fruits:
Siliques, erect, 1.5-3.5 cm long, 1-1.5 mm wide; styles stout, 1-3 mm long.[IFBC-E-flora4]
- Habitat / Range
Moist scree slopes, gravelly areas and mossy rocks in the upper montane to alpine zones; frequent in N BC, rare southward and on Vancouver Island; circumpolar, E to NF and S to ME, NH and N CA. [IFBC-E-flora]
Cardamine breweri - Brewer's bitter-cress
- Origin Status: Native [E-flora]
- General:
Perennial herb from a rhizome; stems erect to spreading or nearly prostrate, simple to freely branched, 20-60 cm tall, glabrous or sparsely hairy near base.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Leaves:
Basal leaves few, simple, blades 1-3 cm long, heart- to kidney-shaped or egg-shaped, shallowly wavy-margined and lobed; stem leaves compound with 2-4 (6) lanceolate to egg-shaped lateral lobes, the terminal lobe heart-shaped to egg-shaped to widely lanceolate, wavy-margined and toothed to shallowly lobed.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Flowers:
Inflorescence a few-flowered raceme; flower stalks 5-20 mm long, ascending; petals white, spoon- to egg-shaped, 3-6 mm long; sepals 1.5-2.5 mm long.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Fruits:
Siliques, erect, 2-3 cm long, 1-1.5 mm wide; styles 0.5-2 mm long.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Habitat / Range: Wet to moist streambanks, shallow ponds and lakesides in the lowland and montane zones; infrequent in S BC; S to WY, NV and N CA.
[IFBC-E-flora]
Two varieties occur in BC:
- 1. Terminal lobes of lower stem leaves heart-shaped at base..................var. orbicularis (Greene) Detl.
- 1. Terminal lobes of lower stem leaves cuneate or rounded at base....................... var. breweri [IFBC-E-flora]
Cardamine corymbosa - New Zealand bittercress
Origin Status:
Exotic [E-flora]
Cardamine flexuosa - Wood bittercress
Origin Status:
Exotic [E-flora]
Food Use
C. flexuosa & C. hirsuta: "Leaves/shoots All parts peppery and spice up salads. Also used like
watercress in soups." [Crawford FFFG]
Medicinal Use
Stems used to treat toothache [Pullaiah EOI]
Cardamine hirsuta - Hairy Bitter-cress
- Origin Status:
Exotic [E-flora]
- General:
Annual herb from slender taproot; stems usually solitary, stiff, 5-30 cm tall, usually glabrous.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Leaves:
Basal leaves in compact rosettes, compound, stalked, hairy-fringed, pinnate with 2-3 or more pairs of egg-shaped to orbicular leaflets and a larger, somewhat kidney-shaped terminal leaflet; stem leaves few, almost unstalked, with smaller, narrower leaflets; all leaflets wavy-margined to shallowly few-lobed, sparsely stiff-hairy above and on the margins.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Flowers:
Inflorescence a simple raceme; flower stalks ascending, 5-10 mm long; petals white, narrow, 1.5-2 mm long; sepals half as long as petals, greenish-violet with narrow white margins; stamens 4.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Fruits:
Siliques, erect, 1.8-2.5 cm long, about 1 mm wide; styles 0.5-2 (6) mm long; seeds 22-36.[IFBC-E-flora]
- Habitat / Range:
Mesic to dry waste places, roadsides and open woods in the lowland zone; frequent in SW BC; introduced from Eurasia. [IFBC-E-flora]
Food Use
Leaves & Flowers: "Leaves and flowers eaten raw or cooked, mainly
used as a garnish or flavouring in salads etc., but are
also sometimes used as a potherb" [EMNMPV.7]
C. flexuosa & C. hirsuta: "Leaves/shoots All parts peppery and spice up salads. Also used like
watercress in soups." [Crawford FFFG]
Medicinal Use
Cardamine hirsuta L. - "Shoot: Extract taken to low blood pressure and in cardiac problems
(Darjeeling: [74]; Sikkim: [75])." [Uprety et al.,2016]
Other information
Seed "Oil, % on dry wt: 25", "Mass of 1,000, g: 0.1"[LLCEOPS]
Cardamine nuttallii - Slender toothwort
Origin Status: Native [E-flora]
- General:
Perennial herb from a short, slender, fleshy rhizome, less than 3 cm long and 1-3 (4) mm thick; stems erect, 20-30 cm tall, glabrous.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Leaves:
Basal leaves long-stalked, blades simple, orbicular to heart-shaped, shallowly round-toothed to lobed, sometimes deeply 3- or 5-lobed or compound with 3-5 (7) leaflets; stem leaves 1-3, grouped mostly above middle of stem, lobed, or compound with 3 or 5 lanceolate to egg-shaped-lanceolate, entire leaflets, 1-4 cm long.[IFBC-E-flora]
- Flowers:
Inflorescence a few-flowered racemes, without bracts; flowers stalks erect to ascending, 10-20 mm long; petals pink to reddish or purplish, 7-12 mm long; sepals 3-5 mm long.[IFBC-E-flora]
- Fruits:
Siliques, erect, 1.5-5 cm long, about 1.5 mm wide; styles slender, 3-6 mm long.[IFBC-E-flora]
- Habitat / Range
Moist woods and bottom lands in the lowland zone; common in SW BC, known from S Vancouver Island, the Gulf Islands and adjacent mainland of BC; S to N CA. [IFBC-E-flora]
Ecological Indicator Information
"A shade-tolerant, submontane to montane, Pacific North American forb; ecologically comparable to C. breweri. Occurs in maritime to hypermaritime cool mesothermal climates
on very moist to wet, nitrogen-rich soils; its occurrence decreases with increasing elevation and continentality. Sporadic in closed-canopy forests on water-receiving sites;
occasional in depressions on water-collecting sites with groundwater table at the ground surface. A nitrophytic species characteristic of Moder or Mull humus forms."
[IFBC-E-flora]
Synonyms
Cardamine pulcherrima Greene [ThePlantLIst.org] 2/3 Confidence, Accessed Feb 13, 2014. [E-flora]
Cardamine nuttallii var. nuttallii [E-flora]
Cardamine nuttallii var. pulcherrima (Greene) Taylor & MacBryde [E-flora]
Dentaria tenella Pursh [E-flora]
Dentaria tenella var. pulcherrima (Greene) Detling [E-flora]
Cardamine occidentalis - Western Bitter-Cress
Synonyms
Cardamine pratensis var. occidentalis S. Watson ex B.L. Rob. [E-flora3]
-
Origin Status:
-
General:
- Perennial herb from a short, slender rhizome; stems 1-1.5 mm thick, enlarged and tuberous near base of leafy stems, 20-40 cm tall, simple to freely branched, erect to decumbent and rooting at nodes, glabrous to sparsely hairy.
[IFBC-E-flora3]
-
Leaves:
- Basal leaves few, slender-stalked, pinnate, lateral lobes (2) 4-6, egg-shaped to heart-shaped, short-stalked to unstalked, 3-8 mm long, generally entire, terminal lobe 1-2 cm long, shallowly wavy-margined; stem leaves several, upper ones unstalked to nearly unstalked, fewer lateral lobes, narrowly egg-shaped to linear, mostly 1-2 cm long, entire or slightly toothed, terminal leaflet egg- to wedge-shaped, 1.5-3 cm long.
[IFBC-E-flora3]
-
Flowers:
- Inflorescence an elongate raceme, without bracts; flower stalks ascending, 10-15 mm long; petals white, 3.5-5 mm long; sepals 1-2 (2.5) mm long.[IFBC-E-flora3]
-
Fruits:
- Siliques, erect, 2-3 cm long, 1-1.5 mm wide; styles about 1 mm long.[IFBC-E-flora3]
-
Habitat / Range
- Wet to moist streambanks and lakeshores in the lowland zone; infrequent in SW BC; N to AK and S to CA. [IFBC-E-flora3]
Cardamine occulta - wood bitter-cress
Status: Exotic [E-flora-1]
Cardamine Oligosperma - Few-seeded Bitter-cress
- Origin Status:
Native [E-flora]
- General:
Annual or biennial (var. oligosperma) or perennial (var. kamtschatica) herb from a taproot; stems erect to ascending, one or more, freely branched, 10-50 cm tall, hairs short or lacking.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Leaves:
Basal leaves forming a rosette; stem leaves similar, pinnate, sparsely stiff-hairy to hairy-fringed to almost glabrous, lateral lobes (2) 3-10, shortly-stalked to stalked, oblanceolate to egg-shaped, entire or shallowly 2 to several times round-toothed or lobed, 3-20 mm long, the terminal leaflet usually larger, to 3 cm long.[IFBC-E-flora]
- Flowers:
Inflorescence an elongate racemes, more or less umbel-like, 3-10 cm long, generally lacking bracts; flower stalks erect to ascending, 5-20 mm long; petals white, 2-4 mm long; sepals 1-2 mm long.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Fruits:
Siliques, erect, 1.5-2.5 cm long, 1-1.5 mm wide, glabrous to sparsely hairy; styles less than 0.5 mm long; seeds 15-22 (24), 1.5-2 mm long, oblong-oval, narrowly wing-margined.
[IFBC-E-flora]
Notes:
Two rather weak varieties occur in BC.
1. Racemes more or less umbel-like, the central axis 1-2 cm long; plants of the upper montane to alpine zones...................... var. kamtschatica (Regel) Detling
1. Racemes more elongate, the central axis greater than 3 cm long; plants of the lowland and lower montane zones............................ var. oligosperma [IFBC-E-flora]
Habitat / Range: Wet to mesic streamsides, ditches, waste places, roadsides, meadows, gravelly slopes and open woods in the lowland to alpine zones; var. oligosperma - common in S BC, less frequent northward, var. kamtschatica - frequent in coastal and N BC; var. oligosperma - S to MT and CA, var. kamtschatica - amphiberingian, N to AK, YT and NT, E to AB and S to OR; E. Asia. [IFBC-E-flora]
Edible Uses
- Leaves - "raw or cooked and used as a vegetable[172, 183]." [PFAF]
Medicinal Uses
- Plant: "Carminative and digestive[172]." [PFAF]
Synonyms
Cardamine oligosperma sensu lato [E-flora]
Cardamine oligosperma var. oligosperma Nutt. [E-flora]
Cardamine parviflora - Small-flowered bitter-cress
- Origin Status:
Native [E-flora-5]
- General:
Annual or biennial herb from a taproot; stems usually solitary, 10-30 cm tall, simple or branched, glabrous.
[IFBC-E-flora-5]
- Leaves:
Basal leaves pinnate, terminal leaflet linear-oblong to oblanceolate; stem leaves with 3-6 pairs of leaflets, linear or narrowly oblanceolate, not over 2 mm wide, entire.
[IFBC-E-flora-5]
- Fruits:
Siliques, ascending, 1-3 cm long; styles 0.5-1.5 mm long.[IFBC-E-flora-5]
Habitat/Range: "Dry sandy or rocky places in the lowland and montane zones; rare, scattered throughout BC;
circumpolar, N to NT, E to NF, S to TX, FL and OR; Eurasia." [IFBC-E-flora-5]
Cardamine pensylvanica - Pennsylvanian bitter-cress
- Origin Status:
Native [E-flora]
- General:
Biennial or annual herb from a taproot, also some fibrous roots from the lower nodes; stems erect to ascending, one or more, freely branched, 10-40 cm tall, usually stiff-hairy at the base.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Leaves:
Basal and stem leaves pinnate, generally glabrous, lateral lobes (2) 4-10, shortly-stalked to stalked; basal leaves not rosetted, oblanceolate to egg-shaped, entire or shallowly lobed, 3-15 cm long, the terminal leaflet usually largest, up to 2 cm long; stem leaves linear or lanceolate to linear-oblanceolate.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Flowers:
Inflorescence an elongated racemes, more or less umbel-like, 3-10 cm long, usually lacking bracts; flower stalks ascending, 5-10 mm long; petals white, 2-4 mm long; sepals 1.2-1.8 mm long.
[IFBC-E-flora]
- Fruits:
Siliques, erect, 1.5-2.5 cm long, 0.7-1 (1.5) mm wide, glabrous; styles 0.4-0.8 mm long; seeds (20) 24-40, about 1 mm long, usually wingless.[IFBC-E-flora]
Habitat / Range: Moist streamsides, ditches, open woods and waste places in the lowland and montane zones; frequent throughout BC; E to NF and S to TX, FL and N CA.
[IFBC-E-flora]
Edible Uses
- Leaves - "raw or cooked[46, 61, 159, 171]. An excellent water cress substitute[105]. A slightly bitter flavour, but not disagreeable[207]." [PFAF]
- "This plant is an excellent substitute for
the common Water Cress. It is slightly bitter but not disagreeable.
On hikes in the woods. I have often gathered this cress to eat
with my sandwiches and have found it a pleasing relish." [EWP]
- Root: "The grated raw root is used as a condiment[207]." [PFAF]
Medicinal Uses
Leaves & Flowering Plant: Carminative and digestive[172]. [PFAF]
Synonyms
- Cardamine pensylvanica var. brittoniana Farw. [E-flora]
Cardamine pratensis - Cuckooflower
Other Names: Lady's-smock [Wildman]
Subtaxa Present in B.C.
- Cardamine pratensis ssp. pratensis
Status: Exotic [IFBC-E-flora]
"Cuckooflower or lady's-smock (Cardamine pratensis) is a perennial, hairless, erect mustard, growing from 8 to 20 inches tall. Its distinctive, fernlike, feather-compound leaves consist of three to seven paired leaflets, and one terminal leaflet. Basal leaflets are rounder, while upper leaflets are more narrow. The pink flowers are typical of mustards. They bloom in spring; then the plant disappears, so you have to collect early. Look for it in moist places, such as swamps, springs, wet meadows, and wet woods, throughout the northern half of North America." [Wildman]
-
General: Perennial herb from a rhizome; stems 8-45 cm tall, glabrous.
- Leaves: Basal leaves with 9-17 orbicular to lanceolate leaflets, 0.2-0.9 cm long, glabrous; stem leaves with 9-15 linear to narrowly oblong leaflets, linear or lanceolate to linear-oblanceolate.
- Flowers: Inflorescence a simple raceme, without bracts; flower stalks spreading-ascending, 5-20 mm long, glabrous; petals pink, pink-purple, or white, 8-15 mm long; sepals 3-4.5 mm long.
- Fruits: Siliques, erect, 1.4-3 cm long, 1-1.5 mm wide, glabrous; styles 1-1.5 mm long.
- Habitat/Range: Wet to moist streamsides, meadows, floodplains and open woods in the montane zone; frequent in SW BC (lower Fraser Valley, where it may be introduced), infrequent in N BC; circumpolar, N to AK, YT and NT, E to NF, S to OH and MS; Eurasia.
Edible Uses
One of the best-tasting plants of the genus. [Schofield] Its peppery taste makes it a favorite of everyone who tries it. Use it raw or cooked. [Wildman]
"Lady’s smock, Cardamine pratensis L., was used in soup in
the Faroes." [Svanberg,2012]
- Leaves: The leaves can be available early in the year[k] and when used in small quantities make a very acceptable addition to salads[183, K]. [PFAF]
"Lady’s smock, Cardamine pratensis L., was used in soup in the Faroes." [Svanberg,2012] "Basal leaves, raw in salads (SP)[spring]" [Tardio,2006]
watercress substitute [EWP] Cardamine pratensis L. - Basal leaves, raw in salads (SP) [spring] [Tardio,2006]
- Leaves & Young Shoots: Raw or cooked[2, 5, 12, 52, 115]. Rich in vitamins and minerals[268], especially vitamin C[238], but with a bitter and pungent flavour[27]. The leaves and young shoots are harvested in the spring and taste rather like water cress[9]. [PFAF]
- Flowers & Flower Buds: Raw. A pungent cress-like flavour[183, K]. The white flowers are very attractive, they make a pleasant nibble and also add a delicious flavour to salads[K]. [PFAF]
Medicinal Uses
"Wild plant taxa, traded by a small southern-Swedish foraging enterprise, which is also
the main provider of wild food plants at the restaurant NOMA, in Copenhagen (Data from Łuczaj
et al. 2012)" - Cardamine pratensis
L. - Aerial parts [Tardio MWEP]
- Used to "stimulate appeite, ease indigestion," and used as a cough remedy. [CRNAH]
- Leaves & Flowering Plant: "Antirheumatic, antiscorbutic, antispasmodic, carminative, digestive, diuretic, stimulant[9, 146, 172, 238, 240]. They are used internally in the treatment of chronic skin complaints, asthma and hysteria[238]. The plant is harvested in spring and early summer and is best used when fresh[9, 238]." [PFAF]
- Appetizer: "Cuckoo flower is seldom used in herbalism, though an infusion of the leaves has been used to treat indigestion and promote appetite[268]." [PFAF]
- Flowers: "The flowers formerly possessed
the reputation of being diuretic, and of being useful in chorea and asthma." [Remington USD20]
"The young leaves have proved a useful anti-scorbutic
in their time. Hill. 1754 thought the juice of the
fresh leaves “an excellent diuretic, and … good for
the gravel”. They have been used for hysteria, and
epilepsy, too (Hulme). Thornton rather ambitiously
reported that “St Vitus’s dance … has yielded to these
flowers…” In Russian folk medicine, it is sometimes
combined with an infusion of haws for angina pectoris
remedies (Kourennoff), but it is the haws that is the
important element in this case. In the Highlands,
it was reckoned good for reducing fevers (Beith)." [DPL Watts] "Claims by physicians that the flowering tops have powerful anti-spasmodic properties which are helpful in cases of hysteria, epilepsy and St
Vitus’ dance appear in the learned medical literature from the time of John
Ray onwards, but evidence that this was also (and maybe originally) a folk
remedy seems to be limited to the Highlands150"[MPFT]
"Its bitterish and slightly pungent
leaves are supposed to be antiscorbutic. The seeds are said to contain myronic acid,
and to yield on decomposition by hydrolysis an oil analogous to oil of mustard. Feist
investigated C. amara L. and its volatile oil and found thio-urea. Kuntze states that
two kinds of crystals were isolated, both being forms of thio-urea. (A. Pharm., 1907,
657.)"[Remington USD20]
"A mixture
of [Viscum] album and Cardamine pratensis is applied for nervous afflictions [8]." [MBI Volume III]
"Aerial Part Mustard oil Content, %: 0.0014–0.03 [1, 2] Composition: Butylmustard oil [2] Seed Oil, % on dry wt: 20–22 [1]"[LLCEOPS]
Flavonoids - Kaempferol-3,7-O-diglucoside - "Biological sources: Cardamine pratensis [1], Vicia
sepium [2]" [Azimova NC]
Cardamine Umbellata - Umbel bitter-cress
Status: Native. [E-flora-2]
Food Use: Another common and tasty species. [Schofield]
Synonyms: Cardamine oligosperma var. kamtschatica (Regel) Detling [E-flora]
Uses of Cardamine Sp.
- Species Mentioned: Cardamine sp; including C. pennsylvanica, C. pratensis, and C. umbellata. [Schofield]
Edible Uses
There are more than one hundred Cardamine species worldwide. Though some taste better than others, I know of no species that are harmful. [Schofield] "Hedrick (1919) listed eight species of Cardamine used from the Straits of Magellen to
New Caledonia, so the comment by Fernald et al. (1958) that species, other than the two
they listed, “doubtless have similar qualities,” is surely correct. Most who comment on
the genus suggest that it has “just the taste of the English water-cress” (Hedrick 1919).
The comparison in the name to “cress” records that long-standing impression" [Daniel F. Austin]
Mustard leaves can be juiced with milder greens like chickweed Stellaria media or sweet
fruits like rose hips Rosa species for a vitamin-crammed drink. When pickling salmon, try adding mustard pods and glasswort Salicornia sp. to the brined fish. [Schofield]
- Cardamine spp. (other smaller
species e.g. Cardamine flexuosa
With., C. hirsuta L.) - Aerial parts consumed [Kang et al.,2013]
- "Cardamine sp.
[syn. Dentaria sp.] (Cruciferae)—pepper root, tooth root
There are reports that this little-known plant (possibly C. concatenata) was used as a
hallucinogen by the Iroquois (Moerman 1986, 100, 604*). Unfortunately, chemical and
ethnobotanical information is lacking (Ott 1993, 405*). The “cuckoo flower” (Cardamine
pratensis L.) was once used to treat epilepsy (Millspaugh 1974, 88*)." [Ratsch EPP]
- Cardamine species - "These plants are good
raw in salads or better cooked in various ways, depending on the cook's imagination and ability.
Some are better than others, C. pensylvanica
being one of the best." [Kirk WEP]
Leaves of young bitter cress add zest to salads, quiches, sandwich fillings, soups, and casseroles. Spring to early summer.[Schofield] "These plants are good
raw in salads or better cooked in various ways, depending on the cook's imagination and ability.
Some are better than others, C. pensylvanica
being one of the best" [Kirk WEP]
Medicinal Uses
Mustards, in general, are often recommended to those plagued by indigestion or lack of appetite. [Schofield]
Cardamine seeds are often eaten in
India after meals to stimulate digestion. They
also are carminative, promoting release of
excess gas. Late summer. [Schofield]
Cultivation
Besides nibbling from the wild, you can plant Cardamine and other wild mustards in your garden. Bitter cress does well in rich, moist loam in damp areas at the perimeter of bogs and garden ponds. [Schofield]
"Increased development of plant defense chemicals in leaves can be induced
by the presence of leaf-pathogenic fungi. This increased concentration of polyphenols causes a significant reduction in the decomposition of plant litters
(Whitham and Schweitzer, 2002). The higher content of these chemicals reduces
the colonization of litter by saprotrophic and mycorrhizal fungi. Koide et al.
(1998a,b) demonstrated a significant reduction in the growth of ectomycorrhizal
fungi as a result of the effects of high concentrations of polyphenols. This effect
could be considered analogous to an allelopathic effect if the reduction in
mycorrhizal colonization of a host plant led to a reduction in the host plant’s
fitness. Molofsky et al. (2000), however, contest that the survival and fitness of
the annual plant Cardamine pensylvanica is related to leaf litter mass and
persistence rather than litter quality. It is thus possible that the controls exerted by
leaf litters are different for annual and perennial plants."[Dighton FEP]
Use of Non-Local Species
"The other cresses eaten by
colonists (R. dictyosperma, Cardamine
gunnii, C. tenuifolia) have tiny white
flowers with four petals, fylindrical
seed pods, and slender delicate leaves
of varying shape. They grow in
south-eastern Australia in damp
forests or near streams." [Low WFP]
"Goyang is an ethnic fermented wild plant food, generally prepared by the Sherpa women of high mountains in the Himalayan regions of India and Nepal (Tamang and Tamang 2007). The leaves of the wild
edible plant (Cardamine macrophylla Willd), are collected, washed and cut into pieces, squeezed to
drain off excess water, and tightly pressed into bamboo baskets lined with two to three layers of leaves
from fg plants. The top of the baskets are then covered with fg plant leaves, and fermented naturally at
room temperature for 25 to 30 days. Freshly fermented goyang is transferred into an airtight container
which can be stored for 2 to 3 months. The shelf life of goyang can be prolonged by making the freshly
fermented goyang into balls that are sun-dried for 2 to 3 days before being stored for several months.
Goyang is eaten as a soup. Lb. plantarum, Lb. brevis, Lactococcus lactis, Enterococcus faecium, P. pentosaceus, and yeasts from Candida spp. have been isolated from goyang (Tamang and Tamang 2007).
" [Hui HPBFFBT] "Goyang is boiled in a soup along
with yak or beef meat and noodles to make a thick thukpa, a common staple food
of the Sherpa."[Tamang FFBW] "Goyang is an ethnic fermented, slightly acidic vegetable food of the Sherpa
of Sikkim and Nepal (Figure 2.7). It is prepared during rainy season,
when the leaves of the wild plant, locally called magane-saag (Cardamine macrophylla Willd.), belonging to the family Brassicaceae, are in plentiful
supply in the hills of Nepal and Sikkim." [Tamang HFF]
Food Use
- Cardamine engleriana O.E. Schultz. - Aerial parts consumed [Kang et al.,2013]
- "Round-Leaved, or American, Water Cress, Cardamine rotundifolia, is found in cold springs and brooks from New York to Ohio
south to North Carolina and Missouri. It is a weak, often reclining plant with oval or round leaves. It is used as a salad plant,
and Asa Gray says of it: "Leaves with just the taste of the English water-cress.""[EWP]
- Cardamine tangutorum O. E. Schulz - vegetable - Leaves, fried (TC)[traditionally consumed]. [Geng et al.,2016]
Medicinal Use
Cardamine bonariensis Pers. - Circulatory system - Plant without root - Therapeutic administration = Oral.
sold in 33 traditional markets at Loja province, Southern Ecuador [Tinitana et al.,2016]
Other Uses
"Detailed investigation of the plants of temperate-zone serpentine
soils has led to the discovery of Ni hyperaccumulation in a total of about
35 further species in the Brassicaceae. They occur in the genera
Cardamine in Italy [22];" [R.D.REEVES]
Cardamine resedifolia - known to hyperaccumulate heavy metals and metalloids [Phytorem1]
Cardamine amara
"Europe and northern Asia. Lightfoot says the young leaves are acrid
and bitter but do not taste amiss in salads. Johnson says the leaves are
often employed by country people in salads, their caste, although
pungent and bitter, is not unpleasant." [Sturtevant EPW]
Cardamine amara; diuretic; depurative, spasms, tumor [CRC Eth] "Several plants were used in soup or salads,
for instance Glechoma hederaceum, Veronica beccabunga L., Ranunculus ficaria
L., Cardamine amara L., Portulaca sativa L. and Taraxacum." [Svanberg EE]
Cardamine diphylla (Michx.) - Wood two-leaved toothwort
"Cardamine diphylla (Michaux) A. Wood, Crinkleroot, Toothwort. Mt (GA, NC, VA, WV), Pd (DE, NC): rich, mesic
forests; common (rare in DE). April-May; May-June. NB west to MN, south to n. GA, SC, and AL. [= RAB, C, K, X, Y, Z; =
Dentaria diphylla Michaux – F, G, W; > Dentaria diphylla – S; > Dentaria incisa Small – S] " [Weakley FSMAS]
"The underground stems, leaves, and
flowers contain mustard oils, spicy,
pungent, and somewhat bitter substances
belonging to a class of carbohydrates called
glucosinolates. These aromatic compounds
are released by mechanical breakdown of
the tissue (e.g., chopping, chewing) and
action of the enzyme thioglucosidase. In
moderate amounts, the underground stems,
leaves, and flowers make great additions to
salads and can be used as condiments (their
flavor is reminiscent of Amoracia
rusticana—horse-radish). In large quantities the mustard oils are reported to be irritating to the gastrointestinal tract." [Haines AP]
"Because of the pungent mustard oils contained in the plant (especially within the underground
stem), Cardamine diphylla is an expectorant when ingested. Applied externally as a poultice, the
rhizome can be used as a rubefacient. Because the glucosinolates contained within the plant
tissue are sulphur-containing compounds, Cardamine diphylla shows some antimicrobial action.
The leaves are high in vitamin C and, therefore, are antiscorbutic (i.e., preventing scurvy)." [Haines AP]
Cardamine impatiens
"Cardamine impatiens Linnaeus, Narrowleaf Bittercress. Mt (NC, VA, WV), Pd (DE, NC), Cp (DE): alluvial floodplains
(in the New River drainage in NC and VA); common (rare in NC and VA), native of Europe. June-July." [Weakley FSMAS]
Food Use
Cardamine impatiens L. - Shoots,leaves: "Young shoots including leaves and flower eaten as salad". [Pullaiah EOI]
"Relevant literature studies show that high levels of
vitamin C, minerals, fibers and protein have been reported in Cardamine macrophylla [48–52]. Also, low
concentration of heavy metal has been found in this wild
edible species. As its affinity, C. tangutorum, theoretically also had abundant nutrient components." [Geng et al.,2016]
Medicinal Use
Cardamine impatiens L. - Whole plant - Nervous disease, for vigor [Pullaiah EOI]
Cardamine macrophylla
Food Use
"In our previous papers [26,27] from northern Qinling
we noted that local people seem to value forest wild
greens over the ruderal taxa. This is even more visible in
this part of the Qinling, where the gathering efforts are
nearly exclusively oriented towards forest greens. Local
people venture six km hikes up steep slopes in order to
collect ferns, marsh marigolds Caltha palustris and bittercress Cardamine macrophylla, and do not bother to collect annual wild
greens growing around their homesteads!"[Kang et al.,2014]
- Cardamine macrophylla Willd. - Aerial parts consumed [Kang et al.,2013]
- Cardamine macrophylla Willd. - vegetable - Leaves, fried (TC)[traditionally consumed]. [Geng et al.,2016]
- Cardamine macrophylla Willd. - "Plant: Used as vegetable (Sikkim: [98]; Taplejung: [87])and also made fermented vegetables
(North-East India: [101])." [Uprety et al.,2016]
Medicinal Use
Cardamine macrophylla Willd. - Whole plant - Asthma, diuretic, fever, tumor, wormicide [Pullaiah EOI]
References
- [E-flora] In Klinkenberg, Brian. (Editor) 2020. E-Flora BC: Electronic Atlas of the Plants of British Columbia [eflora.bc.ca]. Lab for Advanced Spatial Analysis, Department of Geography, University of British Columbia, Vancouver.
- Cardamine angulata https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20angulata&redblue=Both&lifeform=7, Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine bellidifolia https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20bellidifolia&redblue=Both&lifeform=7, Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine breweri https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20breweri&redblue=Both&lifeform=7, Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine corymbosa https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20corymbosa&redblue=Both&lifeform=7 Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine flexuosa https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20flexuosa&redblue=Both&lifeform=7 Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine hirsuta https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20hirsuta&redblue=Both&lifeform=7 Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine nuttallii https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20nuttallii&redblue=Both&lifeform=7 Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine occidentalis https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20occidentalis&redblue=Both&lifeform=7 Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine occulta https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20occulta&redblue=Both&lifeform=7 Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine oligosperma https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20oligosperma&redblue=Both&lifeform=7 Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine parviflora https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20parviflora&redblue=Both&lifeform=7 Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine pensylvanica https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20pensylvanica&redblue=Both&lifeform=7 Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine pratensis https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20pratensis&redblue=Both&lifeform=7 Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine umbellata https://linnet.geog.ubc.ca/Atlas/Atlas.aspx?sciname=Cardamine%20umbellata&redblue=Both&lifeform=7 Accessed 9:57 PM October 11, 2024
- [Jepson2012] Ihsan A. Al-Shehbaz, 2012. Cardamine, in Jepson Flora Project (eds.) Jepson eFlora, http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/get_IJM.pl?tid=17120, accessed on Mar 14 2014
- [Geng et al.,2016] - Geng, Yanfei, et al. "Traditional knowledge and its transmission of wild edibles used by the Naxi in Baidi Village, northwest Yunnan province." Journal of ethnobiology and ethnomedicine 12 (2016): 1-21.
- [Kang et al.,2013] - Kang, Yongxiang, et al. "Wild food plants and wild edible fungi in two valleys of the Qinling Mountains (Shaanxi, central China)." Journal of ethnobiology and ethnomedicine 9 (2013): 1-20.
- Kang et al.,2014 - Kang, Yongxiang, et al. "Wild food plants used by the Tibetans of Gongba Valley (Zhouqu county, Gansu, China)." Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine 10 (2014): 1-14.
- [Mccutcheon.,1995] McCutcheon, A. R., et al. "Antiviral screening of British Columbian medicinal plants." Journal of Ethnopharmacology 49.2 (1995): 101-110.
- PFAF
- Cardamine Oligosperma https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Cardamine+oligosperma, Accessed 11:02 PM October 11, 2024
- Cardamine pensylvanica https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Cardamine+pennsylvanica, Accessed 9:18 PM October 12, 2024
- Cardamine pratensis https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Cardamine+pratensis, Accessed 9:18 PM October 12, 2024
- [R.D.REEVES] Reeves, R. D. "Hyperaccumulation of trace elements by plants." Phytoremediation of metal-contaminated soils. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2006. 25-52.
- [Svanberg,2012] Svanberg, Ingvar, and S. Egisson. "Edible wild plant use in the Faroe Islands and Iceland." Acta Societatis Botanicorum Poloniae 81.4 (2012).
- [Tardio,2006] Tardío, Javier, Manuel Pardo-de-Santayana, and Ramón Morales. "Ethnobotanical review of wild edible plants in Spain." Botanical journal of the Linnean society 152.1 (2006): 27-71.
- [Tinitana et al.,2016] Tinitana, Fani, et al. "Medicinal plants sold at traditional markets in southern Ecuador." Journal of ethnobiology and ethnomedicine 12 (2016): 1-18.
Image References
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