Sarcopoterium spinosum

Syn. Poterium spinosum



Spiny burnett                                                                                                Αστιβίδα


Rosaceae - rose family                                                             Dicot.

 
 

Throughout much of the year, Sarcoptoterium spinosum appears as prickly heaps  of entangled wiry branches but in early spring they are covered in bright green leaves and tiny bright pink flowers which are followed by red berries. This is a very typical plant of phrygana, sometimes referred to as hedgehog heath, it is well suited to dry rocky zones of the Mediterranean ecosystem.

Theophrastus classified S. spinosum (which he called φεώς) as spinous herb and as one of those “which have leaves as well as their spines”.


 

2-3mm, 40-80cm, ⟷50-150cm,W                              JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT NOV DEC


Theophrastus   

        The father of botany




Born c.370 B.C. on the Island of Lesbos, where he studied philosophy,  Theophrastus became a follower of Plato in Athens, where he was a fellow pupil and friend of Aristotle. Following the death of Plato, Aristotle became the teacher and Theophrastus his pupil, and on his death, Aristotle bequeathed his library and his garden to Theophrastus, who became the head of the Lyceum. It was in these gardens that he made many of the observations which contributed to his biological works.


Like Plato and Aristotle, Theophrastus was interested in many aspects of knowledge and observation of the world around him.  In his "Enquiry into Plants", he laid down principles of observation and its application to plants:


" In considering the distinctive characters of plants and their nature generally one must take into account their parts, their qualities, the way on which their life originates, and the course which it follows in each case." 1


He was the first to classify plants, describing trees, shrubs, under-shrubs and herbaceous plants. Theophrastus subdivided under-shrubs into two categories:


" the spineless and the spinous kinds." 1


Theophrastus made careful observations of growth, relating this to the local conditions, weather and even to the astronomical events.


"The growth alike of these and of others takes place in some cases with the first rains after the equinox, for instance, the dandelion.... In other cases after the rising of the rising of the Pleiad."


Theophrastus gives advice on the practical uses of plants and the best timber to choose for particular tasks. He differentiated wild plants from cultivated and gives detailed horticultural advice on propagation, pruning, watering and general management.


The systematic approach to botany laid down by Theophrastus; the differentiation of plants  by detailed observation of the whole plant and its parts, and study of the life cycle of plants, continues to have relevance to the study of botany to this day.


1. THEOPHRASTUS. ENQUIRY INTO PLANTS. Vol. I & II. Translated by A.F.Hort. Loeb Classics. Harvard University Press.

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