Pestplanten tromsøsvineblom Jacobaea alpina x subalpina i Norge - opphav og status
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11735Dato
2016Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Jacobaea alpina
(syn.
Senecio alpinus, S. cordatus
) and
J. subalpina
(syn.
Senecio subalpinus
) are native
to the mountains of Central Europe. Both were cultivated as ornamentals in late 19th century Tromsø. From
the early 1990’s onwards, numerous
Jacobaea
stands have been noticed outside gardens, in particular at
Tromsø, but extending from Lenvik in central Troms northwards to Alta in Finnmark. Almost all specimens
have been labeled as
Senecio cordatus,
i.e.
Jacobaea alpina
, but both the history of cultivation and the highly
variable morphology of the plants suggest that this is unlikely
.
We have carried out a revision of the existing
material, and re-visited a number of sites of supposed
J. alpina
and
J. subalpina
. With a single exception, it is
not possible to assign the plants now found in North Norway to either species
.
Instead, they should probably
be interpreted as a locally formed hybrid (
J. alpina × subalpina
) – which, unfortunately, turns out to be an
aggressive alien. There are numerous stands in Tromsø, and at Slettaelva (Kvaløya island), a single stand
comprises thousands or perhaps tens of thousands of plants, invading meadows, birch forest and in particular
the damp areas along a brook.