Cirsium rivulare aka Cirsium Rivulare
Taxonomy ID: 15911
Common names
Cirsium Rivulare, Brook ThistleMore information about Cirsium Rivulare
How difficult is it to grow Cirsium Rivulare?
Cirsium rivulare is straightforward to grow where its core requirement — consistently moist to wet, fertile soil in a sunny to lightly shaded position — can be met. In its native habitat it is a wet-meadow perennial, and the popular cultivar 'Atropurpureum' is rated very hardy (RHS H7, to about −20 °C), so winter survival is rarely an issue across temperate gardens. The main causes of poor performance are dry, free-draining soils.
How big does Cirsium Rivulare get?
Mature plants form upright clumps roughly 1.5 m (about 5 ft) tall, with a more modest spread, and reach flowering size within a single season once established. Growth resumes vigorously each spring from the perennial rootstock.
Where is Cirsium Rivulare originally from?
Cirsium rivulare is native to large parts of mainland Europe — from Spain and France in the west, through the Alps and Carpathians, into Poland, the Balkans, Ukraine and the European parts of Russia. It is naturalised in Sweden and Belgium and adventive in Great Britain.
What temperatures does Cirsium Rivulare tolerate?
The species is fully cold-hardy across temperate climates; the popular cultivar 'Atropurpureum' has been documented surviving winter lows of at least −20 °C (−4 °F) and is rated RHS H7. It is naturally a plant of cool, moist montane and lowland meadows rather than warm, dry climates.
What humidity does Cirsium Rivulare prefer?
As a wet-meadow perennial, Cirsium rivulare is associated with consistently damp ground and humid microclimates rather than arid conditions; it tolerates fluctuating soil moisture but performs best where the root zone does not dry out.
What do Cirsium Rivulare flowers look like?
Flowers are small, deep-purple, globular thistle-heads borne in tight clusters of two to four at the top of the stems in early to midsummer. The flowering shoots stand well above the basal foliage and the stems lack the spiny wings typical of many other thistles.
What are the popular varieties of Cirsium Rivulare?
The most widely grown selection is Cirsium rivulare 'Atropurpureum', distinguished by deep crimson flowerheads; it has received the RHS Award of Garden Merit and is rated very hardy (RHS H7, to at least −20 °C).
How do I grow Cirsium Rivulare outdoors?
In nature it grows in moist meadows, marshes and wet pastures of the Calthion plant community on neutral to slightly acidic, moderately fertile soils, in bright but not necessarily fully exposed positions, from colline up to montane elevations. Garden conditions that approximate these — a damp, fertile border with full sun or light shade — suit it best.
How is Cirsium Rivulare pollinated?
The deep-purple disc florets are pollinated by insects, particularly long-tongued bumblebees and other bees that work the high-nectar flowerheads; the genus Cirsium is also a known nectar source for butterflies and a larval host for species such as the Painted Lady.
Is Cirsium Rivulare edible?
Cirsium rivulare has been recorded as an edible wild plant in Polish folk cuisine; a peer-reviewed ethnobotanical survey indexed in PubMed reported it as a previously undocumented wild edible. Many other thistles in the genus are likewise eaten — for example, Cirsium oleraceum is cultivated as a food crop in Japan and India and Cirsium setidens is used as a leafy vegetable in Korea — so its consumption fits the broader pattern in the genus.
What medicinal uses does Cirsium Rivulare have?
There is no established traditional or clinical medicinal use of Cirsium rivulare. Laboratory studies have identified flavonoids, phytosterols and essential-oil components in the flowers and roots and have reported antioxidant, antimicrobial, antiproliferative (against breast cancer cell lines MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231) and pro-cognitive activity in animal models, but these findings are preclinical.
What pests and diseases affect Cirsium Rivulare?
No species- or genus-level pest or disease problems are highlighted in the consulted extension and toxicity references; on the contrary, Cirsium thistles are noted primarily as high-value nectar plants for bees and butterflies.
What are the water needs for Cirsium Rivulare
What is the right soil for Cirsium Rivulare
What is the sunlight requirement for Cirsium Rivulare
Is Cirsium Rivulare toxic to humans/pets?
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