Cardamine macrophylla

Willdenow

Large-leaved bitter cress, Central China bitter cress

BrassicaceaeLeavesScore: 64/100
Cardamine macrophylla
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(c) V.S. Volkotrub, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by V.S. Volkotrub
Cardamine macrophylla
iNaturalist · cc-by-nc
(c) Sergey_Cher, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC)
Cardamine macrophylla
iNaturalist · cc-by-nc
(c) Sergey_Cher, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC)

What to Eat

Edible parts: Leaves, Vegetable

Leaves and young shoots are best eaten cooked.

Where to Find It

It is a temperate plant. It grows in damp forests, river banks, tundra, rock crevices, meadows, damp woodlands, thickets, stream sides, valleys, ravines, mountain slopes, among boulders between 500–4200 m altitude in China. In Northeastern India it grows between 3,500-4,000 m above sea level. It grows in wetlands. In Yunnan.

Asia, Bhutan, Central Asia, China, India, Himalayas, Japan, Kashmir, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Nepal, Northeastern India, Pakistan, Russia, Sikkim, Siberia, Tibet,

Countries: United Arab Emirates, Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Bahrain, Brunei, Bhutan, China, Georgia, Indonesia, Israel, India, Iraq, Iran, Jordan, Japan, Kyrgyzstan, Cambodia, North Korea, South Korea, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Laos, Lebanon, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Mongolia, Maldives, Malaysia, Nepal, Oman, Philippines, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Syria, Thailand, Tajikistan, Timor-Leste, Turkmenistan, Turkey, Taiwan, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, Yemen

How to Identify

A cabbage family herb. It grows 30-95 cm tall. It has creeping rhizomes or underground stems. The flower stems are erect and unbranched. The leaves are compound with leaflets along the stalk. The leaves are 7-10 cm long. There are 9-11 leaflets that are narrowly sword shaped and 3-8 cm long and up to 2 cm wide. There are teeth along the edge. The flowers are purple. The pod is narrow and 2-3.5 cm long and flattened. The seeds are oblong and 2 mm long. They are brown.

Nutrition Score: 64/100

PartMoisturekJkcalProteinVit AVit CIronZinc
Leaves 91.2333.3 27.8 2.30.6

How to Grow

Succeeds in most soils. Prefers a moist humus rich soil in shade or semi-shade. Best grown in cool places by water. A very ornamental plant, it is hardy to about -15°c.

Propagation: Sow seed outdoors in a shady seedbed in April, then plant out in autumn or spring. Divide clumps in spring — larger clumps can go straight into their permanent positions, but smaller ones do better potted up in a cold frame until well rooted, then planted out in summer or the following spring.

Medicinal Uses

None known

Other Uses

None known

Wikipedia

Source ↗

A perennial reaching 0.3 m (1 ft) tall. Hardy to UK zone 6. Flowers in June with seeds ripening July to September. Hermaphroditic and self-fertile, pollinated by bees, flies, moths, and butterflies. Adapts to light sandy, medium loamy, and heavy clay soils with mildly acidic to mildly alkaline pH. Grows in semi-shade (light woodland) or full sun, preferring moist or wet soil.

Notes

There are about 160 Cardamine species. They are mostly in damp places in temperate regions.

Names & Synonyms

Chhurukpa, Da ye sui mi qi, Shi gen cai, Shijiacai, Shu, Wang-hru, You

Cardamine macrophylla var. crenata TrautvetterCardamine macrophylla var. dentariifolia J. D. Hooker & T. AndersonCardamine macrophylla var. diplodonta T. Y. CheoCardamine macrophylla var. foliosa J. D. Hooker & T. AndersonCardamine macrophylla var. lo-bata J. D. Hooker & T. AndersonCardamine macrophylla var. mou-pinensis FranchetCardamine macrophylla subsp. polyphylla (D. Don) O. E. SchulzCardamine macrophylla var. polyphylla (D. Don) T. Y. Cheo & R. C. FangCardamine macrophylla var. sikkimensis J. D. Hooker & T. AndersonCardamine polyphylla D. Don (1825), not O. E. Schulz (1903)Cardamine sachalinensis Miyabe & MiyakeCardamine sino-manshurica (Kitagawa) KitagawaCardamine urbaniana O. E. SchulzDentaria gmelinii TauschDentaria macrophylla (Willdenow) Bunge ex MaximowiczDentaria sinomanshurica KitagawaDentaria wallichii G. DonDentaria willdenowii Tausch,
References (14)
  • Flora of China. www.eFloras.org Volume 8
  • Geng, Y., et al, 2016, Traditional knowledge and its transmission of wild edibles used by the Naxi in Baidi Village, northwest Yunnan province. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine. 12:10
  • Ghimire, S. K., et al, 2008, Non-Timber Forest Products of Nepal Himalaya. WWF Nepal p 55
  • Hu, Shiu-ying, 2005, Food Plants of China. The Chinese University Press. p 415 (Also as Cardamine urbaniana)
  • Kang, Y., et al, 2012, Wild food plants and wild edible fungi in two valleys on the Qinling Mountains (Shaanxi, central China) Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine; 9:26
  • Kang, Y., et al, 2014, Wild food plants used by the Tibetans of Gongba Valley (Zouqu country, Gansu, China) Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine 10:20
  • Li, S., et al, 2020, Monpa, memory, and change: an ethnobotanical study of plant use in Mêdog County, South-east Tibet, China. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine. (2020) 16:5 p 16
  • Plants for a Future database, The Field, Penpol, Lostwithiel, Cornwall, PL22 0NG, UK. http://www.scs.leeds.ac.uk/pfaf/
  • Seal, T., et al, 2017, Nutritional potential of five unexplored wild edible plants consumed by the tribal people of Arunachal Pradesh state in India. International Journal of Food Science and Nutrition. Volume 2; Issue 2; Page No. 101-105
  • Tsering, J., et al, 2017, Ethnobotanical appraisal on wild edible plants used by the Monpa community of Arunchal Pradesh. Indian Journal of Traditional Knowledge. Vol 16(4), October 2017, pp 626-637
  • Uprety, Y., et al, 2016, Traditional use and management of NTFPs in Kangchenjunga Landscape: implications for conservation and livelihoods. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine (2016) 12:19
  • Urgamal, M., Oyuntsetseg, B., Nyambayar, D. & Dulamsuren, Ch. 2014. Conspectus of the vascular plants of Mongolia. (Editors: Sanchir, Ch. & Jamsran, Ts.). Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. “Admon“ Press. 334pp. (p. 79-90).
  • Zhang, Y., et al, 2014, Diversity of wetland plants used traditionally in China: a literature review. Journal of Ethnobiology and Ethnomedicine. 10:72
  • Zhou Taiyan, Lu Lianli, Yang Guang; Ihsan A. Al-Shehbaz, BRASSICACEAE (CRUCIFERAE), Flora of China.

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