Dianthus superbus

L.

Fringed pink

CaryophyllaceaeLeavesFlowersPotential hazards — see below
Caution — Parts of this plant may be toxic or require specific preparation. Verify with multiple sources before consuming.
Dianthus superbus
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(c) Federico Biguzzi, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Federico Biguzzi
Dianthus superbus
iNaturalist · cc-by
(c) WATANABE Hitoshi 渡辺仁, some rights reserved (CC BY)
Dianthus superbus
iNaturalist · cc-by-nc
(c) 羅元甫, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC)

What to Eat

Edible parts: Flowers, Leaves

The leaves, stems, and tops can be boiled or steeped in water and eaten as a potherb; young plants are also eaten this way. One report notes the presence of saponins, but the leaves appear not to be toxic, likely because the saponin content is too low to cause harm. Children also suck the flowers for their sweet nectar.

Known Hazards

The plant contains saponins but apparently in quantities too low to cause harm. Although fairly toxic, saponins are poorly absorbed by the body and most pass straight through without harm. Saponins are found in many foods, such as beans. Saponins are much more toxic to some creatures, such as fish, and hunting tribes have traditionally put large quantities of them in streams, lakes etc in order to stupefy or kill the fish.

Where to Find It

It grows in wooded hills, forest openings and margins, grassy hillsides, meadows, mountain valley streams, river banks between 400–3700 m altitude in China. It is frost hardy. It can thrive in damp situations. It suits hardiness zones 4-9. In Yunnan and Sichuan.

Asia, Australia, Central Asia, China, Europe*, Indochina, Japan, Kazakhstan, Korea, Mongolia, Russia, SE Asia, Siberia, Slovenia, Vietnam,

Countries: Andorra, United Arab Emirates, Afghanistan, Albania, Armenia, Austria, Australia, Azerbaijan, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Bangladesh, Belgium, Bulgaria, Bahrain, Brunei, Bhutan, Belarus, Switzerland, China, Cyprus, Czechia, Germany, Denmark, Estonia, Spain, Finland, France, United Kingdom, Georgia, Greece, Croatia, Hungary, Indonesia, Ireland, Israel, India, Iraq, Iran, Iceland, Italy, Jordan, Japan, Kyrgyzstan, Cambodia, North Korea, South Korea, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Laos, Lebanon, Liechtenstein, Sri Lanka, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Latvia, Monaco, Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Myanmar, Mongolia, Malta, Maldives, Malaysia, Netherlands, Norway, Nepal, Oman, Philippines, Pakistan, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Romania, Serbia, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, Singapore, Slovenia, Slovakia, San Marino, Syria, Thailand, Tajikistan, Timor-Leste, Turkmenistan, Turkey, Taiwan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Vietnam, Yemen

How to Identify

A herb which forms mats. It grows up to 60 cm tall. The leaves are pale green-grey. The flower stems are slender. The flowers are mauve-pink. They have a green or purple "eye" at the centre. The flowers are large and have an aroma. They have 5 petals and are deeply and irregularly split.

How to Grow

Prefers an alkaline soil but tolerates slightly acid soils. Succeeds in any well-drained peaty soil in sun or light shade. Plants succeed when grown on the top of a broad or retaining wall. A very hardy plant, tolerating temperatures down to about -20°c. The flowers have a soft sweet perfume.

Propagation: Seed: sow April/June in a greenhouse, barely covering the seed. Germination usually takes 1–3 weeks at 20°C. Prick out seedlings into individual pots when large enough and plant out in autumn.

Medicinal Uses

Known in Chinese herbalism as Qu Mai, the fringed pink has been used in Chinese herbal medicine for over 2,000 years. The whole plant is a bitter tonic herb that stimulates the digestive and urinary systems and the bowels, lowers blood pressure, reduces fevers, and controls bacterial infections. It is abortifacient, contraceptive, diuretic, emmenagogue, ophthalmic, tonic, and vulnerary, and is also said to promote hair growth. It ranks 9th on a list of 250 potential antifertility Chinese plants. It is often combined with Dan Shen (Salvia multiorrhiza) to induce menstruation rather than used alone. Internally, it treats acute urinary tract infections (especially cystitis), urinary stones, constipation, and failure to menstruate. Externally, it is applied to skin inflammations and swellings. The leaves are used for haemorrhoids, lumbricoid worms, and venereal sores. The flowers are astringent, diuretic, haemostatic, resolvent, and vulnerary — research has confirmed they are the most markedly diuretic part of the plant. The closely related D. chinensis shares the same uses and is more commonly employed.

Other Uses

No other uses are known for this plant. Has scented flowers.

Wikipedia

Source ↗

Dianthus superbus, the fringed pink or large pink, is a species of Dianthus native to Europe and northern Asia, from France north to arctic Norway, and east to Japan; in the south of its range, it occurs at high altitudes, up to 2,400 m. It is a herbaceous perennial plant growing to 80 cm tall. The leaves are green to greyish green, slender, up to 8 cm long. The flowers are sweetly scented, 3–5 cm in diameter, with five deeply cut fringed petals, pink to lavender with a greenish base; they are produced in branched clusters at the top of the stems from early to late summer. There are six subspecies: Dianthus superbus subsp. superbus. Most of the species' range. Dianthus superbus subsp. autumnalis Oberd. Southwestern France. Dianthus superbus subsp. sylvestris Čelak. Germany. Dianthus superbus subsp. alpestris Kablík. ex Čelak. (syn. D. s. subsp. speciosus). Alps, Carpathians, at high altitudes. Shorter stems; leaves greyer; flowers large. Dianthus superbus subsp. stenocalyx (Trautv. ex Juz.) Kleopow. Southern Russia, Ukraine. Dianthus superbus subsp. longicalycinus (Maxim.) Kitam. Japan. Also called nadeshiko (ナデシコ). It is the only food source of the large moth Coleophora musculella.

Notes

There are 320 Dianthus species.

Names & Synonyms

čudoviti nageljček, Nadeshiko, Qu mai

D. wimmeri.
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