Santolina: taxon details and analytics
- Domain
- Kingdom
- Plantae
- Phylum
- Tracheophyta
- Class
- Magnoliopsida
- Order
- Asterales
- Family
- Asteraceae
- Genus
- Santolina
- Species
- Scientific Name
- Santolina
Summary description from Wikipedia:
Santolina
Santolina is a genus of plants in the chamomile tribe within the sunflower family, primarily from the western Mediterranean region.
They are small evergreen shrubs growing 10–60 cm (4–24 in) tall. The leaves are simple and minute in some species, or pinnate, finely divided in other species, often densely silvery hairy, and usually aromatic. The composite flowerheads are yellow or white, produced in dense globose capitula 1–2 cm in diameter, on top of slender stems held 10–25 cm (4–10 in) above the foliage. There are no ray florets.
Santolina species are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Bucculatrix santolinella (feeds exclusively on S. chamaecyparissus) and the Coleophora case-bearers C. albicella (recorded on S. chamaecyparissus), C. involucrella (feeds exclusively on Santolina spp) and C. santolinella (feeds exclusively on S. chamaecyparissus).
...Santolina in languages:
- Chinese
- 銀香菊屬
- Czech
- svatolína
- Finnish
- hopeayrtit
- Swedish
- helgonörter
Images from inaturalist.org observations:
We recommend you sign up for this excellent, free service.
Parent Taxon
Child Taxa
- Santolina africana
- Santolina ageratifolia
- Santolina benthamiana
- Santolina canescens
- Santolina chamaecyparissus
- Santolina corsica
- Santolina decumbens
- Santolina elegans
- Santolina ericoides
- Santolina etrusca
- Santolina impressa
- Santolina insularis
- Santolina ligustica
- Santolina magonica
- Santolina melidensis
- Santolina neapolitana
- Santolina oblongifolia
- Santolina pinnata
- Santolina rosmarinifolia
- Santolina semidentata
- Santolina villosa
- Santolina virens
- Santolina viscosa































































































































































