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| Geraniums
(genus Pelargonium) | ||||||||||||
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Common red garden geranium. | ||||||||||||
| Scientific classification | ||||||||||||
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| Species | ||||||||||||
| about 200 |
The flowering plant genus Pelargonium includes about 200 species of perennial, succulent, and shrub plants, commonly known as geraniums. Confusingly, Geranium is also the name of the separate genus that contains the related ( cranesbills). Both genera are in the family Geraniaceae. Linnaeus originally included all the species in one genus Geranium, but they were later separated into two genera by Charles L’Héritier in 1789. Gardeners sometimes refer to the members of genus Pelargonium as "pelargoniums" in order to avoid the confusion, but the older common name is still in regular use.
Most species of geranium (Pelargonium) are subtropical or tropical and do not tolerate more than very light frosts. Geraniums are extremely popular gardenA garden is a planned space, usually outdoors, set aside for the display, cultivation and enjoyment of nature. The garden can incorporate both natural and man-made materials. In its most common form, known as a residential garden, it is found adjacent to plants, and hundreds of cultivarA cultivar is a cultivated variety of a plant species. Modern cultivars are often, but not necessarily, hybrids between species; they may equally well represent particularly desirable selections from populations of a single species. Cultivars generally ars have been developed from about 20 of the species.
Geranium leaves are usually alternate, and palmateIn botany, palmate refers to leaves that have veins radiating from the point where the leaf attaches to the petiole (stem). They may be simple, as in the norway maple, or compound, as in horse chestnut. Botany.ly lobed or pinnatePinnate is a term used to describe feather-like or many-divided features arising from both sides of a common axis in plant or animal structures, and comes from the Latin word pinna for "feather". The word is, in many cases, synonymous with the term pectin, often on long stacks, and sometimes with light or dark patterns. The erect stems bear five-petaled flowers in umbel -like clusters called pseudoumbel s. The shapes of the flowers have been bred to a variety ranging star-shaped to funnel-shaped, and colors include white, pink, red, orange-red, and fuchsia.
Horticultural pelargoniums fall into six major groups, with zonals subdivided further:
The first species of Pelargonium known to be cultivated was Pelargonium triste, a native of South Africa. It was probably brought to the botanical garden in Leiden before 1600, on ships that stopped at the Cape of Good Hope, and in 1631 the English gardener John Tradescant bought seeds from Rene Morin in Paris and introduced the plant to England. The name Pelargonium was introduced by Johannes Burman in 1738.