Daphne laureola

Daphné Laureola

2L
€12,00
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Daphne laureola

Daphné Laureola

€12,00
Organic
Sustainable
Locally grown

Le daphné lauréole est une plante vivace au feuillage touffu et merveilleusement décoratif.


Les feuilles sont brillantes et d'un vert foncé et profond, presque ombragé, ce qui leur donne un aspect presque caoutchouteux.
Les fleurs sont d'un vert chartreuse éclatant, contrastant avec le noir velouté des feuilles.

👨‍🌾 CONSEIL DE JARDINAGE 👨‍🌾 : Daphne laureola

    • Les euphorbes possèdent une sève qui contient un latex irritant et toxique ; veuillez les manipuler avec précaution ou prélever des boutures.

Les Contes : Daphné Laureola

à venir!


Origine

Turquie

Floraison February, March, April, May
Exposition Half Sun/Half Shade, Full Shade
Résistance au gel -15°C
Taille 60cm H x 40cm L, Outdoors
Sol Dry, Calcareous
Origine Southern Europe and North Africa
pda319-2
€12,00
10 restant(s)

🪴9x9 cm

🚂 Expédié dans toute l'UE
🌱 Cultivé dans notre pépinière

Taille du conteneur
Conseils de jardinage

La Botanique

Daphne 'Philippi' belongs to the Thymelaeaceae family. It is native to southern Europe and North Africa, and is a species widely found in France — particularly in the Pyrenees — in its typical form, laureola. In the wild, this shrub grows on calcareous soils, in woodland understories, but also in clearings and on rocky slopes shaded during the hottest hours of the day. Its hardiness extends beyond -15°C.

Floral Morphology

Daphne laureola produces a large number of small, tubular, green-yellowish flowers that open from late January to early April in southern Spain. The flowers are borne in axillary clusters, partially concealed beneath the dense, leathery evergreen foliage — a morphological arrangement that is unusual among insect-pollinated plants and has direct consequences for pollinator access and behaviour.

The tubular corolla structure is particularly significant. Pollinators have been shown to select for longer corolla tubes in hermaphrodite individuals in core populations, which in turn record higher fruit set — direct evidence that corolla length is under active pollinator-mediated selection and represents a meaningful morphological variable between individuals and populations.

Sexual System: Gynodioecy

One of the most scientifically remarkable features of D. laureola is its breeding system. The species is gynodioecious — populations contain both hermaphrodite individuals and male-sterile female individuals coexisting side by side. This is relatively rare in woody perennials and has been the subject of sustained research interest.

Gynodioecy is a dimorphic breeding system in which hermaphrodite and female individuals coexist in populations; sex ratio and gender-relative lifetime seed production determine the stability of this system, and both genetic and ecological factors may influence these parameters.

In gynodioecious species, male-sterile individuals (termed females) usually exhibit some reproductive advantage over hermaphrodites that allows them to compensate for the loss of male function — this compensation can result from higher fecundity, vegetative outperformance, or lower inbreeding depression.

Geographic variation adds another layer of complexity: gender divergence in floral morphology and phenology may be influenced by gender-specific selection patterns imposed by pollinators, which change geographically, with distribution margins showing changes in pollinator fauna and thus variation in gender divergence of floral traits.

Le Mythe

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