Artemisia alaskana

Artemisia alaskana, the Alaskan sagebrush or Alaskan wormwood or Siberian wormwood, is a North American species of plants in the sunflower family.[3] It is found in British Columbia, the Yukon, the Northwest Territories, and Alaska.[4][3] Some authors have considered it as a subspecies as the Russian species A. kruhsiana.[5]

Artemisia alaskana

Apparently Secure  (NatureServe)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae
Genus: Artemisia
Species:
A. alaskana
Binomial name
Artemisia alaskana
Synonyms[1][2]
  • Artemisia kruhsiana subsp. alaskana (Rydb.) D.F. Murray & Elven
  • Artemisia tyrrellii Rydb.

Description

It is a perennial shrub up to 2 feet tall. The fruit is a cypsela, even though it is commonly mistaken as an achene. The bloom color is yellow. The bloom period is from June, July, and to August.[6] The leaves are blunt-tipped and twice ternate. Hair covers the white-silvery leaves and stem.[7]

Uses

Alaskan wormwood is used by the larvae of butterflies which are pollinating it. The plant is an important ingredient in some French cuisines, which chefs use as a flavoring. The plant has a medical purpose as well. It can be used as a cough medicine, lowers fever, cures colic and headache, and is great against intestinal parasites and malaria. The shrub emits a strong odor and has a bitter taste related to the terpenoids and sesquiterpene lactones within its cells.

The plant is used in various cosmetics such as enemas, infusions, lotions, and poultices. It is also used in breweries, and can be used as oil to repel fleas and moths from clothes. Moreover, it can be used as an anthelmintic, febrifuge, and stomachic. The plant requires full sun and partial shade, and a dry soil.[8]

Some wormwoods are used by native Alaskans, including the Tanainas. There are used in steam baths, on top of the rocks.[7]

Conservation status

It has a global rank of G4, meaning apparently secure. It also has a rank of S4 in Alaska and the Yukon. It has a S2 rank in British Columbia, meaning endangered. It doesn’t have an local rank in the Northwest Territories.[9]

References


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