Papaver somniferum : Différence entre versions

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Papaver somniferum MC.tif|1, tige en fleurs ; 2, base de la tige ; 3, fruit ; 4, étamine ; 5, graine (PROSEA, Achmad Satiri Nurhaman)
 
Papaver somniferum MC.tif|1, tige en fleurs ; 2, base de la tige ; 3, fruit ; 4, étamine ; 5, graine (PROSEA, Achmad Satiri Nurhaman)
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File:Mák setý Papaver somniferum ´Major´.JPG|champ de pavot
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File:Papaver April 2010-13 crop.jpg|fleur
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File:Schlafmohn Papaver somniferum 2019-06-17 13-19-31 (C).jpg|stigmates et étamines
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File:Opium pod cut to demonstrate fluid extraction1.jpg|exsudation du latex
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File:Papaver somniferum 5Dsr 6905.jpg|fruit mûr
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File:2 poppies seeds.jpg|fruits et graines
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File:Poppy-seeds.jpg|graines blanches
 
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== Cultivars ==
 
== Cultivars ==
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File:Papaver somniferum Belgium.jpg|pavot à fleurs doubles
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File:Poppy from above.JPG|pavot semi-double
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File:Purple Poppy.jpg
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== Histoire ==
 
== Histoire ==
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== Usages ==
 
== Usages ==
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File:Strucla sweet bread.jpg|pain au pavot
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File:Mohnkuchen.jpg|gâteau fourré au pavot
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{{Citation encadré
 
{{Citation encadré
 
|texte= '''subsp. ''setigerum''''' :  Hammer and Fritsch (1977) confirm the existence of diploid forms and, thus, support the hypothesis of the descent of the cultivated poppy from this taxon. Wild distribution: W Mediterranean region.  
 
|texte= '''subsp. ''setigerum''''' :  Hammer and Fritsch (1977) confirm the existence of diploid forms and, thus, support the hypothesis of the descent of the cultivated poppy from this taxon. Wild distribution: W Mediterranean region.  

Version du 19 septembre 2022 à 21:06

Papaver somniferum L.

Ordre Ranunculales
Famille Papaveraceae
Genre Papaver

2n = 22, et 20, 36, 44

Origine : ouest de la Méditerranée

sauvage ou cultivé

Français pavot somnifère
Anglais opium poppy


Résumé des usages
  • médicinal : morphine, codéine, thébaïne, noscapine...
  • drogue : opium, héroïne
  • graines source d'huile alimentaire : œillette
  • graines condiment de patisserie et du pain
  • jeunes feuilles mangées en salade
  • ornemental : fleurs, capsules en bouquets secs


Description

Noms populaires

français pavot somnifère, pavot à opium ; œillette
anglais opium poppy, mawseed
allemand Mohn, Gartenmohn, Schalmohn
néerlandais maankop, slaapbol, maanzaad
italien papavero, papavero somnifero
espagnol adormidera, amapola
catalan cascall, pintacoques, dormidora, herba dormidora
portugais anfião, dormideira, papoula
polonais mak, mak lekarski, mak ogrodowy
russe мак снотворный - mak snotvornyj
grec moderne μήκων η υπνοφόρος - mikon i ipnoforos
arabe
  • خشخاش - ẖašẖaš : (plante et capsule)
  • tilīdut, talūdat (Souss, Laoust, 1920)
  • ’afyūn : opium (Bellakhdar)
chinois 罂粟 - ying su (Flora of China)
Thaïlande ya pi (Akha), ya fin (Lahu) (PROSEA)
Vietnam cây thuốc phiện, cây anh túc (PROSEA)

Classification

Papaver somniferum L. (1753)

Cultivars

Histoire

Usages

subsp. setigerum : Hammer and Fritsch (1977) confirm the existence of diploid forms and, thus, support the hypothesis of the descent of the cultivated poppy from this taxon. Wild distribution: W Mediterranean region.
subsp. somniferum : Cultivated taxon, probably domesticated in the W Mediterranean region. Worldwide cultivation, which has been legally restricted by the "International Narcotics Control Board" for several countries to avoid drug abuse. Opium is the main exported drug in India. Depending on their use, forms rich or poor in alkaloids are cultivated. Opium and medicine (codeine, methadone) are derived from the latex of the unripe capsules. Even the straw is used for production of morphine (painkiller). The seed oil is good for salad-oil or for production of dyes, varnish and laundry soap. The residues from extraction are fodder rich in proteins. The seeds are used for bakery products and as bird-fodder. The name "opium" has Persian roots. The first prehistoric evidence of P. somniferum has been obtained from W Central European sources from the Neolithic Age (4600-3800 BC) followed by numerous findings from later epoches of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages around the Alpes and later also in the Mediterranean region. First mentioned by Sumerians in the 4th millenium BC. In the antiquity cultivated as a spice, medicinal, oil and ornamental plant in Asia Minor.
subsp. songaricum : Cultivated on the Balkan peninsula and in Asia. There are differences between the two cultivated taxa with respect to their stigma morphology. For detailed infraspecific classification into convarieties and varieties see Danert (1958) and Hammer (1981). The infraspecific taxonomy of Papaver somniferum is recently under discussion with respect to its biochemical diversity.

Mansfeld.


Références

  • Chauvet, Michel, 2018. Encyclopédie des plantes alimentaires. Paris, Belin. 880 p. (p. 543)
  • Dambourney, Louis-Alexandre, 1786. Recueil de procédés et d'expériences sur les teintures solides que nos végétaux indigènes communiquent aux laines & aux lainages. Paris, De l'imprimerie de Ph.-D. Pierres, premier imprimeur ordinaire du roi. 407 p. Voir sur Pl@ntUse
  • Danert, S., 1958. Zur Systematik von Papaver somniferum L. Kulturpflanze, 6 : 61-88.
  • Hammer, K., 1981. Problems of Papaver somniferum - classification and some remarks on recently collected European poppy land-races. Kulturpflanze, 29 : 287-296.
  • Hammer, K. & R. Fritsch, 1977. Zur Frage nach der Ursprungsart des Kulturmohns (Papaver somniferum L.). Kulturpflanze, 25 : 113-124.
  • Schilperoord, Peer, 2017. Plantes cultivées en Suisse – Le pavot. 26 p. DOI: 10.22014/97839524176-e2.

Liens