Notes on Allium oleraceum

Allium oleraceum L. (Alliaceae) (Finland, Lammi, Halila, 1989). Image: Harri Harmaja (scanned from dried specimen). The deviating habitat is what attaches interest to the plants in the image. They were found among moss on a boulder, in eutrophic, moist brook side woods. Anemone ranunculoides, Humulus lupulus, Impatiens noli-tangere, Viola selkirkii and Anomodon rugelii were among the accompanying species. Later I found another stand near-by, in the mull of the shady lower terraces of the adjacent eutrophic rocky hill, quite close to larger ferns such as Matteuccia struthiopteris. (One stand was also found near the top of the rock in a habitat of the usual kind; from here, the species was already known previously.)
    The first deviating occurrence was already found by me in 1971 in Karkkila, Haavisto. It consisted of two small stands in a deep, shady brook valley with a notable stand of Ulmus glabra trees. The plants grew in bare eutrophic mull near the water (the sites apparently being flooded every spring), accompanied by tall ferns, Elymus caninus, Humulus lupulus, Lonicera xylosteum, Milium effusum, Poa remota, Pulmonaria obscura, Stachys sylvatica and Stellaria nemorum. The place is in fairly natural condition. This is the only occurrence of A. oleraceum known in the commune of Karkkila.
    A second locality of this kind was detected by me in 1973 in Turku. Sterile plants were found in shady deciduous rich woods in the famous island of Ruissalo, accompanied with e. g. Quercus robur, Aegopodium podagraria, Corydalis solida, and Hepatica nobilis.
    In all three Finnish localities, the A. oleraceum plants of the ecologically deviating habitats were sterile. The Karkkila and Lammi occurrences have been checked repeatedly during years but flowering was never observed. The shoots were detected in the spring; in early summer they wither rather soon. The sterile plants remind much the sterile shoots of Gagea minima which is sometimes found in similar habitats during the same season, but the onion smell of the bruised leaves and the colour of the bulbs easily distinguish the species. I made growing experiments of long duration with the Karkkila plants both in home and in glasshouse: the plants kept on growing but would not flower.
    The field garlic is known as a species of, often human-influenced, dry or mesic, half-open habitats, bushes, rocky hills and (rarely somewhat moist) meadows. It is regarded as an indicator of old settlement

Created April 6, 2004. Latest revision July 5, 2004.