Golden samphire


The golden samphire is a perennial coastal species, which may be found growing on salt marsh or sea cliffs across western and southern Europe and the Mediterranean.
Golden samphire has a tufted habit, and the plant may grow up to 1 m tall. It has narrow fleshy green to yellow green leaves and large flower heads, with six yellow ray florets which may be up to across. The flowers are self-fertile and may also be pollinated by bees, flies and beetles. They bloom between June and October and can smell like shoe polish.

Taxonomy

It was first described by Carl Linnaeus as Inula crithmoides in his book 'Species Plantarum' 2 on page 883 in 1753 and then later when the genus was renamed, it was published as Limbarda crithmoides by Barthélemy Charles Joseph Dumortier in Fl. Belg. on page 68 in 1827.
It was verified by United States Department of Agriculture and the Agricultural Research Service on 11 June 2015.
Known subspecies;
It is native to temperate parts of Europe, Africa and Asia.

Range

It is found in
Africa, within Algeria, Egypt, Libya, Morocco and Tunisia.
In Asia, it is found in Cyprus, Israel, Lebanon, Syria and Turkey.
Europe, within Ireland, United Kingdom, Albania, Croatia, Greece, Italy, Montenegro and Slovenia. Also within south-western European countries of France, Portugal, Spain.

Uses

Young leaves may be eaten raw or cooked as a leaf vegetable. It was formerly sold in markets in London for uses in pickles.
In Lebanon, it was evaluated for use in saline agriculture.