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Back to AeonioideaeAll kingdoms

Petrosedum sediforme

Kingdom
3Plants
Phylum
6Angiospermae
Class
6Asteranae
Subclass
2Crassulidae
Phase
1Crassulales
Subphase
5Aeonioideae
Stage
14
Author

Qjure

Type

Info

Chapter

3-662.15.05

Book
Family
English: Pale stonecrop.
Synonym: Sedum sediforme; Sedum jacquinii; Sempervivum sediforme; Sempervivum sedoides.
Region: Mediterranean, southern Europe, North Africa, Morocco to Libya, West Asia, Levant.
Habitat: rocks, walls and stony places; grasslands, Maquis and open Pine forests, largely on calcareous soils and clay; very cold-hardy plant, tolerating occasional temperatures to -8°c; succeeds in most soils, prefers a fertile well-drained soil; prefers a sunny position; very drought tolerant; dry soils, on a wall; very tolerant of soils contaminated with copper; mountainous and coastal.
Content: flavonoids.
Ecology: often specially targeted by slugs; immune to the predations of rabbits.
Use: ornamental rock garden; food, edible leaves, raw or cooked, pickled in salads; ideal species, especially in dry climates, for acting as a pioneer species on heavily polluted land, increasing humus levels in the soil and improving conditions for other plants.
BotanyHerb; evergreen; perennial.
Stems: cluster of more or less woody stems that branch at the base.
Leaves: pointed, succulent, glaucous blue.
Inflorescence: non-blooming stems around 10 cm tall which; blooming next years, 15 to 60 cm tall.
Flowers: yellow, five-pointed.
  • 0 Kingdoms
  • ›3 Plants
  • ›6 Angiospermae
  • ›6 Asteranae
  • ›2 Crassulidae
  • ›1 Crassulales
  • ›5 Aeonioideae