Brassica L. sec. Marhold, K. (2011+): Brassicaceae. – In: Euro+Med Plantbase - the information resource for Euro-Mediterranean
Synonymy
Source: Marhold, K. (2011+): Brassicaceae. – In: Euro+Med Plantbase - the information resource for Euro-Mediterranean plant diversity.
Brassica, Sp. Pl.: 666. 1753
- Lectotype (designated by ): Brassica oleracea
Content
Distribution
AE(G T) Ag Al Ar Au(A) dAz BH dBe(B L) Bl(M N) Br Bu By Ca(C G H P T) Cg Cm Co Cr Cs Ct Cy dDa Eg Es dFa Ga(F) Ge Gr dHb(E) He Ho Hs(S) Hu Ir It La Le Li Lt Lu Ma Md(M P) Mk No Po Rf(CS dE) Rm Sa Si(M S) Sk Sl Sn Sr Sy Tn Tu(A E) Uk [Az(C F G J L M P S T) nCa(L) Fe aIs Mo aSu]
Euro+Med: Albania native; Algeria native; Armenia native; Austria, with Liechtenstein native (Austria native); Azores native: doubtfully native (Corvo introduced, Faial introduced, Flores introduced, Graciosa introduced, Pico introduced, Santa Maria introduced, São Jorge introduced, São Miguel introduced, Terceira introduced); Baleares native (Mallorca native, Menorca native); Belarus native; Belgium, with Luxembourg native: doubtfully native (Belgium native, Luxembourg native); Bosnia-Herzegovina native; Bulgaria native; Canary islands native (Gomera native, Gran Canaria native, Hierro native, La Palma native, Lanzarote naturalised, Tenerife native); Corsica native; Crete, with Karpathos native; Crimea native; Croatia native; Cyprus native; Czech Republic native; Denmark native: doubtfully native; East Aegean islands native (Greek East Aegean islands native, Turkish East Aegean islands native); Egypt native; Estonia native; Faroe islands native: doubtfully native; Finland introduced; Former Yugoslavia native; France, with Channel is. and Monaco (France native); Germany native; Great Britain native; Greece native; Hungary native; Iceland casual; Ireland, with N Ireland native: doubtfully native (Ireland native); Israel/Palestine native; Israel/Palestine-Jordan native; Italy, with San Marino and Vatican City native; Latvia native; Lebanon native; Lebanon-Syria native; Libya native; Lithuania native; Madeira archipelago (Madeira island native, Porto Santo native); Moldova introduced; Montenegro native; Morocco native; Netherlands native; North Macedonia native; Norway native; Poland native; Portugal native; Romania native; Russia native (E European Russia native: doubtfully native, North Caucasus native); Sardinia native; Serbia, with Kosovo native; Serbia, with Kosovo and Montenegro native; Sicily, with Malta native (Malta native, Sicily native); Sinai native; Slovakia native; Slovenia native; Spain, with Gibraltar and Andorra native (Spain native); Sweden casual; Switzerland native; Syria native; Tunisia native; Turkey native (Turkey, Asiatic part native, Turkey-in-Europe native); Ukraine native; Ukraine, with Crimea native
Common Names
Azerbaijani (Azerbaijan): KәlәmA; Bulgarian (Bulgaria): ЗелеB; Estonian (Estonia): KapsasrohiC; Finnish (Finland): (hyöty)kaalitD; Greek, Modern (1453-) (Greece): ΒρασσικήE; Latvian (Latvia): KāpostsC; Lithuanian (Lithuania): BastutisC; Romanian (Moldova): КурекьF; Russian (Azerbaijan): КапустаA; Russian (Moldova): КапустаF; Russian (Russia): КапустаG; Russian (Ukraine): КапустаH; Swedish (Sweden & Finland): kålsläktetD; Ukrainian (Ukraine): КапустаH
Bibliography
A. Karjagin, I. I. 1953: Flora Azerbajdžana 4. – Baku: Izdatel'stvo Akademii Nauk Azerbajdžanskoj SSR
B. Andreev, N. , Ančev, M. , Kožuharov, S. I. , Markova, M. , Peev, D. & Petrova, A. 1992: Opredelitel na visšite rastenija v Bălgarija. – Sofija: Nauka i izkustvo
C. Laasimer, L., Kuusk, V., Tabaka, L. & Lekavičius, A. (ed.) 1993: Flora of the Baltic countries. Flora Baltijskich Respublik 1. – Tartu: Estonian Academy of Sciences