lunes, 4 de mayo de 2026

Ceratostigma plumbaginoides: Botanical Profile - GB

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Autumn: 2026

🌱 Natural Farming: Ceratostigma plumbaginoides: Botanical Profile

The plant in the image is a specimen of Ceratostigma plumbaginoides.It is highly prized in gardening for the intense blue of its flowers—a rare color in the plant kingdom—and for its ability to cover ground efficiently.
Below is the detailed technical and botanical information:
Nomenclature and Classification:
Scientific Name: Ceratostigma plumbaginoides Bunge.
Common Names: Hardy Plumbago, Blue Leadwort, Dwarf Plumbago.
Systematic Classification:
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta (Angiosperms)
Class: (Dicotyledons)
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Plumbaginaceae
Genus: Ceratostigma

Interactive Image Viewer: Plumbago rastrero.

Cretona

Habit: It is a rhizomatous perennial herbaceous
plant with a creeping growth habit (reaching between 20 and 40 cm in height). Its stems are thin, angular, and often take on reddish tones.
Leaf Morphology: Leaves are simple, alternate, and obovate to elliptical in shape, with ciliate margins (small hairs on the edges). A distinctive feature is its seasonal color change: they turn from a deep green in summer to a decorative bronzy-red or purple in autumn before falling (deciduous).
Flower Morphology:
They are pentamerous (5 petals) and actinomorphic (radial symmetry).
The corolla is hypocrateriform (trumpet-shaped with a long tube and spreading petals).
They are grouped in terminal or axillary inflorescences called glomerules.
They possess a persistent tubular calyx that often turns reddish after flowering.

It is native to Western China, where it grows naturally on rocky slopes and cliffs. It was introduced to Europe and the Americas in the 19th century.
The Russian botanist Alexander von Bunge formally described it following his expeditions in Asia. Due to its hardiness and beauty, it quickly spread worldwide as an ideal solution for low-maintenance gardens and rockeries.

Erosion Control: Thanks to its rhizomatous roots, it is an excellent groundcover that helps stabilize the surface layer of the soil.
Attractant for Pollinators: Its nectar-rich flowers attract butterflies and bees late in the season (late summer and autumn), when other food sources are scarce.
Dual Ornamental Value: It offers a "double show"; first with its electric blue flowers and later with the striking color change of its foliage in late autumn.
Low Maintenance: It is drought-tolerant once established, tolerates various soil types (including lime-rich soils), and is rarely affected by serious pests.

¡Chears and Happy Farming!

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