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Botany Photo of the Day
In science, beauty. In beauty, science. Daily.

Drimys winteri

Drimys winteri

This photograph was taken at the offices of the Chagual Botanic Garden (English translation) in Santiago, Chile, last October. The garden is in development and is not yet open to the public, but I had the good fortune to tour the garden site with the director, Antonia Echenique. The design for the new garden, which will feature native plants and those from other Mediterranean climate zones, has been carefully planned and the garden will be one of the best places to see Chilean plants.

This entry was co-written by Douglas Justice, Randal Mindell and myself.

Drimys winteri is an evergreen tree or shrub native to temperate rainforests of Argentina and Chile. According to Plants for a Future, The aromatic pungent bark is powdered and used as a pepper substitute in Brazil, Chile and Argentina, and is rich in vitamin C. According to Clements Robert Markham in his book The Sea Fathers (Cassell & co., 1884), Winter, who was captain of the Elizabeth (one of five ships in Francis Drake's fleet) saved his crew from the ravages of scurvy (vitamin C deficiency) on the voyage home by means of a decoction of the bark.

The genus name is from the Greek: drimys = acrid, pungent (from the taste of the bark). Captain Winter evidently steeped the bark in honey to remove some of its acridity. Drimys winteri was named by Johann Reinhold Forster and his son Johann Georg Forster. Johann the elder was the naturalist in Cook's second voyage in 1773.

Drimys is of considerable interest to botanists due to the lack of vessels in their water-conducting tissues. Members of Winteraceae have long been thought to be an early-diverging branch of the angiosperm tree of life. Fossil evidence for the antiquity of the family comes in the form of Lower Cretaceous (~125 million years ago) pollen tetrads. By the Late Cretaceous, there is abundant evidence for the family in the form of vesselless wood, leaves and pollen in places as far flung as California and James Ross Island (off the Antarctic Peninsula).

9 Comments

Karen Vieira commented:

The foliage is reminiscent of rhododendron. Related?

Alina commented:

Hi all,

Such a beautiful plant! We have it in Ecuador too!

Note, and no, it is not related to Ericaceae.

Cheers,

Alina.

And so are the stems.

Barb Mullinix commented:

To me the foliage looked like bay leaf.

Annie Morgan commented:

Thanks for the interesting history! Lovely pic.

elizabeth a airhart commented:

just back from google books
reading pages from sea fathers -adventure
books indeed they left us with so much
this a most interesting plant ever so pretty

thank you all

Eric Simpson commented:

The foliage, especially the leaf shape, is a fairly common trait in rainforest species, as it helps the plant shed rainfall quickly, reducing the risk of stem/limb breakage due to the weight of water.

Quin commented:

Is there some precursor to 'Ecstasy' in the foliage? Is that only in D. lanceolata? That would be some kind of pepper!

Mary Ann, in Toronto commented:

Very pretty, and very interesting write-up.
I love these flowers, and their arrangement -- the way they spray out and float in the air.
I'm curious, do the flowers have much scent?

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