Online Encyclopedia

FUCHSIA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 273 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

FUCHSIA  , so named by Plumier in

honour of the botanist Leonhard Fuchs, a genus of
See also:
plants of the natural order
See also:
Onagraceae, characterized by entire, usually opposite leaves, pendent flowers, a funnel-shaped, brightly coloured, quadripartite, deciduous calyx, 4 petals, alternating with the calycine segments, 8, rarely io, exserted stamens, a long filiform style, an inferior ovary, and fruit, a fleshy ovoid many-seeded berry . All the members of the genus, with the exception of the New Zealand
See also:
species, F. excorticata, F . Colensoi and F. procumbens, are natives of Central and South America—occurring in the interior of forests or in
See also:
damp and shady mountainous situations . The various species differ not a little in
See also:
size as well as in other characters; some, as F. verrucosa, being dwarf shrubs; others, as F. arborescens and F. apetala, attaining a height of 12 to 16 ft., and having stems several inches in diameter . Plumier, in his Nova plantarum Americanarum genera (p . 14, tab . 14, Paris, 1703), gave a description of a species of fuchsia, the first known, under the name of Fuchsia triphylla, core coccineo, and a somewhat conventional outline figure of the same plant was published at Amster-
See also:
dam in 1757 by Burmann . In the Histoire
See also:
des plantes medicinales of the South
See also:
American traveller Feuillee (p . 64, pl. x1.
See also:
v11.), written in 1709-1711, and published by him with his Journal, Paris, 1725, the name Thilco is applied to a species of fuchsia from Chile, which is described, though not evidently so figured, as having a pentamerous calyx . The F. coccinea of Aiton (fig.) (see J . D Hooker, in Journal Linnean
See also:
Soc., Botany, vol. x. p . 458, 1867), the first species of fuchsia cultivated in England, where it was long confined to the greenhouse, was brought from South
See also:
America by Captain Firth in 1788 and placed in
See also:
Kew Gardens .

Of this species Mr

Lee, a nurseryman at
See also:
Hammersmith, soon after-wards obtained an example, and procured from it by means of cuttings several
See also:
hundred plants, which he sold at a
See also:
guinea each . In 1823 F. macrostemma and F. gracilis, and during the next two or three years several other species, were introduced into England; but it was not until about 1837, or soon after florists had acquired F. fulgens, that varieties of
See also:
interest began to make their appearance . The numerous hybrid forms now existing are the result chiefly of the intercrossing of that or other long-flowered with globose-flowered plants . F .
See also:
Venus-victrix, raised by Mr Gulliver, gardener to the Rev . S . Marriott of Horsemonden, Kent, and sold in 1822 to Messrs Cripps, was the earliest white-sepalled fuchsia . The first fuchsia with a white corolla was produced about 1853 by Mr Storey . In some varieties the blossoms are variegated, and in others they are double . There appears to be very little limit to the number of forms to be obtained by careful cultivation and selection . To hybridize, the flower as soon as it opens is emasculated, and it is then fertilized with pollen from some different flower . Ripe seed is sown either in autumn or about
See also:
February or March in
See also:
light, rich, well-drained
See also:
mould, and is thinly covered with Fuchsia coccinea .

1, Flower cut open after removal of sepals; 2, fruit; 3, floral

See also:
diagram . sandy
See also:
soil and watered . A temperature of 700 to 75° Fahr. has been found suitable for raising . The seedlings are pricked off into shallow pots or pans, and when 3 in. in height are transferred to 3-in. pots, and are then treated the same as plants from cuttings . Fuchsias may be grafted as readily as camellias, addition of a small quantity of the aldehyde. preferably by the splice or
See also:
whip method, the
See also:
apex of a young shoot being employed as a
See also:
scion; but the easiest and most usual method of
See also:
propagation is by cuttings . The most expeditious way to procure these is to put plants in heat in
See also:
January, and to take their shoots when 3 in. in length . For summer flowering in England they are best made about the end of August, and should be selected from the shortest-jointed young wood . They root readily in a compost of loam and
See also:
silver-sand if kept close and sprinkled for a short time . In from two to three weeks they may be put into 3-in. pots containing a compost of equal parts of rich loam, silver-sand and leaf-mould . They are subsequently moved from the
See also:
frame or bed, first to a warm and shady, and then to a more airy
See also:
part of the greenhouse . In January a little artificial heat may be given, to be gradually increased as the days lengthen . The side-shoots are generally pruned when they have made three or four
See also:
joints, and for bushy plants the leader is stopped soon after the first potting .

Care is taken to keep the plants as near the

glass as possible, and shaded from bright
See also:
sunshine, also to provide them plentifully with
See also:
water, except at the time of shifting, when the roots should be tolerably dry . For the second potting a suitable soil is a mixture of well-rotted cow-dung or old hotbed mould with leaf-mould and sandy peat, and to promote drainage a little peat-
See also:
moss may be placed immediately over the crocks in the
See also:
lower part of the pot . Weak liquid manure greatly promotes the advance of the plants, and should be regularly supplied twice or thrice a week during the flowering season . After this, water is gradually withheld from them, and they may be placed in the open air to ripen their wood . Among the more hardy or
See also:
half-hardy plants for inside
See also:
borders are varieties of the Chilean species, F. macrostemma (or F. magellanica), a
See also:
shrub 6 to 12 ft. high with a
See also:
scarlet calyx, such as F. m. globosa, F. m. gracilis; one of the most graceful and hardy of these, a hybrid F. riccartoni, was raised at Riccarton, near
See also:
Edinburgh, in 183o . For inside culture may be mentioned F. boliviana (
See also:
Bolivia), 2 to 4 ft. high, with rich
See also:
crimson flowers with a trumpet-shaped tube; F. corymbiflora (Peru), 4 to 6 ft. high, with scarlet flowers nearly 2 in. long in long terminal clusters; F. fulgens (Mexico), 4 to 6 ft., with drooping apical clusters of scarlet flowers; F. microphylla (Central America), with small leaves and small scarlet fujinel-shaped flowers, the petals deep red ; F. procumbens (New Zealand), a
See also:
pretty little creeper, the small flowers of which are succeeded by oval
See also:
magenta-crimson berries which remain on for months; and F. splendens (Mexico), 6 ft. high, with very showy scarlet and green flowers . But these cannot compare in beauty or freedom of blossom with the numerous varieties raised by gardeners . The
See also:
nectar of fuchsia flowers has been shown to contain nearly 78% of
See also:
cane
See also:
sugar, the remainder being fruit sugar . The berries of some fuchsias are subacid or sweet and edible . From certain species a dye is obtainable . The so-called "native fuchsias" of
See also:
southern and eastern
See also:
Australia are plants of the genus
See also:
Correa, natural order Rutaceae .

End of Article: FUCHSIA
[back]
LEONHARD FUCHS (15o1-1566)
[next]
FUCHSINE, or MAGENTA

Additional information and Comments

Good article but Venus Victrix was raised in 1840 and released by Cripps in 1842 not 1822.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.