Anastatica

Genus of flowering plants
title: "Anastatica" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["brassicaceae", "monotypic-brassicaceae-genera", "tumbleweeds", "resurrection-plants", "flora-of-north-africa"] description: "Genus of flowering plants" topic_path: "general/brassicaceae" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anastatica" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Genus of flowering plants ::
|image = Anastatica hierochuntica.jpg |image_caption = Anastatica hierochuntica |genus = Anastatica |parent_authority= L. |species = hierochuntica |authority = L.
Anastatica is a monotypic genus of flowering plants in the family Brassicaceae containing the single species Anastatica hierochuntica or the true rose of Jericho. The plant is a small gray annual herb that rarely grows above 15 cm high, and bears minute white flowers. It is a capable of hygroscopic expansion and retraction. However, it is not a true resurrection plant, because the plant's dead tissues do not revive and turn green.
This species is not to be confused with Selaginella lepidophylla, also sometimes referred to as "rose of Jericho", or "false rose of Jericho", which is a true resurrection plant that can revive from a dried state and regain the processes of respiration and photosynthesis.
Names
Common names include Maryam's flower, flower of St Mary, St. Mary's flower, Mary's flower, white mustard flower and rose of Jericho.
The rose of Jericho name is based on Sirach or .
Range
Anastatica is found in arid areas in the Middle East and the Sahara Desert, including parts of North Africa and regions of Iran, Egypt, Israel, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Jordan and Pakistan.{{cite journal |author1=Friedman, Jacob |author2=Zipporah Stein | title=The Influence of Seed-Dispersal Mechanisms on the Dispersion of Anastatica Hierochuntica (Cruciferae) in the Negev Desert, Israel |journal= The Journal of Ecology |volume= 68 |date=March 1980 |pages= 43–50
|issue=1 |doi=10.2307/2259242 |jstor=2259242 |bibcode=1980JEcol..68...43F
Description
A plant with great resistance to desiccation. Despite it being an annual, the plant lignifies after completing its life cycle, turning into a persistent woody skeleton. Its branches have the property of contracting with dryness into the shape of a closed fist, maintaining its seed bank. The dead skeletal form can remain in situ for many years, reopening with moisture or contact with water. After the rainy season, the plant dries up, dropping leaves and curling branches into a tight ball, and aestivates. Within the ball, the fruits remain attached and closed, protecting the seeds and preventing them from being dispersed prematurely. The seeds are very hardy and can remain dormant for years. Moistened again in a later rainy season, the ball uncurls and the plant wakes up from its dormant state, which causes the capsular fruits to open to disperse the seeds. If water is sufficient, the dispersed seeds germinate within hours. After it curls, it is easy for the wind itself to lift and drag it large distances, making them obligatory travelers through steppes and deserts crossing the borders of various countries in Asia and disseminating their seeds for all of them.
A fraction of the seeds are dispersed in the vicinity of the parent plant by raindrops hitting a spoon-like appendix on the seeds. The seeds have a sticky coat that helps them adhere to the soil, but they also may be carried downstream by surface wash. However, seeds swept downstream do not survive.
The process of curling and uncurling is completely reversible and can be repeated many times. The ability of the plant to do this is attributed to the presence of trehalose,{{cite book |title=Ecophysiology of Economic Plants in Arid and Semi-arid Lands |author=G. E. Wickens |year=1998 |publisher=Springer |isbn=3-540-52171-2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=s8oSKa6_EB8C |page=343 |title=The Encyclopædia Britannica |publisher=Werner Company |pages=175–176 |url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopaediabr00smitgoog |author1=Baynes, Thomas Spencer |author2=Kellogg, Day Otis |author3=Smith, William Robertson |year=1897
Anastatica has been described as the most famous tumbleweed.{{cite book |title=The families and genera of vascular plants |editor1=K. Kubitzki |editor2=C. Bayer |chapter=Cruciferae |pages=75–174 |author1=O. Appel |author2=I. A. Al-Shehbaz |publisher=Springer |volume=5: Flowering Plants: Dicotyledons: Malvales, Capparales and Non-betalain Caryophyllales |year=2003 |isbn=3-540-42873-9 |journal=The Kansas City Review of Science and Industry |volume=3 |pages=612–614 |year=1890 |author=L. J. Templin |title=Distribution of plants |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SBMLAAAAYAAJ |title=An outline of phytobiology |author=W. F. Ganong |author-link=William Francis Ganong |journal=Bulletin of the Natural History Society of New Brunswick |year=1896 |volume=13 |pages=3–26, page 1 errata |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CNMRAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA16
Culture
Since ancient times it was used as an element to guess the climate, since being a vegetable hygrometer, the wise man or shaman, predicted it with success. In dry weather the plant remains completely closed; in wet weather, it opens slowly; if it threatens rain, it opens in a very showy way and with more or less speed according to the proximity of discharge of the clouds.
Gallery
File:Anastatica_hierochuntica_flower.JPG|Flowers File:Zarga_mountains_(10).jpg|Dried up File:SproutingAnastatica.jpg|In water
References
References
- [https://www.britannica.com/plant/rose-of-Jericho rose of Jericho] at britannica.com. Retrieved 18 Oct 2025.
- (2007). "Duke's Handbook of Medicinal Plants of the Bible". CRC Press.
- Quisquis. (1886). "Tumble-weeds". Botanical Gazette.
- [http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=5&taxon_id=250063641 Anastatica hierochuntica in Flora of Pakistan @ efloras.org]
- G. E. Wickens. (1998). "Ecophysiology of Economic Plants in Arid and Semi-arid Lands". Springer.
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