Vitis ×ruggerii

Ardenghi, Nicola M. G. & Cauzzi, Paolo, 2015, Alien grapes (Vitis, Vitaceae) in Sicily (Italy): novelties for the Sicilian and Mediterranean flora, Natural History Sciences 2 (2), pp. 137-148 : 141-142

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4081/nhs.2015.256

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03ACDA11-1712-6767-122D-07E8FD2A4FEA

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Vitis ×ruggerii
status

 

Vitis ×ruggerii View in CoL �rdenghi, Galasso, Banfi & Lastrucci,

Phytotaxa, 166 (3): 187. 2014.

(= V. berlandieri Planch. × V. rupestris Scheele )

Neophyte new to the flora of Sicily. Invasion status changed from naturalized to invasive for Italy and Europe.

Distribution. Widespread, especially in the southern part of the region; recorded from the provinces of Agrigento, Caltanissetta, Messina, Palermo, and Ragusa ( Fig. 1 View Fig ).

Habitat. Roadsides, olive groves, waste land, fences, walls, ditch embankments, often associated with ruderal perennial vegetation (Bromo-Oryzopsion miliaceae O.Bolòs 1970), occasionally with Phragmites australis (Cav.) Trin. ex Steud. stands and halo-nitrophilous chamaephyte communities (Salsolo oppositifoliae-Suaedion mollis Rigual 1972 ); 4-772 m.

Invasion status. Invasive. Similarly to V. rupestris , this nothospecies reproduces only vegetatively, being provided only with male flowers (see �rdenghi et al., 2015a); it commonly forms extended and dense monospecific stands, with covers reaching 100%, concealing spontaneous vegetation, edges of cultivations, roadsides, and buildings ( Fig. 4 View Fig ), particularly along the southern coast.

Use. Rootstocks of V. × ruggerii are at the base of modern Sicilian viticulture. Internationally renowned and economically valuable V. vinifera cultivars grown in Sicily for wine-making, such as ‘Calabrese’ (syn. ‘Nero d’Avola’), ‘Zibibbo’, ‘Ansonica’ (syn. ‘Inzolia’ or ‘Insolia’), ‘Catarratto Bianco comune’, and ‘Nerello Mascalese’, are grafted almost exclusively on this nothotaxon ( Bica, 2007; Ministero delle Politiche �gricole, �limentari e Forestali, 2015), which is additionally used as rootstock for table grape cultivars ( Regione Siciliana, 2014) ( Fig. 5 View Fig ). V. × ruggerii rootstocks began to be used in vineyards of southern Europe and North �frica after 1920, welcomed for their resistance to drought and limestone, high vigor, and grafting affinity with V. vinifera ( Galet, 1988) .

Notes. Two specimens collected in Acate and Calamonaci (collection numbers 04 and 33) belong to the cultivar ‘57 R’, characterized by 3- to slightly 5-lobed leaf blades. It can be easily distinguished from individuals of V. × koberi with lobed leaves (originating from cultivar ‘420 �’) for some typical V. rupestris features, such as the longitudinally folded leaf blades and their reniform shape, the largely U-shaped basal sinus, and the bright red color of petioles and nerves on the adaxial leaf surface ( Fig. 6 View Fig ). This rootstock, whose ability to produce fruits is controversial (see Galet, 1988, and Cosmo et al., 1958), has never been recorded before in the wild; due to incompatibility in grafting, its use has been almost abandoned ( Galet, 1988; Ministero delle Politiche �gricole, �limentari e Forestali, 2015).

V. × ruggerii View in CoL , up to now recorded only from Spain, Italy, and France ( Laguna, 2004; �rdenghi et al., 2014; Tison & de Foucault, 2014), has recently been collected by the authors in Crete, where it can be considered naturalized; this is the first record for Greece. The plant was observed forming a thick, monospecific stand along an unsurfaced road (see specimina visa). As in Sicily, V. × ruggerii View in CoL is the most employed rootstock in Greece ( Lazarakis, 2005).

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Vitales

Family

Vitaceae

Genus

Vitis

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