Artemisia cina is historically important because it is one of the wormwoods linked to santonin, the sesquiterpene lactone once widely used as an anthelmintic. That makes this species notable less for modern garden familiarity than for its place in the medicinal and chemical history of the genus.
Current Artemisia.wiki image for Artemisia cina.
Accepted nameArtemisia cina
SubgenusSeriphidium
SectionSeriphidium
RangeNative to Iran, Kazakhstan, Tadzhikistan, Uzbekistan. Introduced into China North-Central, Xinjiang
HabitatA subshrub. Grows primarily in the temperate biome
Built from the current Artemisia.wiki dataset on 2026-03-18.
Research summary
Paper-backed research brief for Artemisia cina. The local cache does not yet attach species-specific paper-backed records, so the page still leans on genus-level reviews and comparative literature. The strongest recurring themes are phytochemistry, morphology, and identification. Key records include Global phylogeny and taxonomy of Artemisia, The Artemisia L. Genus: A Review of Bioactive Essential Oils, and The Genus Artemisia: A Comprehensive Review.
Abad, M.J., Bedoya, L.M., Apaza, L. & Bermejo, P. (2012). The Artemisia L. Genus: A Review of Bioactive Essential Oils. Molecules 17(3): 2542-2566. DOI: 10.3390/molecules17032542.
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