Re: Fwd: New species


Here is another irises website www.octagongarden.com

Dennis Kramb <dkramb@badbear.com> wrote:
I got this message from another gardening mailing list. It has some info
about new Irid species. I thought some of you might be interested... (I
myself was surprised to hear Anomatheca are now Freesia).

Dennis in Cincinnati


>To: "Pacific Bulb Society"
>Date: Fri, 15 Jul 2005 22:25:53 +0930
>Subject: [pbs] New species
>
>Dear all
>
>The lastest edition of a major botanical journal, Novon volume 15 number 2,
>features three new species of popular genera. Abstracts of the articles
>follow.
>
>[......]
>
>pp. 354-357:
>Tigridia suarezii (Iridaceae, Tigridieae) is a new species from Mexico. Its
>distinguishing features are the dark purple, almost black color of the
>spreading tepal limbs and the white to cream floral cup with dark purple
>spots and stripes. It is morphologically similar to T. alpestris subsp.
>obtusa and T. venusta, from which it differs in the more robust habit of the
>plant, the shape, length, and width of the tepals, and the length of the
>anther, filament column, and style branches. Tigridia suarezii and T.
>venusta inhabit the understory in pine-oak forests in an altitudinal range
>from 2080 to 2800 m, whereas T. alpestris subsp. obtusa grows on exposed
>rocky slopes above 3000 m. Tigridia suarezii is known only from the state of
>Jalisco.
>
>And in Novon volume 15 number 1 pp. 168-172:
>Freesia marginata (Iridaceae: Crocoideae) is a new species from the Breede
>River valley near Worcester in Western Cape Province, South Africa. A local
>endemic of succulent karoo shrubland, it resembles F. caryophyllacea in its
>flowers and short, prostrate leaves, but it is distinguished from all other
>species of Freesia by the leathery, somewhat glaucous leaves with a
>prominent submarginal vein. The four species previously placed in the genus
>Anomatheca are recognized in Freesia as the new subgenus Anomatheca. Three
>of the species, F. grandiflora, F. laxa, and F. verrucosa, are segregated
>into section Anomatheca, and F. viridis is placed in the new section Alatae.
>
>Cheers
>
>Julian Slade




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