RE: Iris cristata
- Subject: RE: [sibrob] Iris cristata
- From: "Greg McCullough" i*@msn.com
- Date: Tue, 13 Jan 2004 17:12:50 -0600
- Importance: Normal
I have seen mention (perhaps in World Of Iris) of a pink I. cristata in East
Tennessee/Western North Carolina, but after much correspondence with folks
in that area haven't been able to confirm this. Has anyone any info on a
pink form? We have a large native population on our farm and grow 9 forms
that we have acquired commercially.
Greg McCullough
Iris City Gardens
Primm Springs, TN zone 6
-----Original Message-----
From: Robt R Pries [r*@sbcglobal.net]
Sent: Tuesday, January 13, 2004 12:14 PM
To: sibrob@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [sibrob] Iris cristata
Some years back I grew about 6 different white clones and about 8
different blue/purple clones, the only one I have now is 'Edgar Anderson'.
Something I don't really undestand is how variations in Irises are
distributed in nature. I have seen many populations that seem to have no
variability at all and in other places I have seen populations where every
Iris seems somewhat different than the ones around it. There was just an
article in the Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society discussing diversity
in various sized populations of Iris aphylla in Poland. In that study even
tiny populations contained as much diversity as very large populations, so
it seems size of the populkation may be irrelevent. In fact some enormous
population Iris missouriensis that I have seen in Colorado showed very
little variation, but some small populations of I. missouriensis in South
Dakota show white and all shades of Blue/purple. It seems like an intriquing
problem.
oneofcultivars@aol.com wrote:In a message dated 1/13/2004 9:44:49 AM
Central Standard Time,
rpries@sbcglobal.net writes:
> Is this white the same as that white? Who knows unless they have a
> cultivar name. No one would every distribute a TB as just white. All of
the
> cultivars are named selections of the species and there has been no
hybrids created
> that I know of. All where selections from wild populations and those
that have
> been registered often state where they were collected.
I have observed native colonies of the cristata varient that grows here
for
about 30 years in passing and closely for the last 11 years. I have never
observed a "white" bloom among the several locations it inhabits or under
garden
culture.
Height here 8 to 12 inches in the wild. Twelve inches is more common under
garden culture.
Smiles,
Bill Burleson
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