Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Quote from: ian mcenery on February 11, 2012, 06:22:08 PMNot much happening for me at present just a coupleC pelistericus from a generous friendC rujanensis - or is atticus ssp rujanensis?Ian,very nice croci images. The pictures of your C. rujanensis are lovely. I like the deep yellow throat. But I have my difficulties to differenciate your samples from C. atticus (C. sieberi ssp. atticus) i.e. cv. 'Firefly'.Refering to Janis crocus book C. rujanensis bract and bracteole are unequal in length, the perianth is purple in the upper part and style exceeds well tips of anthers...
Not much happening for me at present just a coupleC pelistericus from a generous friendC rujanensis - or is atticus ssp rujanensis?
Quote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 03:42:12 PMQuote from: Janis Ruksans on February 13, 2012, 02:44:14 PMQuote from: ronm on February 13, 2012, 11:08:36 AMVery classy, whether C.rujanensis is true or not. I dont think that this should be lumped in without some form of differentiation .I'm not lumping it, too. I have few slightly different stocks, all are collected on locus classicus and they are slightly different from atticus, so I keep them as rujanensis. I don't know how easy would be for me to identify plant without provenance (origin). Not tried yet.JanisQuote from: Janis Ruksans on February 13, 2012, 05:05:35 PMQuote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 03:42:12 PMQuote from: Janis Ruksans on February 13, 2012, 02:44:14 PMQuote from: ronm on February 13, 2012, 11:08:36 AMVery classy, whether C.rujanensis is true or not. I dont think that this should be lumped in without some form of differentiation .I'm not lumping it, too. I have few slightly different stocks, all are collected on locus classicus and they are slightly different from atticus, so I keep them as rujanensis. I don't know how easy would be for me to identify plant without provenance (origin). Not tried yet.JanisQuote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 06:58:41 PMI see that two of the botanists who described Crocus rujanensis are the same ones who have described Crocus jablanicensis(which looks a beautiful plant). Both new species are growing in the same area and must have have been mistaken for Crocus sieberi in the past. Perhaps this means we can look forward to further new species in the future.Quote from: Janis Ruksans on February 13, 2012, 07:11:01 PMQuote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 06:58:41 PMI see that two of the botanists who described Crocus rujanensis are the same ones who have described Crocus jablanicensis(which looks a beautiful plant). Both new species are growing in the same area and must have have been mistaken for Crocus sieberi in the past. Perhaps this means we can look forward to further new species in the future.Jablanicensis (Mount Jablanica in very west) grows quite far from rujanensis (Rujan Plane). If rujanensis is similar to atticus, then jablanicensis could be compared with white cvijicii but its stigma well overtops anthers. I didn't see it in vivo but for me seems that there will be no problems to identify this one.JanisQuote from: Janis Ruksans on February 14, 2012, 08:06:53 AMReturning to discussion about jablanicensis and rujanensis - They grow far one from other - jablanicensis in very SE of Macedonia, it is high mountain plant; rujanensis on border between Serbia and Macedonia - at very North of last and from much lower altitudes. So both are well separated geographically, too.Regarding to complex atticus-dalmaticus-rujanensis - I scanned table comparing all of them (atticus in it is under name of sublimis) and I'm adding pictures of all three (not from this spring, of course). Judge by yourself how different they are for gardener. I only want to warn that cheep crocus offered as dalmaticus by Dutch growers really is atticus. Pictured plants are coming from localities where they are growing (original stock is wild collected). When I started crocus growing and wild plants growing out of USSR were not available for me - I was very confused by so named "dalmaticus" offered by Dutch and grown everywhere - it looked absolutely identical with atticus. C. rujanensis is collected by Jim Archibald on Rujan Planina - its locus classicus, so undoubtedly true to name.Janis see here for comparison pictures etc : http://www.srgc.org.uk/forum/index.php?topic=8490.msg231894#msg231894Quote from: Armin on February 14, 2012, 11:26:56 AMJanis,thank you for the comparison table and the marvelous images. I've learned there are rather small differences with regards to morphology in series reticulati especial sieberi group.Beside traditional (historical) morphological investigations and comparison, DNA analysis have given a new view and understanding of the relationships of the genus crocus.In your book 'Crocuses' you consider C. atticus as species and sublimis and nivalis as subspecies of it while before all three have been considered as subspecies of C. sieberi.From the phylogenetic analysis results (May 2008, see excerpt image) I can't comprehend fully your conclusions with regards to nivalis & sublimis.Maybe I'm lacking latest scientific results since then.Can you kindly give us some more explanation for your conclusions? I and probably many other interested forumist, get more confused by the naming. (How shall I call my babies?)What is the latest status among taxonomist / scientist discussions regarding species/subspecies naming? Will there be a harmonisation / an alignment / an offical revision? Scheduled when?Presumable my questions are not simple to answer but I hope you can give us your appraisals. see here for pictures etc :http://www.srgc.org.uk/forum/index.php?topic=8490.msg231918#msg231918 Armin (& anyone else who is interested) - The arguments about species concepts are far too complex for a short discussion on a horticultural website. Here are a couple of relatively recent papers on the topic sent to me by Pascal Bruggeman. They are quite technical.
Quote from: Janis Ruksans on February 13, 2012, 02:44:14 PMQuote from: ronm on February 13, 2012, 11:08:36 AMVery classy, whether C.rujanensis is true or not. I dont think that this should be lumped in without some form of differentiation .I'm not lumping it, too. I have few slightly different stocks, all are collected on locus classicus and they are slightly different from atticus, so I keep them as rujanensis. I don't know how easy would be for me to identify plant without provenance (origin). Not tried yet.JanisQuote from: Janis Ruksans on February 13, 2012, 05:05:35 PMQuote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 03:42:12 PMQuote from: Janis Ruksans on February 13, 2012, 02:44:14 PMQuote from: ronm on February 13, 2012, 11:08:36 AMVery classy, whether C.rujanensis is true or not. I dont think that this should be lumped in without some form of differentiation .I'm not lumping it, too. I have few slightly different stocks, all are collected on locus classicus and they are slightly different from atticus, so I keep them as rujanensis. I don't know how easy would be for me to identify plant without provenance (origin). Not tried yet.JanisQuote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 06:58:41 PMI see that two of the botanists who described Crocus rujanensis are the same ones who have described Crocus jablanicensis(which looks a beautiful plant). Both new species are growing in the same area and must have have been mistaken for Crocus sieberi in the past. Perhaps this means we can look forward to further new species in the future.Quote from: Janis Ruksans on February 13, 2012, 07:11:01 PMQuote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 06:58:41 PMI see that two of the botanists who described Crocus rujanensis are the same ones who have described Crocus jablanicensis(which looks a beautiful plant). Both new species are growing in the same area and must have have been mistaken for Crocus sieberi in the past. Perhaps this means we can look forward to further new species in the future.Jablanicensis (Mount Jablanica in very west) grows quite far from rujanensis (Rujan Plane). If rujanensis is similar to atticus, then jablanicensis could be compared with white cvijicii but its stigma well overtops anthers. I didn't see it in vivo but for me seems that there will be no problems to identify this one.JanisQuote from: Janis Ruksans on February 14, 2012, 08:06:53 AMReturning to discussion about jablanicensis and rujanensis - They grow far one from other - jablanicensis in very SE of Macedonia, it is high mountain plant; rujanensis on border between Serbia and Macedonia - at very North of last and from much lower altitudes. So both are well separated geographically, too.Regarding to complex atticus-dalmaticus-rujanensis - I scanned table comparing all of them (atticus in it is under name of sublimis) and I'm adding pictures of all three (not from this spring, of course). Judge by yourself how different they are for gardener. I only want to warn that cheep crocus offered as dalmaticus by Dutch growers really is atticus. Pictured plants are coming from localities where they are growing (original stock is wild collected). When I started crocus growing and wild plants growing out of USSR were not available for me - I was very confused by so named "dalmaticus" offered by Dutch and grown everywhere - it looked absolutely identical with atticus. C. rujanensis is collected by Jim Archibald on Rujan Planina - its locus classicus, so undoubtedly true to name.Janis see here for comparison pictures etc : http://www.srgc.org.uk/forum/index.php?topic=8490.msg231894#msg231894Quote from: Armin on February 14, 2012, 11:26:56 AMJanis,thank you for the comparison table and the marvelous images. I've learned there are rather small differences with regards to morphology in series reticulati especial sieberi group.Beside traditional (historical) morphological investigations and comparison, DNA analysis have given a new view and understanding of the relationships of the genus crocus.In your book 'Crocuses' you consider C. atticus as species and sublimis and nivalis as subspecies of it while before all three have been considered as subspecies of C. sieberi.From the phylogenetic analysis results (May 2008, see excerpt image) I can't comprehend fully your conclusions with regards to nivalis & sublimis.Maybe I'm lacking latest scientific results since then.Can you kindly give us some more explanation for your conclusions? I and probably many other interested forumist, get more confused by the naming. (How shall I call my babies?)What is the latest status among taxonomist / scientist discussions regarding species/subspecies naming? Will there be a harmonisation / an alignment / an offical revision? Scheduled when?Presumable my questions are not simple to answer but I hope you can give us your appraisals. see here for pictures etc :http://www.srgc.org.uk/forum/index.php?topic=8490.msg231918#msg231918 Armin (& anyone else who is interested) - The arguments about species concepts are far too complex for a short discussion on a horticultural website. Here are a couple of relatively recent papers on the topic sent to me by Pascal Bruggeman. They are quite technical.
Quote from: ronm on February 13, 2012, 11:08:36 AMVery classy, whether C.rujanensis is true or not. I dont think that this should be lumped in without some form of differentiation .I'm not lumping it, too. I have few slightly different stocks, all are collected on locus classicus and they are slightly different from atticus, so I keep them as rujanensis. I don't know how easy would be for me to identify plant without provenance (origin). Not tried yet.Janis
Very classy, whether C.rujanensis is true or not. I dont think that this should be lumped in without some form of differentiation .
Quote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 03:42:12 PMQuote from: Janis Ruksans on February 13, 2012, 02:44:14 PMQuote from: ronm on February 13, 2012, 11:08:36 AMVery classy, whether C.rujanensis is true or not. I dont think that this should be lumped in without some form of differentiation .I'm not lumping it, too. I have few slightly different stocks, all are collected on locus classicus and they are slightly different from atticus, so I keep them as rujanensis. I don't know how easy would be for me to identify plant without provenance (origin). Not tried yet.JanisQuote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 06:58:41 PMI see that two of the botanists who described Crocus rujanensis are the same ones who have described Crocus jablanicensis(which looks a beautiful plant). Both new species are growing in the same area and must have have been mistaken for Crocus sieberi in the past. Perhaps this means we can look forward to further new species in the future.Quote from: Janis Ruksans on February 13, 2012, 07:11:01 PMQuote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 06:58:41 PMI see that two of the botanists who described Crocus rujanensis are the same ones who have described Crocus jablanicensis(which looks a beautiful plant). Both new species are growing in the same area and must have have been mistaken for Crocus sieberi in the past. Perhaps this means we can look forward to further new species in the future.Jablanicensis (Mount Jablanica in very west) grows quite far from rujanensis (Rujan Plane). If rujanensis is similar to atticus, then jablanicensis could be compared with white cvijicii but its stigma well overtops anthers. I didn't see it in vivo but for me seems that there will be no problems to identify this one.JanisQuote from: Janis Ruksans on February 14, 2012, 08:06:53 AMReturning to discussion about jablanicensis and rujanensis - They grow far one from other - jablanicensis in very SE of Macedonia, it is high mountain plant; rujanensis on border between Serbia and Macedonia - at very North of last and from much lower altitudes. So both are well separated geographically, too.Regarding to complex atticus-dalmaticus-rujanensis - I scanned table comparing all of them (atticus in it is under name of sublimis) and I'm adding pictures of all three (not from this spring, of course). Judge by yourself how different they are for gardener. I only want to warn that cheep crocus offered as dalmaticus by Dutch growers really is atticus. Pictured plants are coming from localities where they are growing (original stock is wild collected). When I started crocus growing and wild plants growing out of USSR were not available for me - I was very confused by so named "dalmaticus" offered by Dutch and grown everywhere - it looked absolutely identical with atticus. C. rujanensis is collected by Jim Archibald on Rujan Planina - its locus classicus, so undoubtedly true to name.Janis see here for comparison pictures etc : http://www.srgc.org.uk/forum/index.php?topic=8490.msg231894#msg231894Quote from: Armin on February 14, 2012, 11:26:56 AMJanis,thank you for the comparison table and the marvelous images. I've learned there are rather small differences with regards to morphology in series reticulati especial sieberi group.Beside traditional (historical) morphological investigations and comparison, DNA analysis have given a new view and understanding of the relationships of the genus crocus.In your book 'Crocuses' you consider C. atticus as species and sublimis and nivalis as subspecies of it while before all three have been considered as subspecies of C. sieberi.From the phylogenetic analysis results (May 2008, see excerpt image) I can't comprehend fully your conclusions with regards to nivalis & sublimis.Maybe I'm lacking latest scientific results since then.Can you kindly give us some more explanation for your conclusions? I and probably many other interested forumist, get more confused by the naming. (How shall I call my babies?)What is the latest status among taxonomist / scientist discussions regarding species/subspecies naming? Will there be a harmonisation / an alignment / an offical revision? Scheduled when?Presumable my questions are not simple to answer but I hope you can give us your appraisals. see here for pictures etc :http://www.srgc.org.uk/forum/index.php?topic=8490.msg231918#msg231918 Armin (& anyone else who is interested) - The arguments about species concepts are far too complex for a short discussion on a horticultural website. Here are a couple of relatively recent papers on the topic sent to me by Pascal Bruggeman. They are quite technical.
Quote from: Janis Ruksans on February 13, 2012, 02:44:14 PMQuote from: ronm on February 13, 2012, 11:08:36 AMVery classy, whether C.rujanensis is true or not. I dont think that this should be lumped in without some form of differentiation .I'm not lumping it, too. I have few slightly different stocks, all are collected on locus classicus and they are slightly different from atticus, so I keep them as rujanensis. I don't know how easy would be for me to identify plant without provenance (origin). Not tried yet.JanisQuote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 06:58:41 PMI see that two of the botanists who described Crocus rujanensis are the same ones who have described Crocus jablanicensis(which looks a beautiful plant). Both new species are growing in the same area and must have have been mistaken for Crocus sieberi in the past. Perhaps this means we can look forward to further new species in the future.Quote from: Janis Ruksans on February 13, 2012, 07:11:01 PMQuote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 06:58:41 PMI see that two of the botanists who described Crocus rujanensis are the same ones who have described Crocus jablanicensis(which looks a beautiful plant). Both new species are growing in the same area and must have have been mistaken for Crocus sieberi in the past. Perhaps this means we can look forward to further new species in the future.Jablanicensis (Mount Jablanica in very west) grows quite far from rujanensis (Rujan Plane). If rujanensis is similar to atticus, then jablanicensis could be compared with white cvijicii but its stigma well overtops anthers. I didn't see it in vivo but for me seems that there will be no problems to identify this one.JanisQuote from: Janis Ruksans on February 14, 2012, 08:06:53 AMReturning to discussion about jablanicensis and rujanensis - They grow far one from other - jablanicensis in very SE of Macedonia, it is high mountain plant; rujanensis on border between Serbia and Macedonia - at very North of last and from much lower altitudes. So both are well separated geographically, too.Regarding to complex atticus-dalmaticus-rujanensis - I scanned table comparing all of them (atticus in it is under name of sublimis) and I'm adding pictures of all three (not from this spring, of course). Judge by yourself how different they are for gardener. I only want to warn that cheep crocus offered as dalmaticus by Dutch growers really is atticus. Pictured plants are coming from localities where they are growing (original stock is wild collected). When I started crocus growing and wild plants growing out of USSR were not available for me - I was very confused by so named "dalmaticus" offered by Dutch and grown everywhere - it looked absolutely identical with atticus. C. rujanensis is collected by Jim Archibald on Rujan Planina - its locus classicus, so undoubtedly true to name.Janis see here for comparison pictures etc : http://www.srgc.org.uk/forum/index.php?topic=8490.msg231894#msg231894Quote from: Armin on February 14, 2012, 11:26:56 AMJanis,thank you for the comparison table and the marvelous images. I've learned there are rather small differences with regards to morphology in series reticulati especial sieberi group.Beside traditional (historical) morphological investigations and comparison, DNA analysis have given a new view and understanding of the relationships of the genus crocus.In your book 'Crocuses' you consider C. atticus as species and sublimis and nivalis as subspecies of it while before all three have been considered as subspecies of C. sieberi.From the phylogenetic analysis results (May 2008, see excerpt image) I can't comprehend fully your conclusions with regards to nivalis & sublimis.Maybe I'm lacking latest scientific results since then.Can you kindly give us some more explanation for your conclusions? I and probably many other interested forumist, get more confused by the naming. (How shall I call my babies?)What is the latest status among taxonomist / scientist discussions regarding species/subspecies naming? Will there be a harmonisation / an alignment / an offical revision? Scheduled when?Presumable my questions are not simple to answer but I hope you can give us your appraisals. see here for pictures etc :http://www.srgc.org.uk/forum/index.php?topic=8490.msg231918#msg231918
I see that two of the botanists who described Crocus rujanensis are the same ones who have described Crocus jablanicensis(which looks a beautiful plant). Both new species are growing in the same area and must have have been mistaken for Crocus sieberi in the past. Perhaps this means we can look forward to further new species in the future.
Quote from: Tony Willis on February 13, 2012, 06:58:41 PMI see that two of the botanists who described Crocus rujanensis are the same ones who have described Crocus jablanicensis(which looks a beautiful plant). Both new species are growing in the same area and must have have been mistaken for Crocus sieberi in the past. Perhaps this means we can look forward to further new species in the future.Jablanicensis (Mount Jablanica in very west) grows quite far from rujanensis (Rujan Plane). If rujanensis is similar to atticus, then jablanicensis could be compared with white cvijicii but its stigma well overtops anthers. I didn't see it in vivo but for me seems that there will be no problems to identify this one.Janis
Returning to discussion about jablanicensis and rujanensis - They grow far one from other - jablanicensis in very SE of Macedonia, it is high mountain plant; rujanensis on border between Serbia and Macedonia - at very North of last and from much lower altitudes. So both are well separated geographically, too.Regarding to complex atticus-dalmaticus-rujanensis - I scanned table comparing all of them (atticus in it is under name of sublimis) and I'm adding pictures of all three (not from this spring, of course). Judge by yourself how different they are for gardener. I only want to warn that cheep crocus offered as dalmaticus by Dutch growers really is atticus. Pictured plants are coming from localities where they are growing (original stock is wild collected). When I started crocus growing and wild plants growing out of USSR were not available for me - I was very confused by so named "dalmaticus" offered by Dutch and grown everywhere - it looked absolutely identical with atticus. C. rujanensis is collected by Jim Archibald on Rujan Planina - its locus classicus, so undoubtedly true to name.Janis
Janis,thank you for the comparison table and the marvelous images. I've learned there are rather small differences with regards to morphology in series reticulati especial sieberi group.Beside traditional (historical) morphological investigations and comparison, DNA analysis have given a new view and understanding of the relationships of the genus crocus.In your book 'Crocuses' you consider C. atticus as species and sublimis and nivalis as subspecies of it while before all three have been considered as subspecies of C. sieberi.From the phylogenetic analysis results (May 2008, see excerpt image) I can't comprehend fully your conclusions with regards to nivalis & sublimis.Maybe I'm lacking latest scientific results since then.Can you kindly give us some more explanation for your conclusions? I and probably many other interested forumist, get more confused by the naming. (How shall I call my babies?)What is the latest status among taxonomist / scientist discussions regarding species/subspecies naming? Will there be a harmonisation / an alignment / an offical revision? Scheduled when?Presumable my questions are not simple to answer but I hope you can give us your appraisals.
Armin, it is known a botanical book on crocus was in preparation. Will inquire more.