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Of interest : these watercolours by Prof. Guner's daughter...http://www.isikguner.com/eng/muscari.html
The problem is there is no monograph,i have the original paper coming to me from adilii
Very nice Maggie, thanksCan this paper be made available?ThanksRimmer
My Muscari adilii from Paul Christian also have relative large seed pods, but it looks quite different from M. adilii from Janis Ruksans.Poul
and Davey- isn't your plant there the one identified a couple of years ago as NOT being M. adillii?Janis' as shown here http://www.srgc.net/forum/index.php?topic=2883.msg87321#msg87321 ( other examples are to be found in the forum) are, I think, from the locus classicus and are identical to those seen shown in slides by Prof. Guner.
Maggie you are right but i showed Ray Cobb it (he has a very large muscari collection)he said it was identical to his,he received his from the chap who discovered the species,all Ray said was has it got inflated seed pods as well and it does ,maybe this sp isn't as uniform as we think,maybe Janis's is just a super form of the sp,my plant is not labeled as adilii but ex pc.Either that or PC is keeping his muscari to close and they are interbreeding and our plants are results of this mess.The problem is there is no monograph,i have the original paper coming to me from adilii but like with everything we all presume from a described specimen that the sp is the same as this one and that its only found in a small area untill its discovered in a new place.
I don't know origin of PC plant, but mine is 100% true, collected just on point from where it is described. Collected were seeds because there are only several tenth of specimens in wild at locus classicus. It is rarest Muascari species with fat spikes and large seed pods.Janis