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Some tulips blooming in my greenhose now:Tulipa albertii from Kazahstan, near Alma-AtaTulipa bifloriformis from Nuratau, Timurlan Gate in Uzbekistan, they grew on large rock and were cllected in strong wind not allowing to pictureThis unusual Tulipa fosteriana was collected in Agalik, Uzbekistan and is named after my first wifeTulipa hewerii comes from Afganistan and is very good grower, strongly resembles T. praestans (by bulb sheets) and something looks as yellow variant of itThis Tulipa humilis was collected in Iran by Arnis Seisums, between those was one pure white, too.
Janis,phantastic tulips. I'm having difficulties to distinguish T. bifloriformis from T. turkestanica. Can you tell us the key differences?I also vague remember having read somewhere the dutch commercial clone of T. turkestanica are all T. bifloriformis???
And I'm off the Canada tomorrow for two and a half weeks - no doubt all the remaining tulips will perform while I'm away due to our late season - grrr! And not just the tulips....there's never a good time to be away from the garden!
Not easy. I can't separate by key prepared by Vvedenskyi "Conspectus Florae Asiae Maediae"Better is key made by Silina - "Ornamental Perennials for Openg ground in USSR. Monocots".By Silina (and by key in Flora USSR)Bulb cover sheets inside hairy throughout - Tulipa bifloriformisBulb cover sheets inside hairy at upper half only - T. turkestanicaBy Botschantzeva - anthers yellow - turkestanica anthers black - bifloriformis - but it is not true - both have forms with yellow and with black anthers
Janis, many thanks, very interesting. This is a new info to me. May I ask your personal opinion? Do you believe the hairs inside cover sheets is a sufficient key to justify two species looking so similar?