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Quote from: Pascal B on July 16, 2010, 07:42:10 PMTo be honest, I can't really understand what the difference is between L. bakerianum var. aureum and var. delavayi. The plant on my pictures on the previous page I have labeled as L. bakerianum var. delavayi because I thought it wasn't the clear yellow var. aureum is supposed to be but are var. delavayi and var. aureum not simply part of the same colour variation range? And var. rubrum the form in all shades of pink? Or are there more differences besides colour?Sorry to be so long in posting this. According to Drysdale, Woodcock & Stearn "Lilies of the World", Forrest found both L bakerianum var aureum and var delavayi in north Yunnan. He described var aureum as 'of a rich golden-yellow throughout, minutely speckled purple on the interior from the base to the very tips of the segments'. His field notes re var delavayi indicate the ground colour as ranging from dull olive-green and palish greenish yellow to olive-brown, with reddish purple maroon or crimson spots on the inside of the bell-shaped flower.Does this help?Liz
To be honest, I can't really understand what the difference is between L. bakerianum var. aureum and var. delavayi. The plant on my pictures on the previous page I have labeled as L. bakerianum var. delavayi because I thought it wasn't the clear yellow var. aureum is supposed to be but are var. delavayi and var. aureum not simply part of the same colour variation range? And var. rubrum the form in all shades of pink? Or are there more differences besides colour?
Maybe proper fieldwork would clarify it for this Lilium species but I quess it really depends on the genus if colors are used to describe varieties on. Personally I rather see the use of cultivars if people insist on naming the different color forms. In Araceae for instance, despite many color variants of species in various genera, taxonomic distinction based on color is hardly (if at all) used. Asarum dito.
Quote from: Pascal B on July 24, 2010, 09:45:36 PMMaybe proper fieldwork would clarify it for this Lilium species but I quess it really depends on the genus if colors are used to describe varieties on. Personally I rather see the use of cultivars if people insist on naming the different color forms. In Araceae for instance, despite many color variants of species in various genera, taxonomic distinction based on color is hardly (if at all) used. Asarum dito.Most of the orange lilies of the eastern part of Eurasia have yellow sports. In one case the yellow variant (lechtlinii) was named as type whereas the more common orange was named first a separate species (maximowiczii). In my eyes, a mistake. Cultvar names can only be used on man-made or man-selected taxa but I agree. There should be a better way of defining the various colour variations that occur.CheersGöte
I think it is lankongense
Hi,I'd appreciate any comments on this lily, it was grown from SRGC seedex 2006/2007 seed as speciosum, I think it is lankongense, flowered at the end of June and was scented. It's set seed so I'd like to get the name right.
Rob, Gote, thanks for the replies. Below are some photos of the whole plant, in a 4 inch pot, so around 80 cms high. The entire packet of seeds is in this pot, but only one has flowered and that for the first time in 2009, making a couple of years from seed to flower.