Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Josef, are those pages only available in Russian? At the root of that site, there is an option for English, but clicking it, many or most of the links disappear, so I assume only a small portion of the site is available in English.http://www-sbras.nsc.ru/en/
Quote from: TheOnionMan on December 08, 2010, 03:10:03 PMJosef, are those pages only available in Russian? At the root of that site, there is an option for English, but clicking it, many or most of the links disappear, so I assume only a small portion of the site is available in English.http://www-sbras.nsc.ru/en/It is written in Russian. The source of the information was translated and already published in English.Friesen, Aquilegia. In: Malyshev, Peshkova, Flora of Siberia, 6. Science Publishers, Enfield 2003.Perhaps you can borrow it in a public library. There are 14 volumes of the Flora of Siberia.
Maybe I'll write to Dr. Nikolai Friesen to see if he has a PDF to share on Aquilegia. PDFs specifically on Aquilegia where not found there, but I'll ask.
McMark,Do you think his Aquilegia saximontana is really the species or nothttp://www.edelbrandbrennerei.at/attachments/Image/saximontana.JPGhttp://farm5.static.flickr.com/4050/4285285548_8393bbb66c_o.jpgIt is a pygmy plant of 6 cm height and the white margin is not sharplydelimited, which speaks pro, but the spurs are merelyslightly divergent, which speaks contra.
Quote from: TheOnionMan on December 08, 2010, 04:33:56 PMMaybe I'll write to Dr. Nikolai Friesen to see if he has a PDF to share on Aquilegia. PDFs specifically on Aquilegia where not found there, but I'll ask.I am interested for his argumentation there for the distinctness of Aquilegia atropurpurea and Aquilegia viridiflora at specific level. Provided there is any in the treatment. There is no one in Flora of China for the contrary.