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This one came from Sergey Banketov in the Caucasus as Allium rotundum (wild seed), sowed spring 2007:
Stephan, an interesting onion. I've gone through the keys in Mathew's A Review of Allium Section Allium. Even without knowing the bulb characteristics, I think I can narrow down the species, although will ask you to provide the following: with (in mm) of the leaves, are the leaves smooth edged or minutely scabrid (do the "feel" test). That being said, I always repeat my mantra that keying species in the lool-alike Allium section Allium is *very difficult*. Knowing the provenance of the plant helps immensely.
I am not quite sure if these pics are 'Allium' or 'Wildlife'Anyway three pics of A. ovalifolium.CheersGöte
Quote from: Stephenb on August 09, 2010, 01:24:59 PMThis one came from Sergey Banketov in the Caucasus as Allium rotundum (wild seed), sowed spring 2007: I have it narrowed the following possibilities in order of likelihood: A. ponticum, A. rotundum ssp. jajlae, A. macrochaetum. I notice the heads are looser than is typical for A. rotundum, and the flower color would rule out typical rotundum although could fit for the pinkish-violet A. rotundum ssp. jajlae. For me however, it comes closest to Allium ponticum.
Hi again, MarkI was a bit surprised you mentioned jajlae as a possible candidate for my "Allium rotundum". I have two other plants which I received as Allium scorodoprasum spp jajlae (pictures 1 to 5) and Allium scorodoprasum ssp rotundum (6 to and both have very compact flower heads (unlike my other "rotundum")Picture 9 shows the two together today (rotundum on the left and jajlae on the right). Picture 10 shows one of my A. scorodoprasum ssp scorodoprasum plants which has formed abnormally large bulbils.So, what do I have? I reckon they are the same. How do you separate rotundum and jajlae?Thanks in advance.Stephen
Could this be beesianum (I got it as this some years ago)?
I've been going through my Allium pictures taken over the last few weeks, so here's the first. A plant I received from two sources in Tromsø last summer as Allium cyanthus (not valid name) and it's not Allium cyaneum. A form of sikkimense I presume?
Quote from: Stephenb on August 09, 2010, 01:21:09 PMCould this be beesianum (I got it as this some years ago)?Hi Stephen, it could be A. beesianum... what's the length of the tepals? Hopefully the length is still measurable, you posted this 12 days ago and I've been very slow in replying. If the tepals are 11-17 mm, then it'll match the characteristic for A. beesianum, if 10 mm or shorter, it'll key to sikkimense.Link to your photo as a reminder of what we're discussing:http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=5766.msg162471#msg162471
Quote from: Stephenb on August 09, 2010, 01:18:17 PMI've been going through my Allium pictures taken over the last few weeks, so here's the first. A plant I received from two sources in Tromsø last summer as Allium cyanthus (not valid name) and it's not Allium cyaneum. A form of sikkimense I presume? Stephen, the blue Allium you show (with invalid name of A. "cyanthus") is truly an enigma, and a classic example of how the Allium treatment in Flora of China does not come close to adequately describing and identifying Allium material from China. It probably does indeed come closest to a form of A. sikkimense, or even A. beesianum if the tepals are very long, but those long sharply acute tepals are completely unique and not at all like sikkimense or beesianum, never seen anything quite like it (seed: hint hint). Is it possible to find out any further information about the source or provenance of this unique form?Since I'm late responding to this, to give context, here is the link to the original posting:http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=5766.msg162470#msg162470
This is another Allium spp. Ex-Magnar Aspaker, this one from the Carpathian Mountains. It flowered for the first time a couple of weeks ago. I wondered if it could be Allium ericetorum - it is very similar. I have ericetorum in a different part of the garden, but it is only just coming into flower. Pictures 1 to 4 are the mystery plant5-6 are my Allium ericetorum (the first picture taken yesterday, the second from last year) - notice the long bract missing from the mystery plant.