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I hope that someone could help me identify this Allium species which the first picture attached shows. I has got some characters of Allium wallichii, but with much broader leaves (I think). I don't know what the flowers look like. It was growing on a steep west facing slope at 4200 meters in north Sikkim. The second picture shows Allium wallichiiPictures where taken in northern Sikkim at the end of September.Johan
Here is another close up picture of the Allium sp..
I tried to find a good checklist of the plants of Sikkim, or Sikkim and neighboring territories (Bhutan, Nepal, Tibet), but couldn't find one; if you know of a good one, post it here.
For A. wallichii the leaves are described as "Leaves 4-5, basal, keeled beneath, to 51 x 0.7-2.5 cm." Additional info: flowering July-October, alt 2670-4420 m.I just give this for your information because you apparantly don't have the Flora of Bhutan (Vol. 3 Part 1, p. 76-81), I know absolutely zip about Allium other than that I like them in my omelet... Going through the descriptions in the FoB however I would say your assesment and Johan's initial identification seems correct.
Quote from: Pascal B on December 10, 2010, 09:40:18 PMFor A. wallichii the leaves are described as "Leaves 4-5, basal, keeled beneath, to 51 x 0.7-2.5 cm." Additional info: flowering July-October, alt 2670-4420 m.I just give this for your information because you apparantly don't have the Flora of Bhutan (Vol. 3 Part 1, p. 76-81), I know absolutely zip about Allium other than that I like them in my omelet... Going through the descriptions in the FoB however I would say your assesment and Johan's initial identification seems correct.Thanks Pascal. I like seeing the leaf description of A. wallichii you found, as it increases the leaf width to 2.5 cm (all other book parrot the same 20 mm or 2 cm). The altitude and flowering time make sense too, as the pedicels and developing capsules are still "in the green" or with fresh color, with Johan mentioning it was in late September.
Thanks alot for the help. My first impression (at sight) of the plant was that it must be close to Allium wallichii. But what didn't fit in my mind of a typical Allium wallichii was the very broad leaves. I am quite sure that the leaves was as broad as 4-5 cm. I also think that it has autumn colors in a way that I havn't seen on other forms of wallichii before. For what I understand it must be a very broadleaved form of Allium wallichii.
Update: remember the Allium species from the Caucasus, collected by Magnus Aspaker, a nice pink and white one that has been getting around... StephenB reminded me I was going to see if Dr. Reinhard Fritsch had any ideas about that one, see the diagnostic photos by forumist Arisaema here:http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=5766.msg159787#msg159787I sent off the photos recently to Dr. Fritsch, here's what he reports:"Concerning the plant from Caucasus, Mr. Jaeger from Giessen (Germany) sent us pictures of the same taxon collected in Georgia, valley of Aragwi river. Some characters are intermediate between A. kunthianum and A. karsianum, but the presence of bulbils in the inflorescence is strange. Mariam Agababian was also not sure about the identity."I have uploaded the two photos; they do indeed look similar, although in our subject plant from Magnus, looking at Arisaema's photo, in the 2 photos of the inflorescence, I can't tell if I'm seeing bulbils in the dark shadows there, or just more buds... I'm going to assume they are bulbils.