Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Sorry Juan,You are right it is very confusing.Well, I don't support most of things in this Volume of Flora Iberica and I support botanist like A. Barra and F. Casas.There are currently two tendencies concerning this autumn narcissi group. I will try to explain.There is an herbarium sheet with something similar to N. elegans called N. obsoletus but very confusing, collected in Andalusia. Botanist like Díaz Lifante & Andrés Camacho consider it is in fact N. miniatus, so they support N. elegans.Botanist like F. Casas consider this plant N. obsoletus corresponds to N. elegans, and suggest an older name for N. miniatus = N. deficiens.In Flora Iberica you will see:Narcissus elegansNarcissus obsoletus (=N. miniatus)Narcissus serotinusN. x perez-larae (N. cavanillesii x N. obsoletus)But if you reed the articles from F. Casas, you will see:Narcissus obsoletus (=N. elegans)Narcissus deficiens (=N. miniatus)Narcissus serotinus N. x perez-larae (N. cavanillesii x N. deficiens) -----fertile----> Narcissus piifontianusThe hybrid in both cases have to be changed by other name, in my op pinion, as it has been described with N. serotinus L. as a parent, and this is wrong.In addition, N. cavanillesii x N. serotinus = N. x alentejanus, with 3 variants, the one that Gerd described before "var. moronensis", an intermediate "var. knochei" and "var. alentejanus"I am sure there is also N.x alentejanus fertile, because they follow the same evolutive process....
Quote from: fermides on January 11, 2011, 10:35:07 PMSpeaking of autumn daffs, I need some help "defining" Narcissus miniatus. Seed of it from the AGS Seedex has been confiscated by AQIS (Australian Quarantine Inspection Service) because it isn't on ICON (the "allowed" list). Do some people still consider it a ssp of N. serotinus? Or when was it re-classified? Any help I can get to do battle with bureacracy would be appreciated! A few years ago, N serotinus was split into N miniatus for the Western Med species, and N serotinus for the Eastern Med species. However (I'm not sure this is going to help) it seems that very recently there have been further changes to N miniatusand it is now N obsoletushttp://apps.kew.org/wcsp/synonomy.do?name_id=281989On this page you will see other synonyms, including N serotinus in various subspecies. Hope that helps you get it through
Speaking of autumn daffs, I need some help "defining" Narcissus miniatus. Seed of it from the AGS Seedex has been confiscated by AQIS (Australian Quarantine Inspection Service) because it isn't on ICON (the "allowed" list). Do some people still consider it a ssp of N. serotinus? Or when was it re-classified? Any help I can get to do battle with bureacracy would be appreciated!
Thanks for your help, Diane.The seed were released to my care last week! cheers fermi
Thank you AnneHere N. cantabricus with his son N. x matritensis
Gerry, this is the new name for N. x susannae, (N. cantabricus x N. triandrus subsp. pallidulus), the mother is N. triandrus subsp. pallidulusN. x litigiosus del Amo (N. albicans x N. triandrus subsp. pallidulus) and the mother is also pallidulus.
If you don't grow it.....
N. munozii-garmendiae?Hans, this name is for a member of asturiensis group.http://www.treknature.com/viewphotos.php?l=3&p=152284