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Emilio, this is that I wrongly used to call Narcissus bulbocodium subsp. nivalis or just Narcissus nivalis Graells. After know that Linneo described Narcissus bulbocodium L. in Peñalara (Guadarrama Mt.) I think var. nivalis or subsp. nivalis is no longer valid.In Guadarrama/Gredos Mt there are only two bulbocodiums: N. bulbocodium L. and N. graellsii Graells (I personally prefer this name) there is another one that we discovered (not published yet), which is a little N. obesus, with noodles leaves, I sent you some seeds some time ago. The species you show receive three names depending the authors: N. subnivalis / N. bulbocodium subsp. ectandrus or more recently N. bulbocodium L. (the same species from Guadarrama etc.) I `never seen it in the wil and I can't say nothing, but I seems and adaptation of N. bulbocodium L. limestone soil.
No matter how common they may be, it's always good to see such plants growing where nature intended them to be, rather than in a garden or in a pot.By the way, how does "Khalid" become "Emilio?"
Emilio,was this the work of a farmer or wild boars?In some areas we have a local plague with cockchafer grubs - the wild boars like the insects, come in the night and trenching the meadows of the farmers and land owners. Result looks like your images. The farmer and their lobbyists get annoyed of the loss of their hay harvest and fear re-cultivation costs and requested the local government to spray insecticides against the cockchafer grub pest via use of helicopers... The bill shall be paided by the forest and hunter tentants because they don't shoot enough wild boars...