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I mean they write that the sepals are yellow and they write not what colour the petals are.
It is my berlief that the colour in that description was written/described from a herbarium sheet... who knows what the colour can be when it has been squashed and stored for x years!! Ian and I have been discussing this very matter with a forum friend and the same is going on on a German plant forum.
A white hyemailis would be be nice
I was looking some things up about white-flowering Eranthis. Something didn't quite make sense...as I understand it, there are three white-flowering species in this genus. E. albiflora, E. stellata and E. pinnatifida. But according to the flora of China E. stellata has yellow flowers and pubescent pedicels (http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=200008006). All pictures I've found of E. stellata show plants with white flowers and glabrous pedicels, so that would make alll of them E. albiflora (http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=200008003)?In the original description of E. stellata (http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?view=image;size=100;id=mdp.39015020108877;page=root;seq=28;num=22) there's no mention of flower-colour at all, but it also mentions the pubescent pedicels...anyone here who can shed some light on this?
Quote from: Maggi Young on January 27, 2012, 02:58:55 PMIt is my berlief that the colour in that description was written/described from a herbarium sheet... who knows what the colour can be when it has been squashed and stored for x years!! Ian and I have been discussing this very matter with a forum friend and the same is going on on a German plant forum. That's a fact,in a herbarium white can become yellow indeed. But that still leaves the difference between glabrous vs pubescent pedicels!I found the discussion on the German Plant forum but nobody there seemed to be able to give a definitive answer.Oh, and another question, anyone ever seen Eranthis lobulata? The flowers aren't described in the FoC, so I guess they haven't seen this species in real life either!
Quote from: WimB on January 27, 2012, 02:01:02 PMI was looking some things up about white-flowering Eranthis. Something didn't quite make sense...as I understand it, there are three white-flowering species in this genus. E. albiflora, E. stellata and E. pinnatifida. But according to the flora of China E. stellata has yellow flowers and pubescent pedicels (http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=200008006). All pictures I've found of E. stellata show plants with white flowers and glabrous pedicels, so that would make alll of them E. albiflora (http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=2&taxon_id=200008003)?In the original description of E. stellata (http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?view=image;size=100;id=mdp.39015020108877;page=root;seq=28;num=22) there's no mention of flower-colour at all, but it also mentions the pubescent pedicels...anyone here who can shed some light on this? This mistake about stellata flower color is in all Russian Floras as they judge by dry flowers in herbarium. Really they are white! May be China follows Russia? I wrote about this in my book BURRIED TREASURES.Janis
There are two species - stellata and sibirica, both distinguishable just by glabrous or pubescent pedicels. Unfortunately all my stocks of Siberian Eranthis turned only stellata so sibirica still is on my wish-list.JanisSorry for late comments, only today opened this topic.
wow very nice plant on John's page and the two doubles Noel Ayres and double Gothenburg form