Iris yebrudii
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Details Top
Internal ID | UUID644027c592350513642600 |
Scientific name | Iris yebrudii |
Authority | Dinsm. ex Chaudhary |
First published in | Bot. Not. 125: 259 (1972) |
Description Top
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Iris yebrudii is a species of iris found in the hillsides of Syria. It belongs to the genus Iris and the subgenus of Iris, specifically in the Oncocyclus section. This plant has curved leaves that often hide a single stem, and its spring flower is pale yellow with fine spots, veining, and a dark purple signal patch and purple beard. It has a small and compact rhizome with 5-8 leaves, a stem that is usually hidden by the leaves, and grows up to 30 cm tall in cultivation. The flowers, which bloom in May, are 13 cm in diameter and have 2 pairs of petals, with the standards being slightly paler than the falls. The plant produces a seedpod after flowering. It has a chromosome count of 2n=20. The specific epithet "yebrudii" refers to the Syrian city of Yabroud. There is a subspecies called Iris yebrudii subsp. edgecombii, which has larger flowers with more reddish-purple shades and a maroon-purple signal patch. However, it is often considered a synonym of the main species. Iris yebrudii is endemic to Syria, specifically in the Yebrud area
Iris yebrudii is a species of iris found in the hillsides of Syria. It belongs to the genus Iris and the subgenus of Iris, specifically in the Oncocyclus section. This plant has curved leaves that often hide a single stem, and its spring flower is pale yellow with fine spots, veining, and a dark purple signal patch and purple beard. It has a small and compact rhizome with 5-8 leaves, a stem that is usually hidden by the leaves, and grows up to 30 cm tall in cultivation. The flowers, which bloom in May, are 13 cm in diameter and have 2 pairs of petals, with the standards being slightly paler than the falls. The plant produces a seedpod after flowering. It has a chromosome count of 2n=20. The specific epithet "yebrudii" refers to the Syrian city of Yabroud. There is a subspecies called Iris yebrudii subsp. edgecombii, which has larger flowers with more reddish-purple shades and a maroon-purple signal patch. However, it is often considered a synonym of the main species. Iris yebrudii is endemic to Syria, specifically in the Yebrud area
Common names Top
Add a new one! Suggest a correction!Language | Common/alternative name |
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Arabic | سوسن يبرودي |
Subspecies (abbr. subsp./ssp.) Top
Add a new one! Suggest a correction!Name | Authority | First published in |
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Iris yebrudii subsp. edgecombii | Chaudhary | Bot. Not. 125: 499 (1972) |
Iris yebrudii subsp. yebrudii | Unknown |
Germination/Propagation Top
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No germination or propagation data was added yet.
Distribution (via POWO/KEW) Top
Legend for the distribution data:
- Doubtful data
- Extinct
- Introduced
- Native
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Asia-temperate click to expand
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Western Asia
- Lebanon-Syria
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Western Asia
Links to other databases Top
Suggest others/fix!Database | ID/link to page |
---|---|
World Flora Online | wfo-0000784066 |
Tropicos | 100207152 |
KEW | urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:439274-1 |
The Plant List | kew-322603 |
Open Tree Of Life | 3998438 |
IUCN Red List | 13162312 |
IPNI | 439274-1 |
iNaturalist | 1224343 |
GBIF | 5299046 |
USDA GRIN | 428645 |
Wikipedia | Iris_yebrudii |
Genomes (via NCBI) Top
No reference genome is available on NCBI yet. We are constantly monitoring for new data.
Phytochemical Profile Top
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Collections Top
In private collections | 0 |
In public collections | 0 |