Origin and Historical Aspects of Cyclamen persicum Mill.1
Autor: | R. E. Lyons, R. E. Widmer |
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Rok vydání: | 1980 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | HortScience. 15:132-135 |
ISSN: | 2327-9834 0018-5345 |
DOI: | 10.21273/hortsci.15.2.132 |
Popis: | The genus Cyclamen is a member of the Primulaceae, yet speciation of individual members can be confusing. Cyclamen are very diverse, with several species widely distributed throughout the Mediterranean countries and others indigenous only to specific islands or mainland areas (2, 3). Their foliage is extremely variable. Within a single species leaves may range from orbicular to cordate with entire to dentate margins, and with or without gradations of silver-gray zonal patterns. Flowers may be scented or odorless and range in color from white to deep pink. They either precede or arise after the foliage and reach anthesis during autumn, winter or spring (3, 10). The species persicum is uniquely different in that its fruited peduncles haphazardly bend and twist instead of coiling back to the crown. The coiling may facilitate seed dispersal by ants, but C. persicum has lost the coiling characteristic even though it shares this dispersal vector (5). |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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