Tulipa aleppensis

Tulipa aleppensis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Monocots
Order: Liliales
Family: Liliaceae
Genus: Tulipa
Species: T. aleppensis
Binomial name
Tulipa aleppensis
Boissier ex Regel

Tulipa aleppensis is a wild tulip found in Southeastern Turkey, Syria, near Beirut in Lebanon and Israel.[1]

Description

Tulipa aleppensis belongs to the genus Tulipa (family Liliaceae). It is a herbaceous, bulbous perennial. The tunic of the bulb is covered with long straight hairs. It forms stolons.[2] The leaves are erect and grey-green, frequently with wavy margins. They are up to 30 cm long and 5 cm wide.[3] The plant produces only a single cup shaped flower, which is intensely red or crimson on the outside and slightly paler inside. The tepals are pointed, the outer larger than the inner.[4] The plant can be up to 45 cm tall.[5] The basal blotch is oval, black and quite short. It can also be entirely absent; very rarely, it has a narrow yellow border.[6] Filaments and anthers are black,[7] the pollen yellow.[8] The flowers appear from March to May. According to the British botanist Alfred Daniel Hall, it is quite similar to Tulipa praecox, but has brighter flowers.[9] It is triploid. Wilford suspects it of being a variant of Tulipa agenensis or Tulipa iulia.[10] It is, however, shorter than T. agenensis and has more narrow tepals and a smaller basal blotch.

History

The plant was discovered near Aleppo by the German Botanist Carl Haussknecht.[11] It was first described in 1873 by the German botanist Eduard August von Regel.[12] In 1874, J. Gilbert Baker described it as Tulipa oculus-solis var. allepica Baker.[13]

As the plant is only found on cultivated land, Wilford suspects that it is a neo-tulip, descended from plants brought from Central Asia by traders.[14] Aleppo is near the end of the Silk Road, after all.

Habitat

Tulipa aleppensis is only found on cultivated land,[15] for example, on fields[16] or in mulberry orchards, as recorded by Hall for the Lebanese species.[17] It is listed on the IUCN red List of threatened Species.[18] The plant is only rarely cultivated in gardens. It needs good drainage and protection from summer rain.[19]

References

  1. Anna Pavord, The Tulip. Bloomsbury 1999, 289
  2. Anna Pavord, The Tulip. Bloomsbury 1999, 289
  3. Richard Wilford 2006, Tulips, species and hybrids for the gardener, Portland, Timber Press, 77
  4. Richard Wilford 2006, Tulips, species and hybrids for the gardener, Portland, Timber Press, 77
  5. Anna Pavord, The Tulip. Bloomsbury 1999, 289; 20-30 cm according to Wilford (Richard Wilford 2006, Tulips, species and hybrids for the gardener, Portland, Timber Press, 77)
  6. Anna Pavord, The Tulip. Bloomsbury 1999, 289
  7. Anna Pavord, The Tulip. Bloomsbury 1999, 289
  8. Richard Wilford 2006, Tulips, species and hybrids for the gardener, Portland, Timber Press, 77
  9. Anna Pavord, The Tulip. Bloomsbury 1999, 289
  10. Richard Wilford 2006, Tulips, species and hybrids for the gardener, Portland, Timber Press, 77
  11. Richard Wilford 2006, Tulips, species and hybrids for the gardener, Portland, Timber Press, 77
  12. Acta horti Petropolis 2, 1873, 450; Gartenflora, Monatschrift für deutsche und schweizerische Garten- und Blumenkunde. Erlangen, Stuttgart, Berlin 1873, 296
  13. Richard Wilford 2006, Tulips, species and hybrids for the gardener, Portland, Timber Press, 78
  14. Richard Wilford 2006, Tulips, species and hybrids for the gardener, Portland, Timber Press, 77
  15. Brian Mathew/Turhan Baytop 1984, The bulbous plants of Turkey. Frome; Batsford, 102
  16. Richard Wilford 2006, Tulips, species and hybrids for the gardener, Portland, Timber Press, 77
  17. Anna Pavord, The Tulip. Bloomsbury 1999, 289
  18. http://www.gbif.org/species/5299566
  19. Richard Wilford 2006, Tulips, species and hybrids for the gardener, Portland, Timber Press, 78
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