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Iris reticulata. Reticulate-bulbed bulbous irises. Formerly genus Iridodictyum. Section Hermodactyloides. Iris danfordiae (Baker) Boiss. Iris histrio Rchb.f. Iris histrioides (G.F.Wilson) S.Arn. Iris hyrcana Woronow ex Grossh; Iris kolpakowskiana Regel; Iris pamphylica Hedge; Iris pskemensis Ruskans; Iris reticulata M Bieb.
Iris reticulata, the netted iris or golden netted iris, [2] is a species of flowering plant in the family Iridaceae. It is native from eastern Turkey to Iran, [3] but cultivated widely in temperate regions. The reticulata group of irises is characterised by a fibrous net surrounding the bulb.
The name for the subgenus is very similar to Hermodactylus (the former name for Iris tuberosa), which was originally a separate genus to irises, but in 2001 was re-classified to be within the Hermodactyloides sub-genus. [5] Most species are native to central Europe and central Asia. They mostly have one or two long leaves and flower in early ...
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; ... Presby Memorial Iris Gardens; List of Iris species; A.
Iris reticulata and Iris persica, both of which are fragrant, are also popular with florists. Iris xiphium, the Spanish Iris (also known as Dutch Iris) and; Iris latifolia, the English Iris. Despite the common names both the Spanish and English iris are of Spanish origin, and have very showy flowers, so they are popular with gardeners and florists.
Iris bakeriana (Foster) then become a synonym for the plant. [1] Although the United States Department of Agriculture and the Agricultural Research Service still class Iris bakeriana as a true species. [12] Iris reticulata var. bakeriana is an accepted name by the RHS. [13]
It is commonly known as the Syrian iris. [8] Iris histrio is an accepted name by the RHS. [9] It has baby blue flowers with intricate markings, shading to purplish blue at the base. [10] Like other members of the Reticulatae group, such as Iris vartanii and Iris danfordiae, it throws out a very large number of small bulbils round the base of ...
Iris hyrcana is now an accepted name by the RHS, [11] and it was verified by United States Department of Agriculture and the Agricultural Research Service on 4 April 2003, then updated on 11 December 2024. [12] It is listed in 1995 in 'Vascular Plants of Russia and adjacent States (the former USSR)' by Czerepanov, S. K. [13]