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'P. corsica Sieber ex Tausch' peony References
Article (magazine)  (2006)  Page(s) 79.  
 
[Key to the Genus Paeonia in the Mediterenean]
1a. Plants entirely glabrous, very occasionally pubescent on lower surface of leaves; carpels glabrous, very occasionally hispid.
2a. Carpels mostly 4–8, very rarely less; leaves purple and always glabrous beneath, lower leaves always with nine or less entire leaflets (Baleares) (2n = 10). . . . . P. cambessedesii
2b. Carpels mostly 2–4, less frequently 1 or more; leaves green-gray or purple, glabrous or holosericeous beneath, lower leaves with nine or more leaflets/segments.
3a. Leaves glabrous, very occasionally pubescent beneath; lower leaves mostly with more than nine leaflets/segments; carpels 2, less frequently 3 or 4 (S Spain and Morocco (2n = 20) . . . . .P. coriacea
3b. Leaves mostly holosericeous, rarely glabrous beneath; lower leaves mostly with 9 leaflets; carpels 1–5 (2n = 10). . . . .P. corsica
1b. Plants hairy, very occasionally glabrous; carpels tomentose.
4a. Hairs on carpels 3 mm long, yellow-white; leaflets/segments mostly more than 9, very rarely 9 in number, glabrous or sparsely hispid beneath (Spain, France, Italy, Sicily, Greece to Iraq) (2n = 20). . . . .P. mascula
4b. Hairs on carpels 1.5 mm long, brown-yellow; leaflets/segments mostly 9, rarely more in number, rather densely holosericeous, rarely glabrous beneath (Corsica, Sardinia, Ionian Islands and Akarnania Province) (2n = 10) . . . . P. corsica
Article (magazine)  (2006)  Page(s) 79-81.  
 
Paeonia corsica SIEBER ex TAUSCH, Flora, 11: 88, 1828. Type: Corsica, “monte Cagna ad Porto vecchio in Corsica”, SIEBER s. n. (holotype, P! isotype, K!)....[many synonyms listed]...Perennials. Roots thickened, carrot-shaped, attenuate downwards, tap roots up to 2 cm in diameter, grey-brown. Stems with 5–7 scales at the base, 35–80 cm tall, glabrous, green or green but partially purple, or nearly entirely purple. Petioles green, partially purple or entirely purple, glabrous or holosericeous; the lowermost one or two leaves biternate, with nine leaflets, leaflets rarely divided nearly to the base, thus leaflets and segments together mostly nine, less frequently 10, 11, very rarely more (up to 20); leaflets/segments ovate to elliptic, 4–13 cm long, 2–8 cm wide, base cuneate to nearly truncate, apex acute, always glabrous above, but mostly rather densely, less frequently sparsely holosericeous, rarely glabrous beneath. Involucrate bracts absent or 1–3, foliate. Sepals 1–8, but mostly 2–5 in number, unequal in size, green or green but purple at periphery to entirely purple, ovate-orbicular, apex rounded or mucronate. Petals rose, 7–8 in
number, obovate. Stamens numerous; filaments purple; anthers yellow. Disc 1 mm high, wavedentate, tomentose on flowers with tomentose carpels. Carpels 1–8, but mostly 2–5, green, purple or red, tomentose, with hairs 1.5 mm long, brown-yellow, rarely glabrous, widest in middle-upper part; styles 1.5–3.0 mm long; stigmas red. Chromosome number 2n = 10
Article (magazine)  (2006)  Page(s) 78.  
 
It seems justified to make following conclusions from the above analysis: 1) The populations
in Corsica and Sardinia are extremely polymorphic, particularly within the population H01015 in Mt. Cagna, Corsica, but they are monotypic, forming a single entity; 2) The peony in Corsica, Sardinia, Ionian Islands and Akarnania Province is distinctly different from those in the other regions, and should be recognized as an independent species; 3) The peony in Sicily is monotypic, and is of only one entity; 4) The peony in Corsica, Sardinia, Ionian Islands and Akarnania Province is a diploid (2n = 10), while all the members of P. mascula are tetraploid (2n = 20) according to the reports so far available on chromosomes (Table 1). Thus, the diploid and tetraploid are closely correlated with the differentiation of external morphology, and they are distinctly different in morphology.
Website/Catalog  (1931)  Page(s) 42.  
 
Pivoines herbacées, espèces et hybrides...Corsica; beau feuillage vert clair, larges folioles rondes, très grandes fleurs carmin pourpré, anthères jaune clair, 10 mai ....15 fr.

[no longer listed in the 1935 catalogue]
Website/Catalog  (Aug 1910)  Page(s) 14.  
 
Pivoines herbacées...Variétés nouvelles...Corsica; folioles ovales, cuculiées, vert foncé, fleurs carmin ...2 fr. 50

[not listed in the 1928-1930 catalogues]
 
Magazine  (Apr 1910)  Page(s) 94.  
 
La Corse donne asile à d’autres Pivoines du groupe des Corallina, entre autres au Pœnia Corsica et Reveilleri, fort belles aussi, de dimensions plus grandes et à floraison plus tardive. Sous ce dernier rapport elles sont en état d’infériorité avec le Pæonia Russi. La Pivoine de Corse offre chez un certain nombre d’individus un commencement de duplicature.
Magazine  (May 1908)  Page(s) 198.  
 
Pour gagner des variétés avec les races locales, on doit semer les graines d’un ou de plusieurs individus, — il suffit souvent d’un seul pour obtenir, ipjso facto, toute une collection de variétés intéressantes. Mais on ne peut guère connaître que par la pratique les espèces qui se comportent ainsi ; car, dans le même genre bien naturel, souvent des espèces sont très polymorphes, tandis que d’autres sont presque stables. En voici un exemple pris dans le genre Pivoine. Si on considère la Pivoine corail (Pœonia coralina) comme une espèce large, on pourra lui rattacher des formes locales à peu près fixes et d’autres formes variables dans quelques-uns de leurs caractères. La plante de France, prise pour type, varie peu ; celle désignée sous le nom de P. Russi est à peu près fixée ; mais le Pœonia corsica, adressé en grand nombre à Jordan, présentait beaucoup de variétés, dont quelques-unes semi-doubles.
Book  (Apr 1907)  Page(s) 58.  
 
565. CORSICA, PAEONIA (TYPE SPECIES)
(1) 1884, Revue Horticole, p. 488.
(2) 1894, The Garden, Vol. 46, p. 104.
 
Book  (1907)  Page(s) 4.  
 
Peonia Corsica, Sieber, Closely related to, if not the same as, the last. [P. coriacea]
 
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