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Article (magazine) (2020) Page(s) 2-4. In the five triploids, the pollen grain size of Rosa multiflora var. cathayensis Rehd ‘Fen Tuan Qiang Wei’ followed a normal distribution, suggesting that 1 mainly ploidy level pollen grain were produced ...Based on the ploidy level analysis of their progeny, ‘Fen Tuan Qiang Wei’ produced 1n viable pollen...Five triploid China roses, including 4 Chinese old garden rose cultivars ‘Chun Shui Lü Bo’, ‘Yu Shi Zhuang’, ‘Hu Zhong Yue’, ‘Si Mian Jing’ and 1 species R. multiflora var. cathayensis Rehd ‘Fen Tuan Qiang Wei’ were used as triploid material (Table 1).
Book (2019) Page(s) 140-141. Includes photo(s). Rosa x uchiyamana Makino, Bot. Mag. Tokyo 22:163 (1908), description
Article (newsletter) (Nov 2017) Page(s) 14. R. multiflora var. cathayensis, “always pink,” grew commonly everywhere beside streams. The canes are often prostrate, though sometimes erect. The leaves and leaflets vary considerably in size and shape. Wilson believed it to be a parent of the double carnea form, which Thomas Evans had sent from China to England in 1804
Article (magazine) (2011) Page(s) 12. In Shen Nong's Herbal, written during the Eastern Han Dynasty (206 B.C. to 220 A.D.), R. multiflora var. cathayensis was named "Qiang Mi" (in Chinese, a vine-like rose that is good for growing on walls). The 'Bai Ye' rose ("Rose with a hundred petals") described by Li Deyu, one of the prime ministers of the Tang Dynasty, in Records of Flowers and Plants in Pin Quan Shan is the R. multiflora var. cathayensis found growing in Shaoixing, Zhejiang today. Rosa multiflora var. cathayensis has many forms, which developed through more than 2,000 years of cultivation.
Booklet (2009) Page(s) 40. The last group that shows a clear cluster contains all but two of the Polyantha class roses and both R. multiflora accessions, though not R. multiflora var. cathayensis. [dendrogram shows the latter closest to R. henryi]
Booklet (2009) Page(s) 28. Diploid....R. multiflora var. cathayensis, heterozygous loci 64% [Provenance: Quarry Hill Botanical Garden, Glen Ellen, CA, 2003.382C Sichuan province]
Article (magazine) (2007) Page(s) 404. Table 1. Comparison of key volatile components in representative cultivated Chinese roses and species. [adsorption volume by Solid Phase Microextraction (peak area, x10')]
R. multiflora var. cathayensis Beta-phenyethyl alcohol 5.65
Website/Catalog (2006) Page(s) 96. R. multiflora var. cathayensis (Bouleng.) Rehd. et Wils. = R. calva Bouleng. var. cathayensis Bouleng. = R. cathayensis Bailey = R. gentiliana Lév. et Van. - China, 1907.
Article (misc) (2005) Page(s) 110, Table 5.1. R. multiflora cathayensis : diploid
Book (1 May 2003) Rosa multiflora var. cathayensis Rehder & E. H. Wilson in Sargent, Pl. Wilson. 2: 304. 1915. fen tuan qiang wei Rosa calva (Franchet & Savatier) Boulenger var. cathayensis (Rehder & E. H. Wilson) Boulenger; R. cathayensis (Rehder & E. H. Wilson) L. H. Bailey; R. gentiliana H. Léveillé & Vaniot; R. kwangsiensis H. L. Li; R. macrophylla Lindley var. hypoleuca H. Léveillé; R. multiflora var. gentiliana (H. Léveillé & Vaniot) T. T. Yü & H. T. Tsai
Flowers to 4 cm in diam. Petals pink. 2n = 14*, 28*. Thickets, scrub, slopes, river sides; 300--2000 m. Anhui, Fujian, S Gansu, Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, S Hebei, Henan, Hunan, Jiangxi, S Shaanxi, S Shandong, Zhejiang. The root, which contains 23–25% tannin, is used for tanning. The fresh flowers, from which essential oils can be extracted, are used in the cosmetic industry. The roots, leaves, flowers, and seeds are all used medicinally.
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