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'P. mascula subsp. triternata Stearn & P.H.Davis synonym' peony References
Book (2022) Page(s) 128. En mars 1813, Joseph Baumann sollicite l'éxpédition de plantes apparaissant dans le catalogue du jardin [botanique de Montpellier]. Quatre-vingt-treize végétaux, classés en trois catégories, intéressent le pépinièriste dont des Paeonia alba flora Sill...., Paeonia corallina Retz, Paeonia lobata Disf. Les plus délicats sont transportés par diligence, les autres par roulage accélleré à partir de Montpellier.
Article (magazine) (2006) Page(s) 79. The type of P. triternata PALL. ex DC. (= P. daurica ANDREWS) is from Crimea, Ukraine, and it is distributed around the Black Sea. Its leaflets are undulate and obovate, and its carpels are covered with long hairs (3.0 mm long).
Book (2005) Marmara Region. Kaz Mountain. Balikesir / Canakkale Species rare on national level...Paeonia daurica (R)....
Article (magazine) (2003) Page(s) 138. According to our observations in the fiels and in the herbaria....Paeonia in the Caucasus may be classified clearly into three major groups as follows: 1 Roots fusiformly thickened; leaflets/segments of lower leaves more than 70 in number, narrow-lanceolate to filiform, less than 1.5 cm wide 2 Leaflets/segments of lower leaves with segments less than 100 in number, narrow-lanceolate ......1 Intermedia group. 2 Leaflets/segments of lower leaves more than 130 in number, linear to filiform..... 2 Tenuifolia group. 2 Roots carrot-shaped; leaflets of lower leaves mostly 9, rarely 10-19; leaflets ovate, oblong or obovate, over 3 cm wide......3 Daurica group.
Article (magazine) (2003) Page(s) 144-145. ...the P. daurica complex in the Caucasus has notable polymorphism, and no distinct differences have been found between the populations. It is thus considered that the group has differentiated only at the stage of geographical races, and is better treated as a single species with five subspecies. Perennials. Roots carrot-like, attenuate downwards. Lower leaves usually biternate with nine leaflets, occasionally triternate, with up to 19 leaflets; leaflets entire or sometimes bifid, obovate, oblong, wide-elliptic, sometimes undulate, apex round, mucronate, acute or shortly acuminate, glabrous above, glabrous or sparsely to densely villose or pilose, or sparsely to rather densely puberulous beneath, 4.8–11.5 x 8.1–17.1 cm. Flowers solitary and terminal; bracts 0–2; sepals 2–3, green; petals 5–8, white, pale yellow, yellow, yellow with a red spot at base or with red periphery, rose, red, or purple-red; filaments purple; carpels 1–5, glabrous or sparsely to densely tomentose; styles nearly absent. The distribution pattern of the five subspecies is as follows: ssp. coriifolia is found below 1000 m in the western part of the Caucasus (including the Transcaucasus), while the other four occur at subalpine and alpine zones at altitudes of (800) 1000–2300 m. They are vertically vicarious with ssp. coriifolia, but allopatric with ssp. wittmanniana in the north-west, ssp. mlokosewitschii in the north-east. ssp. tomentosa in the south-east, and ssp. macrophylla in the south-west.
Book (Jan 1999) Page(s) 30, 34. Page 30: Paeonia daurica see P. mascula subsp. triternata Page 34: Paeonia mascula subsp. triternata formerly treated as a separate species under the alternative names of P. corallina and P. daurica... It was originally sent to England from Siberia by John Bell in 1790 as P. daurica.
Website/Catalog (1925) Page(s) 40. Corallina. Coral-red blooms with yellow stamens......1 piece M 2.-, 100 pieces M 180.-
Website/Catalog (1919) Page(s) 37. Paeonia corallina. Coral-red blooms decorated with yellow stamens. Very early-blooming alpine species...10 pieces M 10.-, 100 pieces M 80.-
Book (Jan 1917) Page(s) 49. There is an account of one famous peony, P. daurica (brought from Siberia via England), which was introduced about 1810 as a rare plant at Malmaison for the Empress Josephine.8
Book (1917) Page(s) 226. Corallina (coral-red, referring to the seeds). Southern Europe to Asia Minor. It is claimed that Corallina has grown wild on an island in the Severn. If this is true, it is the only peony native to England. Flowers, bright crimson. The segments of the leaves are quite distinct from one another at the base and nine in number in the fully developed lowest leaves. ....Varieties:....Triternata (three times ternate, i.e., with twentyseven leaflets), rose and whitish flowers.
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