'Mandarinrose' References
Article (newsletter) (Nov 2017) Page(s) 10. In July of 1903 at the extreme western part of Sichuan, Wilson came across the intensely dark red R. moyesii. A common species in mountain thickets, the plant’s flowers vary in color. Vilmorin had described it in 1894, calling it R. macrophylla var. rubrostaminen—rubro referring to red, and dark red is the way most knowledgeable people think of the blossom.
Article (magazine) (2008) Page(s) 65. Table 3. R. moyesii Lév. Assigned DNA ploidy=4
Book (1 May 2003) Rosa moyesii Hemsley & E. H. Wilson, Bull. Misc. Inform. Kew. 1906: 159. 1906. Shrubs 1–4 m tall. Branchlets terete, glabrous or sparsely puberulous; prickles absent or if present, paired below leaves, straight or slightly curved, to 5 mm, stout, flat, tapering below to broad base. Leaves including petiole 7–13 cm; stipules broad, mostly adnate to petiole, free parts long ovate, glabrous, margin glandular serrate, apex acute; rachis and petiole puberulous, glandular-pubescent, sparsely small prickly, leaflets 7–13, ovate, elliptic, or oblong-ovate, 1–5 × 0.8–2.5 cm, abaxially densely pubescent or only along prominent veins pubescent, adaxially glabrous, base subrounded or broadly cuneate, margin acutely simply serrate, apex acute or rounded-obtuse. Flowers solitary, or 2 or 3 and fasciculate, 4–6 cm in diam.; pedicel 1–3 cm, usually densely stipitate glandular, rarely glabrous; bracts 1 or 2, oblong-ovate, to 2 cm, margin glandular-pubescent, apex acute or acuminate. Hypanthium ovoid. Sepals 5, ovate, leaflike, abaxially glabrous or with a few glandular bristles at base, adaxially pubescent, pinnately lobed. Petals 5, deep red, broadly obovate, base broadly cuneate, apex emarginate. Styles free, shorter than stamens, pubescent. Hip purple-red or orange-red, globose-ovoid, to 5 cm, 1–2 cm in diam., with a short neck at apex, stipitate glandular, with persistent, erect sepals. Fl. Jun–Jul; fr. Aug–Oct. Scrub, slopes; 2700--3800 m. Shaanxi. Sichuan, Yunnan.
Book (Nov 1998) Page(s) 15. Includes photo(s). R. moyesii A species rose native to western China... flowers: single, red... produces orange hips...
Book (Mar 1998) Page(s) 8. R. moyesii scarlet flowers followed by long, bottle-shaped fruits
Book (1997) Page(s) 217. Page 5: [PHOTO OF HIPS] Page 217: R. moyesii W. China. Discovery 1890, introduction 1894. Description... very attractive deep crimson flowers... hips are pendulous, orange-red and flagon-shaped...
Book (Mar 1994) Page(s) 90. Rosa moyesii Description, vital statistics and tips
Book (Feb 1993) Page(s) 35. Includes photo(s).
Book (1993) Page(s) 75. Includes photo(s). [Listed under "Wild Roses and Their Cultivars"] A distinctive rose with bright red flowers in the cultivated form and numerous small, rounded leaflets. Flowers are often pink in the wild. Originally collected in western China, near Kanding, by Pratt and named after the Reverend J. Moyes, a missionary in China. Summer flowering. Height: 20 ft… The flask-shaped hips make a lovely autumn show. [photo of both blooms and hips.]
Book (May 1992) Page(s) 6. Includes photo(s). Hips
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