--
--
Thanks, Rawat ji And Chadwell ji
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "efloraofindia" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to indiantreepix+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to indian...@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/indiantreepix.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
Thank you Chadwell Ji for your comments and questions.
Since you have seen A.mucronifolia I agree with your diagnosis that the plant in discussion is NOT A. mucronifolia. Flowers are umbellate in A.mucronifolia which is not visible in Hemkund specimens.
Yes I have a hard copy of Y.J. Nasir’s (1984) Primulaceae as included in Flora of Pakistan, which has not mentioned A. globifera in sufficient details (no description or diagram) due to which we are not able to differentiate these two species.
I cannot comment on the new species described and the comparison of new species with geographically distant species by Indian Taxonomists. The authors were at BDS which is a herbarium housing more than 120000 specimens all collected from Western Himalaya and adjacent plains. I suppose, the authors must had seen A. globifera which was a well known species at that time i.e. 1988. A. globifera was included in Flora of Chamoli District published in 1984 and authored by B.D. Naithani from the same center (Dehradun) of Botanical Survey of India and another herbarium of Forest Research Institute at Dehradun (DD) house specimens collected from all parts of the Himalaya, adjacent countries and Europe. It is easily accessible and the authors, I suppose, must had seen all specimens of Androsace housed in DD too.
Many of the alpine plants in the Western Himalaya are still being identified superficially by the botanist based on Flowers of the Himalaya (Polunin & Stainton 1984) and few botanists have seen its Supplement by Stainton (1988). A. globifera and A. mucronifolia both are illustrated in Flowers of the Himalaya and look similar, at least in the copy which I have, may be due to poor colour printing. This seems to me the reason for this identification as A. mucronifolia. As we all always reiterate identifying plants based on one picture (as based on Flowers of the Himalaya) is always risky particularly when there are many morphologically similar species growing in the area; we all know this excellent document produced by Oleg Pollunin & Adam Stainton is not a complete account. Such cases cannot be resolved without a herbarium study.
I agree with you that the species is an Androsace and have no such characters to be considered as Primula at all. Two Indian taxonomists from DD made this new combination for a reason not known to me.
I also have the accounts of Frank Smythe (Kamet Conquered and Valley of Flowers) and I have browsed them but cannot say which species they saw or whether their identifications were correct or not. But it is sure that they must have seen A.globifera and this species in discussion though they may have considered both same species.
Following species of Androsace are known from Uttarakhand:
A. chamaejasme Host
A. delavayi Franch.
A. fragilis Duthie ex Prain
A. garhwalicum Balodi & S.Singh
A. geranifolia Watt.
A. globifera Duby
A. lanuginosa Wallich
A. primuloides (Hook.f.) Duby
A. rotundifolia Hardw.
A. umbellata (Lour.) Merr.
A. sarmentosa Wallich
A. villosa L.
Among these only A. delavayi, A. garhwalicum, A. globifera are having solitary flower per rosette. A. delavayi I have seen and have light yellow flowers which can be discarded for this case.
I have not seen or collected A. garhwalicum so can’t say.
The species considered as A. globifera by me is attached here (Androsace globifera_DSR) and it was shot in Sunderdhunga valley of Kumaon region. Kumaon region is closer to West Nepal then to Himachal Pradesh. In addition I am also attaching two more images (Androsace-1 and Androsace-2) for your comments on the ID. Androsace-1 was photographed at an elevation of 4800m in Chamoli district of Garhwal in first week of September and it was close to a ridge top on steep slope. Androsace-2 was photographed at an elevation of 3400 m in a glaciated valley near Badrinath in Chamoli district of Garhwal in September and it was found on exposed moderate slope.
DSRawat Pantnagar
Sent: Friday, 11 November 2016, 6:15
Subject: [efloraofindia:256413] Re: VOF Week: : Androsace mucronifolia? en-route Hemkund sahib
This seems interesting!--
Androsace mucronifolia Watt is not known in Uttarakhand, at least not listed in Uniyal et al. 2007 [(Flowering Plants of Uttarakhand (A Checklist)].
Images shown here and another upload by Dinesh Ji show the characters given by Nasir 1984(FoPakistan) except that the flowers are invariably solitary on peduncles. Nasir have mentioned a varietal name A.mucronifolia var. uniflora Kunth under synonyms which suggests that the species may have solitary flower.
The species A. garhwalicum described by Bipin Balodi and Surendra Singh (in Bull. Bot. Surv. India 30(1-4). 1988) from Hemkund area (India, UP, Chamoli Garhwal, Hemkund, 4200m, U.C. Bhattacharyya 29497 A(Holo), B (Iso) at CAL and BSD) also has solitary flower of 6mm across on 1cm long scape. It has dimorphic oblong-lanceolate or lanceolate leaves with lower leaves smaller and upper leaves larger. It is differentiated from East Himalayan A.selago Hook.f. et Thomson ex Klatt which is (after seeing specimen in Herbcat) is a compact cushion forming species and image is in FoC.
A. globifera and A. delavayi are the other solitary flowered species in Uttarakhand and I have seen A. delavayi in field which it is not. Even A.globifera has more compact and silvery cushions ruling out the possibility.
Some expert may help to resolve the ID with certainty.
Protologue of A.garhwalicum is attached here.
DSRawat Pantnagar
On Friday, September 7, 2012 at 9:48:19 PM UTC+5:30, Prashant wrote:Dear Friends,
This herb was seen on the boulders en-route Hemkund Sahib. I had earlier identified this as Androsace garhwalicum (Ref: book by Keshava Murthy). After seeing the post by Dinesh of similar plant i feel this plant could also be Androsace mucronifolia?
Family: Primulaceae.
Regards
Prashant
You received this message because you are subscribed to a topic in the Google Groups "efloraofindia" group.
To unsubscribe from this topic, visit https://groups.google.com/d/topic/indiantreepix/UKNhLijs5b0/unsubscribe.
To unsubscribe from this group and all its topics, send an email to indiantreepix+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
--
'Creating awareness of Indian Flora & Fauna'
Winner of Wipro-NFS Sparrow Awards 2014 for efloraofindia.
For identification, learning, discussion & documentation of Indian Flora, please visit/ join our Efloraofindia Google e-group (largest in the world- around 2700 members & 2,40,000 messages on 31.3.16) or Efloraofindia website (with a species database of more than 11,000 species & 2,20,000 images).
The whole world uses my Image Resource of more than a thousand species & eight thousand images of Birds, Butterflies, Plants etc. (arranged alphabetically & place-wise). You can also use them for free as per Creative Commons license attached with each image.
Also author of 'A Photoguide to the Birds of Kolkata & Common Birds of India'.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "efloraofindia" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to indiantreepix+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
Thanks, Chadwell ji & Rawat ji.To me it appears close to Androsace globifera as per the following images (though I may or may not be correct):
Thanks, Chadwell ji
Thought best to collect my thoughts before responding further.The problem with the links provided (and most from specialist nurseries, growers and the like) is that such people (in good faith mostly - though it is in the commercial interest of nurseries to list as many different species & cultivars as possible, as there are collectors of all available examples of favoured genera e.g. Androsace, Primula, Iris, Meconopsis, Geranium etc.). They will buy if the species name or cultivar name is different to what they already have (or think they have).The problem is that hardly any of those running nurseries, websites (even the top horticulturists in the UK) have any proper training in how to identify plants - to be fair, often few, if any reference books or other resources exist. They rely on the name something arrived at.The result is, as my own informal research suggests, a high proportion of plants are misidentified in cultivation (just as a significant proportion of plants seen during surveys and trips to the Himalaya are misidentified). For plants under names of species found in the Himalaya (some plants grow in the Himalaya and other regions of the world, so the example may not have originated in the Himalaya) I judge at least 50% to be misidentified (and I do not mean because they are hybrids, another complication in cultivation) - I have checked plants from nurseries and sources of seed, commercial and botanic garden index semina.Thus, we cannot expect the situation with Androsace in cultivation to be any different.Of the links provided, the final two do not come close to the others and in my opinion are not Androsace globifera.As to the identity of the plant photographed in VoF - this, as I have already stated is definitely not A.mucronifolia. It might be A,globifera but some sources say it should have flower-stalks (others like 'Flowers of Himalaya' say short-stalked or stalkless. It is the most likely candidate. These images appear close to the single close-up image posted from VoF which I have just commented on.There has long been confusion with the mat and cushion-forming species.Interestingly, the image of A,globifera in 'Flowers of the Himalaya' shows flowers with darker central parts, as does the much larger photo of this species in 'Portraits of Himalayan Flowers' (T.Yoshida), along with one of the images in his 'Himalayan Plants Illustrated'.I shall be commented about Androsace garwhalicum in another response.
To: efloraofindia <indiantreepix@googlegroups.com>
Cc: Prashant awale <pka...@gmail.com>; D.S Rawat <drdsrawat...@gmail.com>; chrischadwell261@btinternet.com