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Scilla litardierei

Species of flowering plant

Scilla litardierei

Species of flowering plant

  • Chouardia litardierei (Breistr.) Speta{{cite web | url= http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/kew-288634
  • Nectaroscilla litardierei (Breistr.) Trávn.
  • Scilla amethystina Vis.
  • Scilla italica Host
  • Scilla pratensis Waldst. & Kit.
Flower of Scilla litardierei
''Scilla litardierei'' flowers

Scilla litardierei, the amethyst meadow squill or Dalmatian scilla, is a species of flowering plant in the family Asparagaceae. A bulbous perennial, with blue grape-hyacinth like flowers, blooming in late spring, much later than the more popular Siberian squill and later than Muscari which it resembles.

Description

Scilla litardierei has 3–6 grass-like leaves, 3-8mm wide, tapering to a point. Up to 70 blue-violet flower buds are borne on each stem in a dense raceme, opening into star-shaped flowers, 15–20 cm high. Preferring partial shade, it will naturalise and spread in favourable conditions.

Habitat

It originates in the western Balkans (hence Dalmatian scilla), and in its original habitat in Slovenia it is considered an endangered species, flowering in May–June.

Taxonomy

The exact taxonomic circumscription of the genus Scilla and related genera has proven very difficult, as noted by Stedje in 2001. "The definition of genera and the assignment of species to genera within the family Hyacinthaceae or subfamily Scilleae of the family Liliaceae, have troubled taxonomists since Linnaeus. The group is poor in qualitative characters, which has made it difficult to define stable genera based on good diagnostic characters. Species have often been moved from genus to genus either due to different opinions on generic delimitation or to misinterpretation of characters." Previously placed within the family Liliaceae, Scilla was subsequently reclassified as Asparaginaceae (subfamily Scilloideae, tribe Hyacintheae, subtribe Hyacinthinae).

Based on DNA sequence studies, the Austrian botanist Franz Speta had proposed to re-ascribe this species into a separate genus, Chouardia, within the Hyacintheae (1998). However, the accepted and preferred name is Scilla litardierei. The synonyms Scilla amethystina Fish., Scilla pratensis Waldst. & Kit., Scilla italica Host and Scilla nutans Alsch. are no longer valid.

Cultivation

It was introduced to Britain in 1827. It has become much more easily available since 2004. In cultivation in the UK Scilla litardierei has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit. It is hardy down to -20 C.

References

Bibliography

Articles

Databases

Websites

References

  1. Caković, D., Bogunić, F. & Boršić, I.. (2018). "''Scilla litardierei''".
  2. [http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/161812/0 IUCN Red List]
  3. [https://www.zaplana.net/flowers/asp/display_flower.asp?name=Scilla+litardierei Zaplana.net]
  4. Speta, F. (1998): Systematische Analyse der Gattung Scilla L. s. l. (Hyacinthaceae). Phyton (Horn Austria) 38(1), 97–99.
  5. [https://apps.kew.org/wcsp/namedetail.do?name_id=288634 Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew: World Checklist]
  6. [http://www.paghat.com/scillapratensis.html Paghat's garden]
  7. "RHS Plantfinder – ''Scilla litardierei''".
  8. (July 2017). "AGM Plants – Ornamental". Royal Horticultural Society.
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