Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Iris vartanii

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Kingdom
  
Family
  
Tribe
  
Irideae

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Subfamily
  
Iridoideae

Genus
  
Iris vartanii httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Iris histrio, Iris regis‑uzziae, Iris palaestina, Iris atrofusca, Iris grant‑duffii

Iris vartanii is a species in the genus Iris. It is also part of the sub-genus Hermodactyloides and Section Reticulatae. It is a bulbous perennial.

Contents

Iris vartanii SIGNA The Species Iris Group of North America

It was once though to be part of the Iris sub-genus Xiphium. It is sometimes referred to as 'Vartanni Iris', or 'Iris vartani'.

Iris vartanii Iris vartanii

It was first described in 1885 in Gardeners' Chronicle, and an illustration (No.6942) was published in Curtis's Botanical Magazine two years later. It was named by Sir Michael Foster after Dr. Vartan from Nazareth.

Iris vartanii SIGNA The Species Iris Group of North America

Habit

Iris vartanii Iris vartanii

It has four leaves that are un-equalsided and up to 20 cm tall (when in flower), but that increases to nearly 40 cm later.

Iris vartanii Iris vartanii Foster Flora of Israel Online

It flowers between October and December. The flowers are greyish lilac-white, (or slaty blue ) with falls having dark blue veins. The flowers smell of almonds.

Iris vartanii Iris vartanii

Due to its early flowering (during winter), the leaves can be damaged (by snow and ice) so much that the plant does not form healthy bulbs for the next year. So it is best grown like other species of iris in an alpine house or bulb frame. It is hardy to USDA Zone 3.

Like other members of the reticulata group (including Iris danfordiae), it has the habit of the main bulb splitting into many bulblets, that can take many years (between 2–3 years) to reach flowering size again.

Native

It was originally found near the city of Nazareth in Palestine. It was also found in Israel, Jordan and Syria. On rocky hillsides. It is found in Golan, Galilee, Mount Carmel, Samarian desert and Judean mountains, various regions of Israel. But according to Dr Dawud Al-Eisawi's book Wild Flowers of Jordan, it is now thought to be extinct in Jordan.

Cultivar

First found in 1910 in Beersheba and Hebron, it was originally thought to be a white form of I. histrioides. On 21 December 1912, it was described in 'The Garden' magazine of the Royal Horticultural Society, now as a white form of I. vartanii. Then in 1913, it gained Award of Merit by the RHS.

It is sometimes referred to as Iris vartanii var. alba.

References

Iris vartanii Wikipedia