Difference: SpecVersicolor (r55 vs. r54)

■ (SPEC) Iris versicolor L.

1753, Botanical author Linneaus Iris versicolor L. ( Carolus Linnaeus, 1753, E. U.S.A); Section Limniris, Series Laevigatae. Height 8-32" (20-80 cm); Purples, violets, or lavenders; Linnaeus in Species Plantarum ed. 1: 39. 1753;

Iris versicolor L. ( Carolus Linnaeus, 1753, E. U.S.A); Section Limniris, Series Laevigatae. Height 8-32" (20-80 cm); Purples, violets, or lavenders; Linnaeus in Species Plantarum ed. 1: 39. 1753;

See below:

CY-I-VERSICOLOR DEEP ROSE.jpgDD-I-VERSICOLOR WHITE -LAVENDER VEINS.jpgDykes plate XVLIII versicolor.jpgI-versicolor-in-pond.jpgI-Versicolor.jpgI.versicolor01.jpgI.versicolor02.jpgI.versicolorJB16.JPGIMG 6868-X2 i versicolor.jpgIrisversicolor01.jpgiversicolor02.jpgIversicolor05.jpgIversicolor06.jpgiversicolor07.jpgiversicolorrosea01.jpgrosea01.jpgversicolor01.JPGversicolor02.JPGversicolor03.JPGversicolor04.JPGversicolor05.JPGversicolor06.jpgversicolor07.JPGversicolor10.jpgversicolor2.jpgversicolor3.JPGversicolor5.JPGversicolor9.jpgVersicolor plate from Addisonia.jpgversicolor seed.jpgversicolorblue.jpegversicolorblue1.jpegversicolorkermisina.JPGversicolorpurple.jpegvirginicapurple.jpeg

References:

Linn. Species Plantarum 38. 1753;
Curtis's Botanical Magazine, table 21, 1787
Hocker 1938; Robbins 1939; Kat. 1939;
Dickson 1794; Prince 1823; Van W. 1907; Bon. 1920; Farr 1920. Jacquin aîné, 1834, Iris versicolor, Annales de Flore et de Pomone, pp. 366-368.
In Dickson 1794; Prince 1823; Van W. 1907; Bon. 1920; Farr 1920. Addisonia 9: 4, 55. Dec. 1924 , ; Small provides the following note; "The taxonomic botanical history of iris in America starts with this species. Linnaeus based the name, indirectly, on descriptions of plants said to have come from Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania, including descriptions and figures which were supposed by Dillenius to represent two species. The name Iris versicolor, however, has now settled upon the common blue flag of the northeastern States and the highlands of the South. The remote ancestors of Iris versicolor in the High Appalachian Highlands evidently gave rise to various species of Iris as the descendants spread to all points of the compass. After the ice-age, Iris versicolor or its immediate relatives spread northward, eastward, and westward, but kept mainly to the higher provinces, particularly to the Piedmont, where as a species it has settled down to a very consistent aggregate. Iris versicolor and its relative I. carolina[I. virginica] are the only large blue-flags that have retained a geographic continuity through all the plant provinces, from the original Appalachian Highlands to the coast.
As one would suspect, in the case of a plant that is widely distributed and an inhabitant of several plant provinces of various altitudes, there is more variation in size and vigor of the plants of Iris versicolor, although its flowers and fruits are reasonably constant in characters. It has had vastly more experience, so to speak, than its relative Iris carolina, and has for some reason developed a double row of seeds in each carpel. This character, which amounts to the doubling of the number of seeds, may have resulted in its maintenance in environments more rigorous and precarious than that of its southern relative.
Iris versicolor is quite flexible in regard to natural habitats, and hence tractable in cultivation; preferring a soil in which much humus has been deposited, its native haunts are swamps, marshes, meadows, streams, stream banks, lakes, and ponds. Different colonies and individual plants exhibit pale and deep shades of color in the flowers, and albinos are not infrequently observed in the field. The specimen from which the accompanying illustration was made was from a native colony in the New York Botanical Garden.
The common blue-flag has a very stout horizontal rootstock. The leaves are erect and usually four to six together, with linear, often narrow linear-attenuate, glaucous blades up to one and a half feet long. The flower-stalk is stoutish, as tall as the leaves or taller, simple or with a peduncle-like branch at the middle or above it. The flower-cluster usually exceeds the leaves, terminating a green or purplish peduncle. The main bracts are much shorter than the leaves. The flowers are much exserted from the involucre. The main bracts of the involucre are not foliaceous. The pedicels are mostly one and a half to three inches long. The hypanthium, surrounding the ovary, is usually shorter than the pedicel and bluntly three-angled. The perianth-tube is funnel-form, about one fourth of an inch long. The flowers are mostly two or three together at the ends of terminal and often of axillary peduncle-like, stoutish, glaucescent branches. The three sepals are spreading, remate, one and three quarters to two and a quarter inches long; the blade is ovate, slightly longer than the claw, crestless, mainly violet or purple and indistinctly veined with darker purple, the claw is rather broad, but less than half the width of the blade, green or yellowish green, veined with dark purple, the green running into the base of the blade where it turns to white which is veined with bright purple which runs down the upper part of the blade. The three sepals are erect, narrowly spatulate, three fifths to four fifths as long as the sepals, purple and veined with darker purple, or whitish with purple veins near the narrow base. The three stamens are one to one and a quarter inches long, the anthers slightly longer than the filaments. The three style-branches are broadly inear, nearly or quite one and a half inches long, about one third of an inch wide, lilac with whitish margins. The style-appendages are one fourth to one third of an inch long, curved inward, semi-orbicular-quadrate, rounded at the apex and undulate-angulate. The stigmas are irregularly broadly rounded entire. The capsules are prismatic-cylindric, or in the case of short ones somewhat ellipsoid, mostly one and a hlf to two and a half inches long, with a slight ridge one each side and a slightly more prominent ridge on each rounded angle, obtuse or slightly beaked, the earlier ones on pedicels shorter or longer than their length, the later ones often with longer pedicels The seeds, borne in two rows in each carpel or cavity of the capsule, are semiorbiculate or lunate, rather thin, dark brown, slightly corky, about one third of an inch in long diameter."
The In origins of Iris versicolor are discussed in Edgar Andersons paper "The Problem of Species in The Northern Blue Flags, Iris Addisonia versicolor L. and 9: 4, 55. Dec. 1924 , Iris virginicaL." ; Small provides the following note; "The taxonomic botanical history of iris in America starts with this species. Linnaeus based the name, indirectly, on descriptions of plants said to have come from Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania, including descriptions and figures which were supposed by Dillenius to represent two species. The name Iris versicolor, however, has now settled upon the common blue flag of the northeastern States and the highlands of the South. The remote ancestors of Iris versicolor in the High Appalachian Highlands evidently gave rise to various species of Iris as the descendants spread to all points of the compass. After the ice-age, Iris versicolor or its immediate relatives spread northward, eastward, and westward, but kept mainly to the higher provinces, particularly to the Piedmont, where as a species it has settled down to a very consistent aggregate. Iris versicolor and its relative I. carolina[I. virginica] are the only large blue-flags that have retained a geographic continuity through all the plant provinces, from the original Appalachian Highlands to the coast. Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 1928
, pages 241-313. As one would suspect, in the case of a plant that is widely distributed and an inhabitant of several plant provinces of various altitudes, there is more variation in size and vigor of the plants of Iris versicolor, although its flowers and fruits are reasonably constant in characters. It has had vastly more experience, so to speak, than its relative Iris carolina, and has for some reason developed a double row of seeds in each carpel. This character, which amounts to the doubling of the number of seeds, may have resulted in its maintenance in environments more rigorous and precarious than that of its southern relative.
Iris versicolor is quite flexible in regard to natural habitats, and hence tractable in cultivation; preferring a soil in which much humus has been deposited, its native haunts are swamps, marshes, meadows, streams, stream banks, lakes, and ponds. Different colonies and individual plants exhibit pale and deep shades of color in the flowers, and albinos are not infrequently observed in the field. The specimen from which the accompanying illustration was made was from a native colony in the New York Botanical Garden.
The common blue-flag has a very stout horizontal rootstock. The leaves are erect and usually four to six together, with linear, often narrow linear-attenuate, glaucous blades up to one and a half feet long. The flower-stalk is stoutish, as tall as the leaves or taller, simple or with a peduncle-like branch at the middle or above it. The flower-cluster usually exceeds the leaves, terminating a green or purplish peduncle. The main bracts are much shorter than the leaves. The flowers are much exserted from the involucre. The main bracts of the involucre are not foliaceous. The pedicels are mostly one and a half to three inches long. The hypanthium, surrounding the ovary, is usually shorter than the pedicel and bluntly three-angled. The perianth-tube is funnel-form, about one fourth of an inch long. The flowers are mostly two or three together at the ends of terminal and often of axillary peduncle-like, stoutish, glaucescent branches. The three sepals are spreading, remate, one and three quarters to two and a quarter inches long; the blade is ovate, slightly longer than the claw, crestless, mainly violet or purple and indistinctly veined with darker purple, the claw is rather broad, but less than half the width of the blade, green or yellowish green, veined with dark purple, the green running into the base of the blade where it turns to white which is veined with bright purple which runs down the upper part of the blade. The three sepals are erect, narrowly spatulate, three fifths to four fifths as long as the sepals, purple and veined with darker purple, or whitish with purple veins near the narrow base. The three stamens are one to one and a quarter inches long, the anthers slightly longer than the filaments. The three style-branches are broadly inear, nearly or quite one and a half inches long, about one third of an inch wide, lilac with whitish margins. The style-appendages are one fourth to one third of an inch long, curved inward, semi-orbicular-quadrate, rounded at the apex and undulate-angulate. The stigmas are irregularly broadly rounded entire. The capsules are prismatic-cylindric, or in the case of short ones somewhat ellipsoid, mostly one and a hlf to two and a half inches long, with a slight ridge one each side and a slightly more prominent ridge on each rounded angle, obtuse or slightly beaked, the earlier ones on pedicels shorter or longer than their length, the later ones often with longer pedicels The seeds, borne in two rows in each carpel or cavity of the capsule, are semiorbiculate or lunate, rather thin, dark brown, slightly corky, about one third of an inch in long diameter."
Anderson, E., (1935), The Irises origins of the Gaspe Peninsula, Iris versicolor are discussed in Edgar Andersons paper "The Problem of Species in The Northern Blue Flags, Bulletin of the American Iris Society versicolor , #59 L. and October. Note the AIS Bulletin Archives are available on the AIS Emembers siteIris virginica L." in the Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 1928, pages 241-313.
Anderson, E., (1936), Blue (1935), The Flag Irises of North America in the Gaspe Peninsula, Annals Bulletin of the American Iris Society , #59 October. Note the AIS Bulletin Archives are available on the MissouriAIS Emembers site Botanical Garden 23: 457-509. Iris virginica var. schrevei.
Anderson, E., (1936), Blue Flag Irises of North America in Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 23: 457-509. Iris virginica var. schrevei.

Synonyms

Synonyms:

Synonyms Boltoniana, Hort. ex Regel; caurina, Her.; Common Blue Flag; flaccida, Spach; pulchella, Regel; Virginica; virginiana. : Boltoniana, Hort. ex Regel; caurina, Her.; Common Blue Flag; flaccida, Spach; pulchella, Regel; Virginica; virginiana. ----

Chromosome counts


Chromosome counts: 2n=54,56, Simonet, 1932; 2n=108, Anderson, 1936; 2n=108, Love & Love, 1961; 2n=108, Love & Love, 1981; 2n=108, Laublin & Cappadocia, 1992. ----

Chromosome counts:

Variations

2n=54,56, Simonet, 1932; 2n=108, Anderson, 1936; 2n=108, Love & Love, 1961; 2n=108, Love & Love, 1981; 2n=108, Laublin & Cappadocia, 1992.


Variations:

Iris versicolor L.

  • forma albocaerulea Rousseau.
  • forma murrayana Fernald

Hybrids

Iris versicolor crosses:

¼ Iris versicolor crosses: 'Akira Horinaka', 'Dyson Moore', 'Enfant Prodige', 'Little Prince', 'Mirabel Glow', 'Marie Chuard', 'Que Reverie', 'Reensata', 'Splendid Companion', 'Spring Surprise', 'Strange Fantasy', 'Tenue Royale', 'Top Pick', 'Welcome Intruder',

Advanced Iris versicolor crosses: 'George Rodionenko', 'Night Flash' ----


Distribution and Cultivation

Distribution: The distribution of the species gives clues as to its cultural requirements, although plants in cultivation can often tolerate a wider range of variables: The species is found in the following region: Central & Eastern Canada to North Carolina & Eastern U.S.A.and specifically in the following states and provinces: Manitoba, Labrador, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Nunavut, Ontario, Quebec, Prince Edward Island, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermount, Virginia, Maryland. Bonap's North American Plant Atlas shows the following map. Note locations in Nebraska and Idaho probably reflect herbarium specimens collected in gardens. Reproduced by permission of Kartesz, J.T., The Biota of North America Program (BONAP). 2015. Taxonomic Data Center. (http://www.bonap.net/tdc). Chapel Hill, N.C. [maps generated from Kartesz, J.T. 2015. Floristic Synthesis of North America, Version 1.0. Biota of North America Program (BONAP). (in press)]
Cultivation: Flourishing in full sun, well drained, good garden soil that stays moist. Often found near streams but not in the water
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-- Main.RPries - 2010-02-22

IAttachmentActionSizeDateWhoComment
CY-I-VERSICOLOR_DEEP_ROSE.jpgjpgCY-I-VERSICOLOR_DEEP_ROSE.jpgmanage 41 K 17 Sep 2010 - 01:28UnknownUser Lorena Reid photo
DD-I-VERSICOLOR_WHITE_-LAVENDER_VEINS.jpgjpgDD-I-VERSICOLOR_WHITE_-LAVENDER_VEINS.jpgmanage 32 K 17 Sep 2010 - 01:46UnknownUser Lorena Reid photo
Dykes_plate_XVLIII_versicolor.jpgjpgDykes_plate_XVLIII_versicolor.jpgmanage 47 K 03 Jan 2011 - 21:47UnknownUser versicolor seed from Dykes The Genus Iris
I-Versicolor.jpgjpgI-Versicolor.jpgmanage 46 K 19 Oct 2010 - 22:08EleanorHutchison Photo by El Hutchison, near Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, Z3
I-versicolor-in-pond.jpgjpgI-versicolor-in-pond.jpgmanage 58 K 19 Oct 2010 - 22:09EleanorHutchison Photo by El Hutchison, near Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, Z3
I.versicolor01.jpgjpgI.versicolor01.jpgmanage 24 K 06 Oct 2014 - 03:24 Main.TLaurin Photo by Chapman Iris
I.versicolor02.jpgjpgI.versicolor02.jpgmanage 29 K 06 Oct 2014 - 03:25 Main.TLaurin Photo by Chapman Iris
I.versicolorJB16.JPGJPGI.versicolorJB16.JPGmanage 53 K 07 May 2016 - 19:55 Main.Betsy881 Photo by John Baumfalk
IMG_6868-X2_i_versicolor.jpgjpgIMG_6868-X2_i_versicolor.jpgmanage 207 K 17 Feb 2016 - 05:47BrockHeilman Please contact Brock Heilman for image use.
Irisversicolor01.jpgjpgIrisversicolor01.jpgmanage 52 K 19 Sep 2014 - 19:37 Main.TLaurin Photo by Adele and Lewis Lawyer
Iversicolor05.jpgjpgIversicolor05.jpgmanage 79 K 06 Jun 2014 - 21:25 Main.TLaurin Photo by Rosalie Figge
Iversicolor06.jpgjpgIversicolor06.jpgmanage 101 K 06 Jun 2014 - 21:27 Main.TLaurin Photo by Rosalie Figge
Versicolor_plate_from_Addisonia.jpgjpgVersicolor_plate_from_Addisonia.jpgmanage 45 K 14 Oct 2011 - 13:23UnknownUser Addisonia plate
iversicolor02.jpgjpgiversicolor02.jpgmanage 62 K 09 Oct 2014 - 21:44 Main.TLaurin Photo by Rowden Gardens-England
iversicolor07.jpgjpgiversicolor07.jpgmanage 51 K 28 Jan 2016 - 22:13 Main.TLaurin Photo by Iris City Gardens
iversicolorrosea01.jpgjpgiversicolorrosea01.jpgmanage 59 K 28 Jan 2016 - 22:16 Main.TLaurin Photo by Iris City Gardens
rosea01.jpgjpgrosea01.jpgmanage 147 K 20 Jun 2017 - 15:50 Main.TLaurin Photo by Holly Johnson-Taken at MN Landscape Arboretum
versicolor01.JPGJPGversicolor01.JPGmanage 64 K 28 Nov 2014 - 21:46 Main.TLaurin Photo by Don McQueen,London, Ont. Canada Zone5.
versicolor02.JPGJPGversicolor02.JPGmanage 65 K 28 Nov 2014 - 21:47 Main.TLaurin Photo by Don McQueen,London, Ont. Canada Zone5.
versicolor03.JPGJPGversicolor03.JPGmanage 71 K 28 Nov 2014 - 21:49 Main.TLaurin Photo by Don McQueen,London, Ont. Canada Zone5.
versicolor04.JPGJPGversicolor04.JPGmanage 60 K 21 Apr 2014 - 20:08 Main.TLaurin Photo by Don McQueen,London, Ont. Canada Zone5.
versicolor05.JPGJPGversicolor05.JPGmanage 83 K 19 Jul 2014 - 20:17 Main.TLaurin Photo by Don McQueen,London, Ont. Canada Zone5.
versicolor06.jpgjpgversicolor06.jpgmanage 61 K 18 Jun 2015 - 18:47 Main.TLaurin Photo by Alla Chernoguz-Ukraine
versicolor10.jpgjpgversicolor10.jpgmanage 46 K 10 Oct 2013 - 20:20 Main.TLaurin Photo by Alla Chernoguz-Ukraine
versicolor2.jpgjpgversicolor2.jpgmanage 139 K 13 Mar 2017 - 18:32 Main.TLaurin Photo by Geles Iris Garden-Lithuania
versicolor3.JPGJPGversicolor3.JPGmanage 49 K 10 Feb 2012 - 18:16 Main.htb ©2004 Laurie Frazer
versicolor9.jpgjpgversicolor9.jpgmanage 65 K 10 Oct 2013 - 20:17 Main.TLaurin Photo by Alla Chernoguz-Ukraine
versicolor_seed.jpgjpgversicolor_seed.jpgmanage 29 K 29 Sep 2010 - 18:37UnknownUser seed

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