Tulipa dianaeverettiae J. de Groot & Zonn.

Kubentayev, Serik A., Baasanmunkh, Shukherdorj, Alibekov, Daniyar T., Tojibaev, Komiljon Sh., Nyamgerel, Nudkhuu, Ivashchenko, Anna A., Tsegmed, Zagarjav, Epiktetov, Vladimir G., Sitpayeva, Gulnara T., Izbastina, Klara S., Idrissova, Zhansaya T., Mukhtubayeva, Saule K., Abubakirova, Nurganym B., Gil, Hee-Young & Choi, Hyeok Jae, 2024, Revisiting the genus Tulipa (Liliaceae) in Kazakhstan, the country with the richest tulip diversity worldwide, PhytoKeys 250, pp. 95-163 : 95-163

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.3897/phytokeys.250.136736

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14548278

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/88D8737A-3B6E-555A-8244-09D6B1D206B5

treatment provided by

PhytoKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Tulipa dianaeverettiae J. de Groot & Zonn.
status

 

Tulipa dianaeverettiae J. de Groot & Zonn. View in CoL , Int. Rock Gard. 122: 7 (2020).

Fig. 18 View Figure 18

Type.

Kazakhstan • Altai. Altai Pass , approximately 1800 m altitude, cult. J. J. de Groot ( L 3986813 ) .

General distribution.

Endemic to Kazakhstan ( Kubentayev et al. 2024).

Distribution in Kazakhstan and habitat.

This species grows in open sunny places in dry sandy soil mixed with stones in the Altai.

Conservation status.

Tulipa dianaeverettiae is a critically endangered species globally ( IUCN 2024).

Phenology.

Flowering in April – May; fruiting in May – June.

Notes.

Tulipa dianaeverettiae was described in 2020 by de Groot and Zonneveld (2020) from cultivated plants grown in the Netherlands from seeds collected by W. Lemmers in Kazakhstan (Alatai Pass Kurchumskiy Ridge) in 2001. Tulipa dianaeverettiae is distinguishable from other closely related species ( T. biflora , T. kolbintsevii and T. patens ) by the presence of short hairs on the stem, particularly on the leaf margin, and by a distinct capsule with a small dome at the apex. The authors reported that this is the only species of the sect. Biflores growing at an altitude of 1800 m a. s. l. in the Altai Mountains. The flowers of T. dianaeverettiae have a sweet odor ( de Groot and Zonneveld 2020). Currently, little information is available on the distribution and population status of this species.

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Liliopsida

Order

Liliales

Family

Liliaceae

Genus

Tulipa

SubGenus

Tulipa

Section

Spiranthera