Species of flowering plant
Iris juncea (commonly called the rush iris ) is a smooth-bulbed bulbous iris species. The name is derived from 'juncea' from the Greek word meaning 'rush-like'.[ 1]
It was first described by Jean Louis Marie Poiret in 1871.[ 2] It was then illustrated in Curtis's Botanical Magazine in 1898.[ 3]
Its flowers are light yellow[ 4] and fragrant. Normally 2 per stem in summer.[ 5] It flowers between June and July.[ 3]
It grows to a height of between 1 and 2 feet.[ 6]
The 3mm wide leaves appear in the autumn and then fade before flowering.[ 5]
The bulb is reddish-brown in colour.[ 3]
It can be found in (Algeria and Tunisia ) in North Africa,[ 7] Southern Spain and Sicily .[ 5]
Other varieties known include;[ 5]
iris juncea var. merimieri (Lynch) Sulphur yellow flowers
iris juncea var. numidica (Anon) lemon-yellow flowers (from Africa)[ 3]
iris juncea var. pallida (Lynch) large soft yellow flowers
References
^ Stearn, William (1972). A Gardenerer's Dictionary of Plant Names . London: Cassell. p. 184. ISBN 0304937215 .
^ "Iris juncea Poir" . Global Biodiversity Information Facility . Retrieved April 24, 2014 .
^ a b c d Richard Lynch The Book of the Iris , p. 160, at Google Books
^ "New Garden Plants". Kew Bulletin (25– 48): 47. 1890.
^ a b c d James Cullen, Sabina G. Knees, H. Suzanne Cubey (Editors) The European Garden Flora Flowering Plants: A Manual for the Identification , p. 259, at Google Books
^ William Robinson (2009). Hardy Flowers . Applewood Books . p. 150. ISBN 978-1429014434 .
^ Martınez, Jorge; Vargas, Pablo; Luceno, Modesto; Cuadrado, Angeles (13 August 2010). "Evolution of Iris subgenus Xiphium based on chromosome numbers" (PDF) . www.rjb.csic.es. Retrieved 1 August 2014 .
External links
Media related to Iris juncea at Wikimedia Commons