Cyclamen repandum


Cyclamen repandum, the spring sowbread, is a species of flowering plant in the family Primulaceae, native to southern Europe and some Mediterranean islands. It is the most widespread of a group of cyclamens with wide, heart-shaped leaves, often coarsely toothed or lobed, and late spring-blooming flowers with long, slender petals.

Etymology

The name of the subgenus, Psilanthum, comes from Ancient Greek psilós "bare" and ánthos "flower". The species name repandum is Latin for "bent back" or "turned up".

Description

Cyclamen repandum grows in rocky areas, shrubland, and woodland near the Mediterranean from southeastern France through Italy to Serbia and on Corsica, Sardinia, and Sicily. The tuber of the C. repandum group roots only from the center of the bottom. Leaves are dark green with a lighter arrowhead pattern, not speckled. Flowers are deep carmine-pink or white, without a darker nose. They lack the auricles present in Cyclamen hederifolium.

Similar species

The Cyclamen repandum group also includes C. rhodium, C. balearicum, and C. creticum.

Hybrids

When species of the Cyclamen repandum group are growing together, hybrids can emerge:
  • Cyclamen × meiklei Grey-Wilson
  • Cyclamen × saundersii Grey-Wilson
  • Cyclamen creticum × ''Cyclamen balearicum''

Cultivation

Cyclamen repandum is a deciduous plant that has a hardiness rating of H4. It requires partial shade and can grow in chalk, clay, sand or loam. It can grow in any pH level; acid, alkaline or neutral. C. repandum can grow to an ultimate height of and can take anywhere between 2–5 years to reach this height.
The subspecies C. repandum subsp. repandum has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.