Iris ivanovae


Iris ivanovae is a plant species in the genus Iris and part of the subgenus Iris and in the section Pseudoregelia. It is a rhizomatous perennial, from eastern Russia, China, and Mongolia.
It has narrow and linear light green leaves, short slender stem and pink-purple flowers. It is cultivated as an ornamental plant in temperate regions.

Description

It is similar in form to Iris tigridia but differs in the leaves, being narrower on Iris tigridia and Iris ivanovae having smaller flowers.
It has a thick, dark grey rhizome that is about 2 – 4 mm in diameter. Below the rhizome, it has wrinkled dark grey secondary roots. The rhizome is covered in the remains of light brown or grey dead leaves.
The radical leaves are light green, narrow, linear, with 2–3 prominent veins. They can grow up to between long, and 1–2.5 mm wide.
It has a slender stem that can grow up to between tall.
The stem has 2 green, narrow, lanceolate spathes that are long and between 0.5 and 0.7 cm wide.
The stems hold 1 terminal flower, blooming in early May.
The flowers are in diameter, and come in shades of pink-purple. The flowers have dots and dashes markings.
Like other irises, it has 2 pairs of petals, 3 large sepals, known as the 'falls' and 3 inner, smaller petals, known as the 'standards'.
The falls are long, and 0.8–1 cm wide, with a beard of clavate hairs in the middle. They narrow to a thread-like claw. The standards are lanceolate, with a notch at the top of the petal.
It has a triangular shaped ovary, a 1.5–2 cm long perianth tube that is between 0.5–1 mm in diameter, and yellow anthers.
After the iris has flowered in late June and early July, it produces an oblong-oval seed capsule, which has a small nose or sprout. Inside the capsule are brown, wrinkled and reticulate seeds.

Biochemistry

As most irises are diploid, having two sets of chromosomes, this can be used to identify hybrids and classification of groupings.
It has a chromosome count of 2n=20 or 2n=40. Specimens from Chitinskaya Oblast in Russia, were found to have a chromosome count of 2n=20.

Taxonomy

It is sometimes known as Iris invanova in Russia. It is written in Russian Cyrillic script as Касатик Ивановой. It is also commonly known as 'fine-leaved iris'.
It is not known what the Latin specific epithet ivanovae actually refers to. But it has also been used by Nothobranchius ivanovae Valdesalici, 2012, Polypogon ivanovae Tzvelev and Oncopsis ivanovae.
It was first published and described by Vladimir Doronkin in 'Flora Sibiri' on page 117 in 1987.
It has not yet been verified by United [States Department of Agriculture] and the Agricultural Research Service as of 6 August 2015.

Distribution and habitat

Iris ivanovae is native to central Asia, including U.S.S.R., China and Mongolia.

Range

It is found in Russia, within Siberia, Buryatia and Chita Oblast regions.
It is found in China, within several Provinces of China,.
It is also found in Mongolia. Including being found in Selenge Province of the Khuder District.
It was found that specimens in the Mongolian Academy of Sciences Institute of Botany, were labelled as Iris tigridia from Mongolia, were actually Iris ivanovae.

Habitat

It grows on the rocky slopes of mountains and in gravelly steppes. It can also found at the edges of elm forests.
It can be found growing with fescue grasses and tansy plants.

Conservation

It has been listed in the Red Data Books of Republic of Buryatia, as a 'Vulnerable' species.
It was also listed in the Chita Region Data book, as 'Rare', and later again in the Chita Region.
Also it is rare in the Agin-Buryat Autonomous Area.
Specimens have been protected in the "Dauria reserve and Sohondin-sky reserve, and growing in botanical gardens of Trans-Baikal.
It is threatened due to grazing by cattle during late summer and the autumn-winter time. It also does not produce much seed, due to the climatic conditions of its habitat, so only spreads vegetatively.

Cultivation

It was introduced to the Trans-Baikal Botanical Garden in 1996.
It has been grown in botanical gardens of Novosibirsk, Saint Petersburg Botanical Garden and Chita, to determine its cold hardiness. Specimens did not survive in St. Petersburg.
It prefers to grow in well-drained soils, in full sun. It needs protection from winter moisture, which can kill the plant.
It is suitable to grow in rockeries.