Iris narbutii


Iris narbutii is a species of flowering plant in the genus Iris, subgenus Scorpiris. It is a bulbous perennial from Central Asia. It has dark green leaves, short stems, spring flowers in shades of greenish-yellow to pale violet.

Description

Iris narbutii has a brown bulb with papery tunic, the bulb is approx. in diameter. It has thickened roots, which look similar to fat short pointed tubers.
The thin, channelled dark green leaves emerge before the flowers, they are 5–25 mm wide. They gradually narrow to an apex, and have a very visible white edging/margin.
One of the shorter Juno irises, similar to Iris leptorrhiza, only growing to a height of.
It blooms in early-mid spring, flowering between January and April depending on the weather conditions. It has 1 or 2 scentless flowers per bulb stem.
The flowers come in a range of shades from greenish-yellow to pale violet.
The green-purple perianth tube is about long. It has standards that hang downwards. It has falls that start upright, but then the blade bends downwards, with a dark violet blotch at the tip. They have a raised white crest surrounded by a yellow zone/area. The yellow zone can sometimes have a dark purple ring around it.
It has whitish pollen.

Taxonomy

It is sometimes misspelt as 'Iris narbuti'.
It was first published as Juno narbutii by Olga Fedtschenko in 'Izvestiya Imperatorskago Obscestva Ljubitelej Estestvoznanija, Antropologii i Etnografii, Sostojascago pri Moskovskom Universitete' in 1902.
It was later published as Iris narbutii by Boris Fedtschenko in Bull. Jard. Bot. St. Petersb. Vol.V on page 157 in 1905.
Iris narbutii is now an accepted name by the RHS.
It is listed in 1995 in 'Vascular plants of Russia and adjacent states ' by Czerepanov, S. K.
It may have been named after 'Narbuta Beg', a grandson of 'Abd al-Karim' of the Fergana Valley, Central Asia, where the iris was found.

Native

Iris narbutii is from Central Asia. Originally found on the slopes of Syr-Darya river valley.
It is found on the rocky, gravelly slopes of the mountains of western Tien Shan and southern Pamir Mountains. Also seen near to Samarkand and Tashkent.
Olga Fedtschenko had speculated that the plants from west Tien Shan, could be a separate species, due to their paler colour.
In Chulbair Mountains, Uzbekistan, it is a threatened species and close to extinction.

Cultivation

It can be seen growing in the 'Le Grand Clos Botanique Garden' in Bourgueil, France.
It can be cultivated in pots, or in well-drained soils in sunshine.

Known hybrids

Iris narbutii 'Kara Kaga'
In Russia, Vvedenskii had noted several natural hybrids including;J. narbutii x J maracandica,J. narbutii x J. Orchioides andJ. narbutii x J. subdecolorata.