Iris winkleri
Iris winkleri, or Winkler iris, is a species in the genus Iris, classified in the subgenus Hermodactyloides and section Monolepsis. It is a bulbous perennial from Turkestan, in Central Asia.
Description
The iris is deemed to be very similar to Iris kolpakowskiana, but it has a brown, membranous covering to the bulb. I. kolpakowskiana has a netted covering. Another close relative is I. pskemensis.It has 3–4 glabrous, linear shaped leaves, which are sometimes longer than flowers and stems. They are 1–2 mm wide.
It has a green and acuminate shaped spathes,.
It has a very very short stem, with the flower, it grows up to tall.
It blooms in June, with blueish-violet flowers.
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 oblanceolate shaped and the standards are erect, oblong shaped and wider than falls.
It has a perianth tube equal to length of the limb, and style branches that have oblong lobes.
Taxonomy
It was discovered by botanists in 1884 in Turkestan, and then published by Eduard August von Regel in the Trudy Sankt-Peterburgskogo botanicheskogo sada between 1884 and 1885, on page 677.The plant is named after Konstantin George Alexander Winkler, a botanist from the University of Tartu in Estonia. Later in 1897, Winkler was made head botanist at Saint Petersburg Botanical Garden.
It was verified by the United States Department of Agriculture and the Agricultural Research Service on 2 October 2014.
Distribution and habitat
It is native to temperate Asia.Range
It was originally found in the temperate regions of middle Asia and Kyrgyzstan. It is also found in other former states of the Soviet Union,, and Kazakhstan. Including on the Tian Shan mountain range.It is normally found at above sea level.