Taxonomy of Tulipa
The taxonomy of Tulipa places the genus in the family Liliaceae, and subdivides it as four subgenera, and comprises about 75 species.
History
While tulips were known from at least the 12th century in Persia, and appear in decorative art in Turkey in the 13th century, the first description in European botanical literature, was by Conrad Gesner in his De Hortus Germanica, which he referred to as Tulipa turcarum, and states he saw in a garden in Augsburg in 1559.Phylogeny
The taxonomy of Tulipa has always been complex and difficult for many reasons. Tulipa is a genus of the Liliaceae family, once one of the largest family of monocots, but which molecular phylogenetics has shown to be a much smaller discrete family with only 15 genera. Within Liliaceae, Tulipa is placed within Lilioideae, one of three subfamilies, with two tribes. Tribe Lilieae includes seven other genera in addition to Tulipa. Some species with a more eastern distribution formerly classified as Tulipa are now considered as the separate genus Amana, including Amana edulis. These species are more closely allied to Erythronium, although some authors believe that all three genera of the Tulipeae could be treated as a single genus.The evolutionary and phylogenetic relationships between the genera currently included in Liliaceae are shown in this Cladogram.
Subdivision
Subgenera and sections
Historically, subdivision of the genus and speciation has been based on vegetative and floral characters, but further research has shown these to be quite plastic, even within a species. Together with population variability, hybridisation and naturalisation, the classification and taxonomy of tulips has been complex and controversial.The genus Tulipa was traditionally divided into two sections, Eriostemones and Tulipa, and comprises about 76 species. In 1997, the two sections were raised to subgenera and subgenus Tulipa was divided into five sections:ClusianaeEichleres
- * subdivided into eight seriesKopalkowskianaTulipanumTulipa
In 2009, two other subgenera were proposed, Clusianae and Orithyia, and this total of four subgenera was corroborated by a 2013 study by Maarten Christenhusz and colleagues. That study did not find support for any of the previous sections proposed, and since hybridisation is relatively common, it is probably better to refrain from subdividing the subgenera any further.
Species
Historically there has been considerable disagreement about the number of species within the genus. For instance tulips often grow in remote inaccessible hills and valleys where winters are harsh and summers long and dry, and may flower for only a short period, meaning that species are often missed. Furthermore, descriptions of species were often derived from studying cultivated bulbs, and the variability of the wild population was poorly understood. Many of these species were never identified in the wild. These taxonomic difficulties are those associated with long established cultivation, hybridisation, selection and naturalisation. Treatments of the genus vary considerably in how they deal with speciation, with some, such as the Flora Europaea, taking a very broad approach, and others a much more narrow approach. For example, a broad approach treats T. orphanidea as a single variable species with a range of forms, while those using a narrow approach divide the species into T. bithynica, T. hageri and T. whittallii.The number of accepted species has varied between 50 and 114, for instance The Plant List includes 113. A 2013 review lists 76, as described here. This list was used as the basis for Kew Gardens monograph of that year, The Genus Tulipa.
Subgenus ''Tulipa''
- Tulipa agenensis Redouté - Greece, Middle East
- Tulipa albanica Kit Tan & Shuka - Albania
- Tulipa alberti Regel - - Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
- Tulipa aleppensis Boiss. ex Regel - Turkey, Syria, Lebanon
- Tulipa altaica Pall. ex Spreng. - Altai Krai, Western Siberia, Kazakhstan, Xinjiang
- Tulipa anisophylla Vved. - Tajikistan
- Tulipa armena Boiss. - Turkey, Iran, South Caucasus
- Tulipa banuensis Grey-Wilson - Afghanistan
- Tulipa borszczowii Regel - Kazakhstan
- Tulipa botschantzevae S.N.Abramova & Zakal. - Turkmenistan, Iran
- Tulipa butkovii Botschantz. - Uzbekistan
- Tulipa carinata Vved. - Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Afghanistan
- Tulipa cypria Stapf ex Turrill - Cyprus
- Tulipa dubia Vved. - Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan
- Tulipa eichleri Regel - Turkey, Iran, Caucasus, accepted by the World Flora Online as of 2021 but regarded as a synonym of T. undulatifolia by others
- Tulipa faribae Ghahr., Attar & Ghahrem.-Nejad - Iran
- Tulipa ferganica Vved. - Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan
- Tulipa foliosa - Turkey
- Tulipa fosteriana W.Irving - Afghanistan, Central Asia
- Tulipa gesneriana L.
- Tulipa greigii Regel - Iran, Central Asia
- Tulipa heweri Raamsd. - Afghanistan
- Tulipa hissarica Popov & Vved. - Tajikistan, Uzbekistan
- Tulipa hoogiana B.Fedtsch. - Turkmenistan, Iran
- Tulipa hungarica Borbás - Hungary, Serbia, Bulgaria
- Tulipa iliensis Regel - Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Xinjiang
- Tulipa ingens - Tajikistan, Uzbekistan
- Tulipa julia K.Koch - Turkey, South Caucasus, Syria, Lebanon
- Tulipa kaufmanniana Regel - Central Asia
- Tulipa kolpakowskiana Regel - Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Xinjiang, Afghanistan
- Tulipa korolkowii Regel - Central Asia
- Tulipa kosovarica Kit Tan, Shuka & Krasniqi - Kosovo
- Tulipa kuschkensis B.Fedtsch. - Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Iran
- Tulipa lanata Regel - Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, W Himalayas
- Tulipa lehmanniana Merckl. - Afghanistan, Iran, Central Asia
- Tulipa lemmersii - Kazakhstan
- Tulipa ostrowskiana Regel - Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
- Tulipa persica Sweet - Iran
- Tulipa platystemon Vved. - Kyrgyzstan
- Tulipa praestans H.B.May - Tajikistan
- Tulipa scardica Bornm. - Kosovo, Greece
- Tulipa scharipovii Tojibaev - Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan
- Tulipa schmidtii Fomin - Iran, South Caucasus
- Tulipa serbica Tatic & Krivošej - Kosovo, Serbia
- Tulipa sosnowskyi Achv. & Mirzoeva - South Caucasus
- Tulipa suaveolens Roth - Ukraine, Crimea, Russia and south of Siberia, Caucasus, Iran, Kazakhstan
- Tulipa subquinquefolia Vved. - Tajikistan, Uzbekistan
- Tulipa systola Stapf - Middle East
- Tulipa talassica Lazkov - Kyrgyzstan
- Tulipa tetraphylla Regel - Xinjiang, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
- Tulipa × tschimganica Botschantz. - Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
- Tulipa ulophylla Wendelbo - Iran
- Tulipa undulatifolia Boiss. - Greece, Balkans, Caucasus, Middle East, Iran, Central Asia
- Tulipa uzbekistanica Botschantz. & Sharipov - Uzbekistan
- Tulipa vvedenskyi Botschantz. - Tajikistan
Subgenus ''Eriostemones''
- Tulipa biflora Pall. - Macedonia, Egypt, Crimea, Russia, Asia from Saudi Arabia to Xinjiang + Western Siberia
- Tulipa bifloriformis Vved. - Central Asia
- Tulipa cinnabarina K.Perss. - Turkey
- Tulipa cretica Boiss. & Heldr. - Crete
- Tulipa dasystemon Regel - Central Asia, Xinjiang
- Tulipa humilis Herb. - Caucasus, Middle East
- Tulipa kolbintsevii Zonn. - Kazakhstan
- Tulipa koyuncui Eker & Babaç - Turkey
- Tulipa orithyioides Vved. - Central Asia
- Tulipa orphanidea Boiss. & Heldr. - Greece, Bulgaria, Turkey
- Tulipa regelii Krassn. - Kazakhstan
- Tulipa saxatilis Sieber ex Spreng. - Greece, Turkey
- Tulipa subbiflora Vved.
- Tulipa sprengeri Baker - Turkey
- Tulipa sintenisii Baker - Turkey
- Tulipa sylvestris L. - Eurasia from Portugal to Xinjiang
- Tulipa turkestanica Regel - Central Asia, Xinjiang
- Tulipa urumiensis Stapf - Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Iran
Unplaced
- The horned tulip is often offered in the trade as "Tulipa acuminata", but is in fact a cultivar, unknown from the wild, and should be distributed under its correct cultivar name: Tulipa 'Cornuta'.
- Tulipa boettgeri Regel – Central Asia; accepted by the World Checklist of Selected Plant Families as of 2015, but regarded as unplaced by Christenhusz et al.
Species reclassified to other genera
These species were classified as Tulipa but are now placed in other genera- Tulipa anhuiensis X.S.Shen, now: Amana anhuiensis Christenh.
- Tulipa breyniana L., now: Moraea collina Thunb..
- Tulipa edulis Baker, now: Amana edulis Honda.
- Tulipa erythronioides Baker, now: Amana erythronioides D.Y.Tan & D.Y.Hong.
- Tulipa graminifolia Baker ex S.Moore, now: Amana edulis Honda.
- Tulipa latifolia Makino, now: Amana erythronioides D.Y.Tan & D.Y.Hong
- Tulipa ornithogaloides Fisch. ex Besser, now: Gagea triflora Schult. & Schult.f.
- Tulipa pudica Raf., now: Fritillaria pudica Spreng.
- Tulipa sibthorpiana Sm., now: Fritillaria sibthorpiana Baker.
Etymology
The word tulip, first mentioned in western Europe in or around 1554 and seemingly derived from the "Turkish Letters" of diplomat Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq, first appeared in English as tulipa or tulipant, entering the language by way of and its obsolete form tulipan or by way of Modern Latin tulīpa, from Ottoman Turkish tülbend, and may be ultimately derived from the delband, this name being applied because of a perceived resemblance of the shape of a tulip flower to that of a turban. This may have been due to a translation error in early times, when it was fashionable in the Ottoman Empire to wear tulips on turbans. The translator possibly confused the flower for the turban.Books
- , In
- see also Species Plantarum
- In
Articles
*Websites
- , see also Angiosperm Phylogeny Website