-
-
Primula villosaSlo: kutravi jegliDat.: May 08. 2011Lat.: 46.41789 Long.: 14.84612Code: Bot_Bot_514/2011_DSC7691 Habitat: Stony pasture, in crevices of outcropped rocks, on steep to vertical Andesite rock faces, rarely south oriented, otherwise at sunny and fairly dry places, exposed to direct rain, average precipitations 1.500-1.800 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevations 1.650 m (5.500 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: acid soil pockets in Andesite rock. Place: Smrekovec mountains, on top of Mt. Komen 1.684 m (5.525 feet), tajerska, Slovenia EC Comment: Endemic to Southeast Alps. Growing solitary and in groups of a few plants P. villosa is a species with extraordinarily disjunct distribution. It grows on six small areas in eastern Alps. The most southeast of them is on top of Mt. Komen in Slovenia (a second small area in Slovenia was discovered just recently). Smrekovec mountains are a region with rare (in Slovenia) extrusive magmatic rock Andesite. Ref.:(1) M.A.Fischer, W.Adler, K.Oswald, Exkursionsflora Oesterreich Liechtenstein, Suedtirol, LO Landesmuseen, Linz, Austria (2005), p 676.(2) A.Martini et all., Mala Flora Slovenije, Tehnina Zaloba Slovenije (2007), p 480. (3) G.Cmith, B. Burrow and D.Lowe, Primulas of Europe and America, The Alpine Garden Society (1987), pp 139. (4) J.Richards, Primula, B.T. Batsford Ltd, London (1993), pp 94. (5) H.Sauerbier, W.Langer, Alpenpflanzen, Endemiten von Nizza bis Wien, IHW-Verlag, (2000), p 152.
-
Primula villosaSlo: kutravi jegliDat.: May 08. 2011Lat.: 46.41789 Long.: 14.84612Code: Bot_Bot_514/2011_DSC7691 Habitat: Stony pasture, in crevices of outcropped rocks, on steep to vertical Andesite rock faces, rarely south oriented, otherwise at sunny and fairly dry places, exposed to direct rain, average precipitations 1.500-1.800 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevations 1.650 m (5.500 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: acid soil pockets in Andesite rock. Place: Smrekovec mountains, on top of Mt. Komen 1.684 m (5.525 feet), tajerska, Slovenia EC Comment: Endemic to Southeast Alps. Growing solitary and in groups of a few plants P. villosa is a species with extraordinarily disjunct distribution. It grows on six small areas in eastern Alps. The most southeast of them is on top of Mt. Komen in Slovenia (a second small area in Slovenia was discovered just recently). Smrekovec mountains are a region with rare (in Slovenia) extrusive magmatic rock Andesite. Ref.:(1) M.A.Fischer, W.Adler, K.Oswald, Exkursionsflora Oesterreich Liechtenstein, Suedtirol, LO Landesmuseen, Linz, Austria (2005), p 676.(2) A.Martini et all., Mala Flora Slovenije, Tehnina Zaloba Slovenije (2007), p 480. (3) G.Cmith, B. Burrow and D.Lowe, Primulas of Europe and America, The Alpine Garden Society (1987), pp 139. (4) J.Richards, Primula, B.T. Batsford Ltd, London (1993), pp 94. (5) H.Sauerbier, W.Langer, Alpenpflanzen, Endemiten von Nizza bis Wien, IHW-Verlag, (2000), p 152.
-
Primula villosaSlo: kutravi jegliDat.: May 08. 2011Lat.: 46.41789 Long.: 14.84612Code: Bot_Bot_514/2011_DSC7691 Habitat: Stony pasture, in crevices of outcropped rocks, on steep to vertical Andesite rock faces, rarely south oriented, otherwise at sunny and fairly dry places, exposed to direct rain, average precipitations 1.500-1.800 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevations 1.650 m (5.500 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: acid soil pockets in Andesite rock. Place: Smrekovec mountains, on top of Mt. Komen 1.684 m (5.525 feet), tajerska, Slovenia EC Comment: Endemic to Southeast Alps. Growing solitary and in groups of a few plants P. villosa is a species with extraordinarily disjunct distribution. It grows on six small areas in eastern Alps. The most southeast of them is on top of Mt. Komen in Slovenia (a second small area in Slovenia was discovered just recently). Smrekovec mountains are a region with rare (in Slovenia) extrusive magmatic rock Andesite. Ref.:(1) M.A.Fischer, W.Adler, K.Oswald, Exkursionsflora Oesterreich Liechtenstein, Suedtirol, LO Landesmuseen, Linz, Austria (2005), p 676.(2) A.Martini et all., Mala Flora Slovenije, Tehnina Zaloba Slovenije (2007), p 480. (3) G.Cmith, B. Burrow and D.Lowe, Primulas of Europe and America, The Alpine Garden Society (1987), pp 139. (4) J.Richards, Primula, B.T. Batsford Ltd, London (1993), pp 94. (5) H.Sauerbier, W.Langer, Alpenpflanzen, Endemiten von Nizza bis Wien, IHW-Verlag, (2000), p 152.
-
Primula villosaSlo: kutravi jegliDat.: May 08. 2011Lat.: 46.41789 Long.: 14.84612Code: Bot_Bot_514/2011_DSC7691 Habitat: Stony pasture, in crevices of outcropped rocks, on steep to vertical Andesite rock faces, rarely south oriented, otherwise at sunny and fairly dry places, exposed to direct rain, average precipitations 1.500-1.800 mm/year, average temperature 4-6 deg C, elevations 1.650 m (5.500 feet), alpine phytogeographical region. Substratum: acid soil pockets in Andesite rock. Place: Smrekovec mountains, on top of Mt. Komen 1.684 m (5.525 feet), tajerska, Slovenia EC Comment: Endemic to Southeast Alps. Growing solitary and in groups of a few plants P. villosa is a species with extraordinarily disjunct distribution. It grows on six small areas in eastern Alps. The most southeast of them is on top of Mt. Komen in Slovenia (a second small area in Slovenia was discovered just recently). Smrekovec mountains are a region with rare (in Slovenia) extrusive magmatic rock Andesite. Ref.:(1) M.A.Fischer, W.Adler, K.Oswald, Exkursionsflora Oesterreich Liechtenstein, Suedtirol, LO Landesmuseen, Linz, Austria (2005), p 676.(2) A.Martini et all., Mala Flora Slovenije, Tehnina Zaloba Slovenije (2007), p 480. (3) G.Cmith, B. Burrow and D.Lowe, Primulas of Europe and America, The Alpine Garden Society (1987), pp 139. (4) J.Richards, Primula, B.T. Batsford Ltd, London (1993), pp 94. (5) H.Sauerbier, W.Langer, Alpenpflanzen, Endemiten von Nizza bis Wien, IHW-Verlag, (2000), p 152.
-
-
A full plant view. This grows in soggy ground in Red Rock Lakes National Wildlife Refuge in Montana. It is considered a rare plant here.
-
Mealy Primrose (Primula incana) in Red Rock Lakes National Wildlife Refuge, July 2010. This grows in damp or soggy ground.
-
Ortogiardino 2018
-
Ortogiardino 2018
-
Primula obconica HancePRIMULACEAE Origem: ChinaRef.: Lorenzi, H. e Souza, H.M. Plantas Ornamentais no Brasil. 4 edio. Plantarum, 2008.
-
Ortogiardino 2018
-
Ortogiardino 2018
-
Primula obconica HancePRIMULACEAE Origem: ChinaRef.: Lorenzi, H. e Souza, H.M. Plantas Ornamentais no Brasil. 4 edio. Plantarum, 2008.
-
Primula obconica HancePRIMULACEAE Origem: ChinaRef.: Lorenzi, H. e Souza, H.M. Plantas Ornamentais no Brasil. 4 edio. Plantarum, 2008.
-
Ortogiardino 2018
-
-
-