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Flora Nordica: Cistaceae Cistaceae1 i 1 – Annual, with basal rosette, stigma sessile ................................................................................. 3. Tuberaria Perennial, without basal rosette, style present .............................................................................................. 2 2 Leaves all opposite and decussate, oblong to linear; stamens all fertile; flowers in raceme-like cymes ................................................................................................................................. 1. Helianthemum Upper leaves alternate, linear; outer stamens sterile; flowers solitary ......................................... 2. Fumana – 1. Helianthemum Mill. Miller, Gard. Dict. abr. ed. 4 (1754). Rhodax Spach (1836). Literature. Du Rietz 1923. Chamaephytes. Evergreen, woody dwarf shrubs. Leaves short-petiolate, opposite, oblong to lanceolate; stipules present or absent. Inflorescences raceme-like, scorpioid cymes with small linear bracts; , flowers fully open in sunshine, closed at night and in cold weather. Sepals markedly unequal, the three inner ones ovate, the two outer ones smaller, linear. Petals 5, caducous. Stamens numerous, all fertile, ± erect, on tactile stimulation spreading close to the corolla. Style sigmoid at base or straight. Capsule ovoid, loculicidal, 3-valved. Chromosome base-number x=10 or 11; diploids in Norden. Taxonomy. The two species native to Norden differ in morphological, cytological and embryological traits and are referred to separate subgenera. A separation of subgenus Plectolobum (H. oelandicum and related species) at the generic level as Rhodax Spach has been generally accepted in SE Europe, but was not supported by Arrington & Kubitzki (2003). Both native species belong to complexes with variation centra in southern and central Europe. Taxonomists have laid much weight on the presence or absence of stellate hairs on the lower surface of the leaves (Proctor & Heywood 1968). Variation in stellate hairs of H. nummularium shows a distinct geographical pattern in Norden, while the variation in H. oelandicum is more intricate. Trichome production has been shown to be a character with simple inheritance in several studies of plants (Kärkkäinen & Ågren 2002). Preliminary results indicate that inheritance of stellate hairs on the lower surface of the leaves depends on one or very few genes in both species of Helianthemum (Widén, personal observation). Taxa which are mainly based on this character are therefore given a low rank here. 1 – Leaves with stipules; flowers 2–3 cm diam. ..................................................................1. H. nummularium Leaves without stipules; flowers 1–1.5 cm diam. .............................................................. 2. H. oelandicum 1. Helianthemum nummularium (L.) Mill. Miller, Gard. dict. ed. 8, no. 12 (1768). – Cistus nummularius L., Sp. pl.: 527 (1753). – Type: Linnaean herbarium 889.54 (LINN) lectotype, sel. by López, An. Jard. Bot. Madrid 50: 46 (1992). H. nummularium subsp. arcticum (Grosser) Hiitonen (1933). D Soløje. F kultapäivännouto. N solrose. S solvända. Stem short, vertical, just above the ground producing numerous procumbent to ascending, up to 25 cm long shoots. Leaf blades elliptic-oblong to lanceolate, on flowering shoots 10–30 3–10 mm (2–5 times as long as wide), on non-flowering shoots smaller and 2–3 times as long as wide, slightly revolute at the margin; upper surface subglabrous to hairy, lower surface subglabrous (rarely) or covered with a thin to dense whitish felt of 1 version 070809 baserad på version 050628, 4b, d v s den interngranskade versionen + kommentarer i ”totalversionen” som fortfarande kan ha relevans + kommentarer från S N F D och BJ – de som ej kunnat lösas direkt är inlagda som slutkommentarer Flora Nordica: Cistaceae stellate hairs. Stipules narrowly lanceolate, 3–8 mm, as long as or longer than the petiole. Inflorescences with up to 10–15 flowers. Pedicels 5–11 mm. Inner sepals 5–9 mm. Petals 8–16 7–15 mm, pure yellow, often with a dark orange spot at the base, very rarely entirely orange. Stamens 50–100, 4–6 mm. Style 3.5–4.5 mm, ± straight; stigma entire, with short papillae. Ovary whitish tomentose. Capsule 5–7 mm, nodding at dehiscence because the pedicel becomes arched. Seeds up to 30, brown, rounded to weakly polyedric, 1.3–1.7 mm, covered by a mucilaginous sheath, when dry tuberculate and when wet forming a viscous sheath. – Early summer to mid-summer. ii 2n=20 (S Sk 4 ). – [2n=20] iii Distribution. Nem–SBor. – Indigenous in large parts of its Nordic area; declining . D fairly common in Sjæ, scattered in NJy at and south of Limfjorden, ØJy Glatved, Klejs Skov, and scattered at Mariager Fjord, VJy iv Mønsted, Daugbjerg, Hesselvig, Skovbjerg, LFM Gedser and Møns Klint, and western Brn. N Øf Moss. S distinctly southeastern: very common in Öl and Gtl; common in Bl, Klm, eastern SmI, Ög (except the northernmost part), eastern Srm and most of Upl; fairly rare in southern and eastern Sk and part of eastern Vg; rare in southeasternmost Vsm; Gst Gävle and Valbo, Hls Norrala (Andviken, known since 1924) and Mpd Sundsvall (Norra Stadsberget, originally sown but established in south-facing cliffs, known from 1910 to at least 1972); formerly also in Hl Hasslöv (c. 1754) and Östra Karup (before 1924), Dlr Rättvik (before 1831) and v possibly Husby (before 1842); a specimen from BhG Strömstad 1909 was perhaps mislabelled. F indigenous and fairly common in A; archaeophytic in V along ancient traffic routes in the southwest archipelago (surviving in Dragsfjärd and Korppoo; older and partly perhaps unreliable records from Kustavi, Salo, Turku and Vihti) and in EH Janakkala (Hakoinen fort hill and its surroundings; EH records of uncertain status from Hausjärvi and (only pupil specimens) Hauho, Iitti and Kangasala); apparently a casual recent incomer in U Hanko 1934 (roadside) and Nurmijärvi 1974 (yard lawn), ES Lappeenranta 1932 (pupil specimen), Kouvola 1945 (railway) and Valkeala 1948 (railway) and PeP Tornio 1961; an apparently well-established population in EP Vaasa (possibly polemochorous, first record 1951) persisted to the late 1950’s. Reported as indigenous from U Vantaa 1940 but possibly planted (dry lawn beneath calcareous rock); repeatedly searched for in vain in the 1990’s. Europe, Turkey, the Caucasus, N Iran. vi Habitat. Dry to moderately dry, sunny sites with low vegetation, usually on basic or neutral substrate (sand, moraine or bedrock with a thin soil layer); commonest in seminatural, usually grazed grassland but also present e.g. in woodland fringes and in herb-rich, south-facing cliffs. The species is favoured by moderate grazing but becomes damaged by too intense grazing. It stands the initial phases of overgrowth but disappears in later phases. – Throughout Norden declining due to artificial fertilization and overgrowth. Biology. The roots form mycorrhiza (Boursnell 1950). Horizontal shoots sometimes root, giving rise to restricted vegetative propagation. Old shoots eventually die back and become replaced by new shoots from the base. Flowering shoots develop mainly from apical buds on the previous year’s shoot and flower in late May and June; during favourable conditions inflorescences are formed also on shoots of the current year so that flowering may continue until late summer. The flowers are usually open one at a time, taking a position at the top of the inflorescence; when the petals are fully expanded the stamens are exposed to pollen-collecting insects. The flowers are homogamous with stigma and anthers functional at about the same time. The species has been reported to be ± self-compatible (Proctor 1956), but isolated plants do not set seed in cultivation (Widén, personal observation). Variation. The H. nummularium complex shows great diversity, especially in mountain areas of southern and vii central Europe, and was subdivided into eight subspecies by Proctor and Heywood (1968). In the Nordic area, pubescence on the lower surface of the leaves varies ± continuously from subglabrous with few or no stellate hairs to a dense whitish felt of stellate hairs. Most plants can be referred to one of two categories, often recognized as separate taxa: var. or subsp. obscurum with few or no stellate hairs on the lower surface of the leaves, and var. or subsp. nummularium, with a whitish felt of stellate hairs. The frequency of the two morphs and intermediates between them varies geographically in Norden. Var. obscurum is the exclusive or dominating morph in populations in D, while the two morphs usually but not always occur together in populations in the southwestern part of the distribution area in S. Var. nummularium is, however, the only morph in most of S Klm and Ög, in Öl, Gtl, Vg and further north. Intermediates between var. obscurum and var. nummularium have a sparse cover of stellate hairs on the lower side of the leaves. These stellate hairs are usually larger than stellate hairs in var. nummularium. Intermediates are found in mixed populations as well as in populations with exclusively var. obscurum, especially in D. Populations consisting of a mixture of var. Flora Nordica: Cistaceae obscurum, var. nummularium and intermediates occur in other parts of Europe as well (Azzouzi et al. 1997). Intermediates are similar to experimentally produced F1 hybrids between the two varieties (Widén, personal observation). Variation between populations in size of leaves and flowers is not correlated with variation in pubescence. There is a weak geographical trend in variation of leaf shape across the overlapping distribution area of the two hair morphs in Norden (leaves being more oblong in D and more lanceolate in S Klm). However, the lack of discontinuities in most morphological traits suggests that variation in pubescence should be recognized viii taxonomically at variety level only. There is some variation in petal colour. The orange spot at the base of the petal is rarely large, covering a large part of the petal; in Öl, one specimen with homogeneously orange petals has been found; pale yellow or whitish petals occur very rarely. – Var. roseum (from southwestern Europe; a casual garden escape in Norden) has pink petals. 1a. var. nummularium D Filtet Soløje. F ketopäivännouto. S ljus solvända. Lower surface of leaves with a dense whitish felt of stellate hairs (older leaves and leaves on flowering shoots sometimes more sparsely hairy). Petals pure yellow, often with a dark orange spot at the base, very rarely entirely orange. Distribution. D rare: NJy Gedsted; Sjæ Hørsholm (relic of cultivation?), Jægerspris, Næsbystrand, Røsnæs, Solrød, Tornved, Tømmerup, LFM Gedser, Brn the western coast at Hellig Peder and Hammershus. S the dominating or exclusive morph throughout except in Sk, where it is rare throughout the area of the species, and ix x in Bl, where it is common in the easternmost part but rare in the west. F see species . S and C Europe, extending to the British Isles, the Baltic states, S Russia and Turkey. 1b. var. obscurum (Pers.)xi xii *****. H. obscurum Pers., Syn. 2: 79 (1806) . – H. nummularium subsp. obscurum (Pers.) Holub (1964). – Described from France. H. ovatum (Viv.) Dunal (1824). – H. nummularium subsp. ovatum (Viv.) Schinz & Thell. (1909). H. chamaecistus ssp. hirsutum (Vollm.) Weim xv Cistus helianthemum L. (1753). H. chamaecistus Mill. (1768). xiii xiv . – H. vulgare Gaertn. (1788). D Bakke-Soløje. F tanskanpäivännouto. S mörk solvända. Lower surface of the leaves glabrous, with few stellate hairs on the midrib only, or with sparse stellate hairs all over. Stellate hairs often larger than in var. nummularium. Petals pure yellow, often with a dark orange spot at the base. xvi Distribution. D declining ; fairly common in Sjæ; scattered in western Brn and in NJy at and south of Limfjorden; ØJy Glatved, Klejs Skov and scattered at Mariager Fjord. VJy Mønsted, Daugbjerg, Hesselvig and Skovbjerg. LFM Møns Klint. N Østfold Moss (Jeløy). S fairly common in Sk (except in the northwest), Bl (except the easternmost part), southeastern SmI and southwesternmost Klm (Kråksmåla, Madesjö, Örsjö, Torsås and Vissefjärda); fairly rare in northern SmI from Bringetofta north to Säby; Ög Västra Tollstad; Gtl Fardhem 1908, Västerhejde 1892; perhaps casual in Klm Kalmar 1884. xviixviii xix Europe except the British Isles, the southern Iberian Peninsula and the southern Balcan Caucasus and N Iran. xx ; Turkey, the 1c. var. roseum (Willk.) López Gonzáles 1992 (H. nummularium subsp. pyrenaicum (Janchen) Schinz & Thell.). S röd solvända. – Similar to var. nummularium but with pink petals. D Sjæ Halskov 1994 (escaped from cultivation). S Sk Malmö (docks) 1990. – The Pyrenees and neighbouring mountains. Flora Nordica: Cistaceae 2. Helianthemum oelandicum (L.) Dum. Cours. Dumont de Courset, Bot. cult. 3: 129 (1802). – Cistus oelandicus L., Sp. pl.: 526 (1753). – Type: S Öl, Linnaean herbarium 689: 40 (LINN), lectotype sel. by López, An. Bot. Jard. Madrid 50: 51 (1992). D Ølands-Soløje. F öölanninpäivännouto. S ölandssolvända. xxi Literature. Janchen 1907, Du Rietz 1923, Sterner 1936, Widén 1980, 1986, 1988. Dwarf shrub. Main stem vertical, 2–10 cm; branches ± horizontally spreading, 5–15 cm. Leaves without stipules; petiole 2–7 mm; blade ± lanceolate to oblong, 7–25 2–7 mm (2–5 times as long as wide), upper surface glabrous or with few to many bristles, lower surface glabrous to densely stellate-tomentose; leaves (as well as inflorescences and sepals) with minute glandular hairs, especially on otherwise glabrous plants. Inflorescences with (1–)3(–10) flowers, glabrous to densely covered with bristles and stellate hairs. Pedicels 5–10 mm. Inner sepals 2.5–4.5 mm. Petals 5–8 4–7 mm, often slightly crenulate at apex, reflexed when the flowers are fully open, pure yellow without an orange spot. Stamens 30–60, 2–4 mm. Style sigmoid at base; stigma 3-lobed, with long papillae. Ovary glabrous to whitish tomentose. Capsule 4–5 mm, erect when ripe. Seeds (1–)3–5(–15), light brown, ovoid to polyedric, smooth, 1.3–1.7 mm. – Early summer to early autumn (flowering peaks in early June and July–August). [2n=22] Distribution. Nem–SBor. – S Öl very common in the south (Stora Alvaret), more scattered in the north (owing to scarcity of habitat). The species occurs in the British Isles, S and C Europe, N Africa, Turkey and the Caucasus. In Norden it is represented by the endemic subsp. oelandicum. Habitat. Dry, open, ± well-drained habitats on limestone pavement and calcareous grassland on alvar ground; often dominant. Biology. Roots without root hairs, probably with mycorrhiza. Horizontal shoots rarely rooting. The flowering intensity varies between years depending on degree of dying back of branches during drought. Mainly windpollinated; the flowers are rarely visited by pollen-collecting insects (mostly in wind-protected habitas). The flowers are homogamous and ± self-incompatible (Widén 1986). The seeds germinate during a prolonged period with a peak in spring and may remain viable in the soil seed bank for 3–4 years. Variation. H. oelandicum subsp. oelandicum is extremely variable in hairiness of leaves, inflorescences and sepals. This variation is maintained in cultivation and is geographically structured in Öland. The frequency of different hair-morphs varies significantly between populations and seems to be correlated with environmental factors such as drought in summer and waterlogging and frost-induced movements in the soil during winter and early spring. In areas where both morphs occur, hairy plants tend to be more frequent in dry, well-drained habitats, while glabrous plants are more frequent in habitats subjected to waterlogging (Widén 1988). There is also variation in flowering phenology. The most common morph (var. oelandicum) produces inflorescences only on the previous year’s growth and flowers during a few weeks in early June (Fig. 00). Var. canescens produces some inflorescences on the previous year’s growth, but most inflorescences are on the current year’s growth; the flowering period it therefore longer, with one peak in early June (on the previous year’s growth) and a second, larger one in July–August (mainly on the current year’s growth). The concentrated flowering of var. oelandicum is more efficient in wind-pollination than the prolonged flowering of var. canescens. Thus, var. oelandicum has often a higher fruit and seed set than var. canescens. On the other hand, seed production in var. oelandicum is often reduced by drought in spring and early summer, while seed production in var. canescens is often favoured by late summer rain. The two varieties have allopatric distributions; they occur sympatrically only in a narrow zone (from tens to a few hundred metres) of overlap. In this zone var. canescens usually occurs in well-drained habitats on bedrock with a thin layer of weathered soil, var. oelandicum in less well-drained habitats with a thicker layer of weathered soil. No barriers against cross-fertilization exist, but the allopatric distribution and the partial separation of flowering times restrict gene flow between the two morphs. Introgression can be traced in flowering phenology. Experimentally produced F1 hybrids have most inflorescences on the previous year’s growth, and the few inflorescences on the current year’s growth often have a delayed flowering compared with the main summer flowering of var. canescens. Var. canescens has traditionally been referred to H. canum, while var. oelandicum was referred to a group of taxa without stellate hairs on the lower side of the leaves (H. alpestre, H. italicum and H. rupifragum). Flora Nordica: Cistaceae However, crossing experiments show that all morphs in Öland are closely related to each other and that they are closely related to the H. canum group (Widén 1986). Consequently, many modern floras treat the complex as one species, H. oelandicum, with a number of geographical subspecies (Castroviejo et al. 1993, Stace 1997). 2a. var. oelandicum D Almindelig Ølands-Soløje. F kaljuöölanninpäivännouto. N ölandssolrose. S äkta ölandssolvända. xxii Leaves, inflorescences and sepals glabrous, with glandular hairs and/or bristles, and rarely also with a thin felt of stellate hairs. Inflorescences mainly at the apex of the previous year’s growth, during favourable conditions also laterally on the previous year’s growth; number of internodes (3–)5–15(–20). – From late May to mid-June (flowering lasts only 2–3(–4) weeks). 2n=22 (S Öl 10). Distribution. S Öl Stora Alvaret except the southernmost part (to south of the village Albrunna in Södra Möckleby and south of the village Södra Sebberneby in Ventlinge); also in small alvar areas in the northern and middle parts of the island. Endemic. Habitat. Well-drained to occasionally waterlogged open limestone gravel, especially along fissures in the limestone pavement; sometimes in more closed calcareous grassland. Variation. The frequency of hairy plants differs significantly between populations (Widén 1988). Glabrous plants dominate on most small alvars in northern Öland (Sterner 1936) and in a large area in the eastern part of Stora Alvaret (northwest of the village Segerstad), but are rare in some parts in the west (Widén 1988). 2b. var. canescens (Hartm.) Fr. Fries, Nov. Fl. suec. 7: 115 (1823). – Cistus oelandicus var. canescens Hartm., Handb. Skand. fl.: 207 (1820). – H. canum subsp. canescens (Hartm.) Á. Löve & D. Löve (1961). – Type: H. canum auct., non (L.) Baumg. (1816). xxiii H. italicum (L.) Pers. (1806) subsp. rupifragum sensu Sterner (1936), non (A. Kern.) Hayek (1925). xxiv xxv xxvi D Grå Ølands-Soløje. F villaöölanninpäivännouto. N filtsolrose. S sen ölandssolvända. Leaves, inflorescences and sepals with bristles and stellate hairs, the lower surface of the leaves with or without a whitish felt of stellate hairs. Inflorescences mainly laterally on the current year’s growth, some also laterally on the previous year’s growth; number of internodes in inflorescences on the current year’s growth (1–)2–3(–8), in those on the previous year’s growth (2–)5–8(–12). – From late May to August, and more sparsely throughout autumn. 2n=22 (S Öl 5). Distribution. S Öl the central parts of southernmost Stora Alvaret (± south of a line between the limestone quarry north of the village Albrunna in Södra Möckleby and the village Löt in Gräsgård); also in a ± isolated alvar north of the village Eketorp in Gräsgård, and in small alvar areas south of Stora Alvaret. Endemic. Habitat. The main occurrences in Stora Alvaret are on drained limestone pavement and limestone gravel; in the southern part of Stora Alvaret usually in less frost-disturbed sites than var. oelandicum. Variation. The proportion of inflorescences on the previous year’s growth and on the current year’s growth varies between years and between populations, and especially the flowering intensity in June varies between years (Widén 1980). The most densely hairy plants dominate in a small area in the northern part of the area of var. canescens but are less common elsewhere. They are rare in the small alvars south of Stora Alvaret. Plants without a whitish felt of stellate hairs on the lower side of the leaves have been mistaken for a taxon from SE Europe (H. italicum subsp. rupifragum; Sterner 1936). However, preliminary results from crossing experiments within var. canescens show a clear segregation in two morphs, with and without a whitish felt of stellate hairs on the lower side of the leaves, respectively, in F2. This indicates that pubescence is a trait with simple inheritance and that variation in stellate hairs should be treated taxonomically at a low taxonomical level only. Flora Nordica: Cistaceae Rare casual H. ledifolium (L.) Mill. 1768. – Annual, 10–50 cm; variable in pubescence. Leaves lanceolate to elliptic-obovate, 10–40 mm. Stipules linear-lanceolate, to half as long as the leaves. Pedicels erect, shorter than the sepals. Petals yellow, shorter than the sepals. – [2n=20] D Sjæ Hastrup at Køge 1982 (garden weed). – S Europe. The Danish specimen belongs to subsp. lasiocarpum (Jacques & Hérincq) Nyman 1878. 2. Fumana (Dunal) Spach Spach, Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot. Ser. 2, 6: 359 (1836). – Basionym: Helianthemum sect. Fumana Dunal in DC., Prodr. 1: 274 (1824). Fumana procumbens (Dunal) Gren. & Godr. Grenier & Godron, Fl. France 1: 173 (1847). – Helianthemum procumbens Dunal in DC., Prodr. Syst. 1: 275 (1824). – Described from “Gallia austr., Italia, Tauria”. Cistus fumana L., Sp. pl.: 525 (1753). – Helianthemum fumana (L.) Mill. (1768). xxvii F. vulgaris Spach (1836) . D Gotlandssoløje. F rentopäivänkilo. N gotlandssolrose. S gotlandssolvända. xxviii Literature. Bengtsson 1993, Pettersson 1958. Chamaephyte. Dwarf-shrub with short, thick, vertical stem and prostrate, up to 25 cm long branches. Stems with minute, arched, multicellular glandular hairs, thereby apparing greyish; leaves, pedicels and sepals with similar, but more sparse hairs. Leaves linear, 7–15 0.5–2 mm, alternate; stipules absent; margins sometimes scabrid from a few hairs, apex usually with one such hair. Flowers solitary, axillary. Pedicels 7–14 mm. Sepals markedly unequal, the three inner ones 7–9 4–6 mm, prominently veined, the two outer ones similar to the leaves but only 4–5 0.2–1 mm. Petals 5, caducous, 5–8 4–7 mm, pale yellow. Outer stamens sterile, less than 10, moniliform (like a string of beads); inner ones fertile, less than 20. Style filiform, ± geniculate at base; stigma ± undivided, with short papillae. Capsule 7–8 mm, ovoid, convex-triangular in transverse section, loculicidal; valves 3, usually patent after dehiscence. Seeds 5–10, dark brown, ovoid, convex-triangular summer. [2n=32]. xxix in transverse section, smooth, 2–3 mm. – Mid-summer to late Distribution. Nem–SBor. – S Öl Böda (Mensalvaret), Sandby (several localities) and Stenåsa (east of Bårbykällan); Gtl scattered in areas dominated by hard limestone. W, S and C Europe (north to C Germany), S Ukraine, the Caucasus, N Iran. Habitat. Sunny, well-drained habitats with sparse vegetation on hard limestone usually covered with a thin layer of weathering gravel; very rarely on calcareous, shifting sand. The life length of individual plants is often limited by frost upheaval which gradually leads to uprooting. The species does not stand intensive grazing, but, at least in Öland moderate grazing seems to be necessary to keep the localities sufficiently open for the species. In Gotland, on the contrary, it has increased during the 20th century because large alvar areas are no longer grazed (Pettersson 1958). Biology. The roots are woody with sparse fine roots and without root hairs. New shoots and seedlings grow upwards, while branches on older plants extend horizontally in right angles to the dying apical shoot (thereby the plants get a zigzag appearance when seen from above). No vegetative propagation occurs. The development of individual flowers is accompanied by characteristic movements of the pedicel. The pedicel of the young flower bud is straight, thus the bud is pointing along the shoot and is hidden among leaves. Before anthesis the pedicel bends upwards and during anthesis the petals are exposed; the petals are held horizontally at anthesis. The flowers open in the morning and are ephemeral (2–5 hours; the petals fall well before noon). They offer neither nectar nor large amounts of pollen to pollinators and the species is almost exclusively self-fertilizing. Adding extra pollen to open flowers gave marginally more seeds than bagged flowers in a field experiment (Bengtsson, unpublished). After flowering the sepals close around the stamens and the pistil and the pedicel starts bending downwards; the sepals remain around the capsule. The whole procedure of pedicel bending takes Flora Nordica: Cistaceae about 48 hours according to Vestergren (1909). The capsules mature in two to four weeks depending on weather conditions. The prostrate growth habit and the fact that the capsule opens downwards are likely to restrict the average distance of seed dispersal outside the immediate neighbourhood of the maternal plant. According to Vestergren (1909) and Pettersson (1958) long-distance dispersal of unopened capsules during the winter may however be possible. 3. Tuberaria (Dunal) Spach Spach, Ann. Sci. Nat. Bot. Ser. 2, 6: 364 (1836). – Basionym: Helianthemum sect. Tuberaria Dunal in DC., Prodr. 1: 270 (1824). Tuberaria guttata (L.) Fourr. 1868. F täplänouto. S fläcksolvända. – Annual with a basal leaf-rosette. Stem ± procumbent to erect, 10–30 cm. Leaves with 3 distinct veins, pubescent. Lower leaves elliptic to obovate, without stipules; upper leaves linear-oblong to linear-lanceolate, with stipules. Petals 5–8 × 4–7 mm, usually with a dark spot at the base. – [2n=36] F U Helsinki 1940 (with Moroccan cork). England and E Germany, and to Turkey. xxx xxxi – S and W Europe, mainly Mediterranean but extending north to S References Arrington, J.M. & Kubitzki, K. 2003: Cistaceae. In K. Kubitzki & C. Bayer (eds), The families and genera of vascular plants. V. Malvales, Capparales and non-betalain Caryophyllales. Springer Verlag. Azzouzi, K., Vekemans, X., Meerts, P. & Lefèbvre, C. 1997: Allozyme variation in calcicolous and silicicolous populations of Helianthemum nummularium. Belg. J. Bot. 129: 101–106. Bengtsson, K. 1993: Fumana procumbens on Öland: population dynamics of a disjunct species at the northern limit of its range. J. Ecol. 81: 745–758. Boursnell, J.G. 1950: The symbiotic seed-borne fungus in the Cistaceae. Ann. Bot. 14: 217–243. Castroviejo, S., Aedo, C., Cirujano, S., Laínz, M., Montserrat, P., Morales, R., Muños Garmendia, F., Navarro, C., Paiva, J. & Soriano, C. 1993: Flora Iberica III. Real Jardín Botánico, Madrid. Du Rietz, G.E. 1923: De svenska Helianthemum-arterna. Bot. Notiser 1923: 435–446. Janchen, E. 1907: Helianthemum canum (L.) Baum. und seine nächsten Verwandten. Abhandl. Zool. Bot. Ges. Wien 4: 1–68. Kärkkäinen, K. & Ågren, J. 2002: Genetic basis of trichome production in Arabidopsis lyrata. Hereditas 136: 219–226. Pettersson, B. 1958: Dynamik och konstans i Gotlands flora och vegetation. Acta Phytogeogr. Suec. 40. Proctor, M.C.F. 1956: Biological flora of the British Isles, Helianthemum. J. Ecol. 44: 675–692. Proctor, M.C.F & Heywood, V.H. 1968: Helianthemum. In T.G. Tutin et al. (eds), Flora Europaea. 2. Rosaceae to Umbelliferae: 286–291. Cambridge University Press. Stace, C. 1997: New flora of the British Isles. Ed. 2. Cambridge University Press. Sterner, R. 1936: Helianthemum oelandicum (L.) Willd. och dess anförvanter på Öland. Svensk Bot. Tidskr. 30: 419–432. Vestergren, T. 1909: Om Helianthemum fumanas blomning. Svensk Bot. Tidskr. 2: 210–222. Widén, B. 1980: Flowering strategies in the Helianthemum oelandicum (Cistaceae) complex on Öland, Sweden. Bot. Notiser 133: 99–115. Widén, B. 1986: Biosystematics in the Helianthemum oelandicum complex on Öland. Symb. Bot. Upsal. 27: 53–60. Widén, B. 1988: Partitioning of variation in pubescence of a dwarf shrub, Helianthemum oelandicum. Acta Phytogeogr. Suec. 76: 135–156. i BENGT: De nomenklatoriska efterforskningarna bör mycket snart vara avslutade. Ett flertal kommentarer, sök efter ditt namn! ii BJÖRN: DU BÖR NU GRANSKA VOUCHERS (skall finnas på Botaniska museet i Lund)./MA De fyra räkningarna från Skåne gjordes av Börje Lövkvist och finns publierade i Opera Botanica nr 137. Två av dem hör till ssp. nummularium (Benestads backar, voucher 1081 och Smedstorp, voucher 2287), två till ssp. obscurum (Brösarp, vocuher 1555 och Gladsax: Bäckhalladalen, vocuher 1288). När du granskat vouchers kan uppgifterna eventuellt flyttas till rätt underart. /ThK Flora Nordica: Cistaceae iii Inlagt pga dansk kommentar, OK?./MA iv CISTACEAE dansk interngranskning (enda kommentaren): Helianthemum nummularium På det vestlige Brn kan arten efter vores opfattelse højst betegnes som "scattered" i dag. Desuden bør det anføres for landet som helhed, at den er "declining". De samme bemærkninger gælder for var. obscurum. [”declining” står under ”habitat” men kanske borde antydas i samband med frekvenserna också. /MA] v Jag har underartsbestämt beläggen av H. nummularium i UPS vilket föranleder en del förslag till ändringar. Se vidare under underarterna. I utbredningsavsnittet, sist i Sverige, lägg till: ”A specimen from BhG Strömstad 1909 is perhaps mislabeled.” Symbol saknas för Öf (redaktionell miss) – ska vara ROSLPY Lägg till BhG+IIIIID+Strömstad 1909 (UPS), perhaps mislabelled/ GJORT GEOFILER Infoga BhG med följande text: Strömstad 1909 Gösta Strandell (UPS) På Dlr, stryk ”No specimens known” / GJORT vi RAINO: Check the text on Finland! – based on your text but many changes, hopefully no misunderstandings? Raino Lampinen, 8/23/2005 – Cistaceae - Helianthemum nummularium Finnish name (used by Henry Väre in the translation of Mossberg / Stenberg): kultapäivännouto. Map is ok, distribution text needs details, a rather long suggestion below: RAINO check new map (it needed changing to match text) / INLAGT TEXT CHANGE TO NOTES F indigenous and fairly common in A and possibly U ***; as an archaeophyte rare in southeasternmost V and in EH ***; casual in U ***, ES ***, EP *** and PeP ***. F indigenous and fairly common in A; Suominen & Hämet-Ahti (Norrlinia 4, 1993): H. nummularium favours dry calcareous habitats, being native only in Åland. Its other Finnish permanent occurrences lie at ancient settlement places (Hakoinen fort hill in EH Janakkala) and along old traffic routes, and thus it is an apparent archaeophyte. From V it is disappearing due to overgrowth of meadows. From some provinces there are records from loading places or gardens. A surviving as archaeophytic along ancient traffic routes in Dragsfjärd and Korppoo in the SW archipelago of V (older and partly perhaps unreliable records also from Kustavi, Salo, Turku and Vihti) as well as in EH Janakkala (Hakoinen fort hill and its surroundings; additional EH records from Hausjärvi and (pupil specimens) from Hauho, Hausjärvi, Iitti and Kangasala); an apparent casual neophyte in U Hanko 1934 (roadside) and, Nurmijärvi 1974 (yard lawn), ES Lappeenranta 1932 (pupil specimen), Kouvola 1945 (railway) and Valkeala 1948 (railway), EP Vaasa upto the late 1950s and in PeP Tornio 1961. Reported as indigenous from U Vantaa 1940 (dry lawn at the foot of a calcareous rock; apparently extinct), but possibly planted there. Flora Nordica: Cistaceae V 1) +- Archipelago: Dragsfjärd, Korppoo, Kustavi 2) Mainland: Salo 1909, Turku, Vihti 1888, 1896 [Vantaa] Helsingin pitäjä, Vestersundom, Vikkulla, nurmikkorinteellä kalkkipit. kallion tyvellä, nähtävästi luonnonvarainen, 1940 Erkamo (H) Nurmijärvi, Röykä, Kaukopää, yard lawn 1974 (P. Askola, H) Hanko, vägkant 1934 I. Seligson (H) St Loimaa, Loimijoki, 15.IX.1904 Knut Allan Wegelius, H675479. – Pupil specimen! EH Hauho 1916 (pupil specimen) Hausjärvi 1923 (H); literature records also Janakkala: 1) Hakoinen (first collected 1840), 2) Kangasala 1957 Iitti 1891 (pupil) U ES Lappeenranta, Simola, hill 1932 (H); Kouvola, along rw 1945 (KYM); Valkeala, Saarento, railway (Mäkelä 1948, literature record) EP Collected from Vaasa, Vaskiluoto, previous German camp site in 1951, 1953,1954, 1959 (VOA, H; at least) Rautiainen & Laine (1989): In V the species has always been rare, and it has been found from eight places. The only mainland locality has been in Katariinanlaakso in Turku (…), from which it disappeared due to clearing land for cultivation. Eklund (1958) mentioned the plant in the 19201930s from five places in Korppoo. In summer 1987 only one of them was found, in Finnö island. … Surviving also in hiittiinen, Långholm; old records from Kustavi Erkamo's specimen originates from the vicinity of Vikkulla farm (gård). Arto Kurtto has visited the palce several times without finding the plant. There are many relic or escaped plnts in that area. In Hakoinen fort hill accompanied by Agrimonia eupatoria, Allium olecaeum, Lithospermum arvense, Trifolium arvense, Mysotis stricta, Viola tricolor Hiitonen, Luonnon Tutkija 58:58 (1954) points out that probable not a polemochore in EP Vaasa, since in 1953 there were over 60 shoots (or a big plant of that size), and in a place a bit away from the "other" polemochores; thinking that it must have taken decades to grow into that size. Flora Nordica: Cistaceae PeP TAX Helianthemum nummularium GRI 730:38 *G1 PRO PeP COM Tornio SIT Kaakamo, Kalkkimaan tien varrella HAB Niityllä NAM Railonsala, Helmi NAM Railonsala, Artturi DAT 1961-07-17 SOU Herb HER H SER 122698 vii BJÖRN, THOMAS: Ska en mer genomgripande ändring göras? Här följer gamla kommentarer: BJÖRN; THOMAS: Nu framgår det inte [längre?] hur den taxonomiska värderingen BW gjort förhåller sig till Proctor and Heywoods underarter. För den oinvigde blir det kryptiskt. Jag föreslår omflyttning och omskrivning för att länka ihop det om europeisk indelning med det om nordisk variation, enligt nedan. Det gula bör vara sist (som nu) eller först – och i vilket fall som helst kompletteras med några ord som binder samman P & H med det som beskrivs i Flora Nordica (eller kanske förklarar att BW inte tar hänsyn till P & H eftersom deras indelning inte fungerar för det nordiska, eller hur det nu är). Variation. Pubescence on the lower surface of the leaves varies ± continuously from subglabrous with few or no stellate hairs to a dense whitish felt of stellate hairs. Most plants can be referred to one of two categories, often recognized as separate taxa: var. or subsp. obscurum with few or no stellate hairs on the lower surface of the leaves, and var. or subsp. nummularium, with a whitish felt of stellate hairs. The frequency of the two morphs and intermediates between them varies geographically in Norden. Var. obscurum is the exclusive or dominating morph in populations in D, while the two morphs usually but not always occur together in populations in the southwestern part of the distribution area in S. Var. nummularium is, however, the only morph in most of S Klm and Ög, in Öl, Gtl, Vg and further north. Intermediates between var. obscurum and var. nummularium have a sparse cover of stellate hairs on the lower side of the leaves. These stellate hairs are usually larger than stellate hairs in var. nummularium. Intermediates are found in mixed populations as well as in populations with exclusively var. obscurum, especially in D. Populations consisting of a mixture of var. obscurum, var. nummularium and intermediates occur in other parts of Europe as well (Azzouzi et al. 1997). Intermediates are similar to experimentally produced F1 hybrids between the two varieties (Widén, personal observation). Variation between populations in size of leaves and flowers is not correlated with variation in pubescence. There is a weak geographical trend in variation of leaf shape across the overlapping distribution area of the two hair morphs in Norden (leaves being more oblong in D and more lanceolate in S Klm). However, the lack of discontinuities in most morphological traits suggests that variation in pubescence should be recognized taxonomically at variety level only. There is some variation in petal colour. The orange spot at the base of the petal is rarely large, covering a large part of the petal; in Öl, one specimen with homogeneously orange petals has been found; pale yellow or Flora Nordica: Cistaceae whitish petals occur very rarely. – Var. roseum (from southwestern Europe; a casual garden escape in Norden) has pink petals. Helianthemum nummularium shows great diversity, especially in mountain areas of southern and central Europe, and was divided in eight subspecies by Proctor and Heywood (1968). The Nordic variation is [intricate and/but...?] [well within the range of subsp. ...?] Ad hoc-lösning efter förslag från ThK genomförd: ”Jag föreslår att ”The H,. nummularium compex ... (1968) får inleda sektionen om variantion. Och sedan fortsätter texten: ”In the Nordic area, pubescence on the lower surface ... “ Detta som det för tillfället smidigaste lösningen som inte kräver ngot fritt svamlande från vår sida.” viii Jag har inga indikationer på att variationen i hårighet ska behandlas taxonomiskt olika i olika delar av utbredningsområdet! /BW / Denna not förstår jag inte – har någon påstått detta?? Det kanske bara är en upplysning till oss. / ThK BJÖRN: var det så eller är det någon formulering som du vill ändra? ix Jag har underartsbestämt beläggen av H. nummularium i UPS vilket föranleder en del förslag till ändringar. - Material från Bohuslän och Dalarna av ssp. nummularium fanns där. Tills vidare bör vi nog betrakta bohuslänsfyndet som tvivelaktigt, men vi efterlyser bohuslänningarnas synpunkter./ThK GEOFILER Helianthemum nummularium var. nummularium Infoga BhG med följande text: Strömstad 1909 Gösta Strandell (UPS) Infoga Dlr med följande text: ”Från Rättvik i Dalarne” ex herb. C. G. Kröningssvärd (UPS) / GJORT EFTERLYS synpunkter från Bohuslän. Inlagd som frågetecken på Bh. x Här måste stå något om den finska förekomsten! Raino Lampinen, 8/23/2005 - Cistaceae - Helianthemum nummularium var. nummularium Finnish name (used by Henry Väre in the translation of Mossberg / Stenberg): ketopäivännouto. Map and text for F the same already given at species level, see above./RL BJÖRN/THOMAS: Ska texten stå här eller på arten??? (gäller både manus och geofil) Kan några av de tillfälliga vara annan ras?/MA Lägg till Dlr+ENALXY+Rättvik (UPS) Lägg till BhG+IIIIID+Strömstad 1909 (UPS), perhaps mislabeled / GJORT xi BENGT: På varietetsnivå måste kanske en nykombination göras. Svar: Ja, noteras för Fl. Nordica notes / BJ – ThK kommenterar: Observera att det behöver inte vara obscurum som blir det gällande epitetet! Arbetet bör inte uppskjutas länge, för det kan bli tidsödande att ta reda på vilket av alla epiteten i den europeiska litteraturen som gavs först på varietets nivå. xii BENGT att kolla: [Notering från Bengt:] Enl. Holub , Acta Horti Bot. Prag. 1963: 53 (1964) är H. obscurum basionym – varför Fl.Eur. 2: 288 anger Celakovsky har jag inte luskat ut. – [Thomas’ kommentar:] Enligt Med-Checklist och Standardliste är basionymen H. chamaecistus ssp. obscurum Čelak., Prodr. Fl. Böhmen 3: 483 (1875). Här får man nog kontrollera litteraturställena. – Bengts svar: Celakovský skriver: under Helianthemum chamaecistus: a) obscurum (Pers. sp., H. ovatum Dunal). och sedan 3 raders beskrivning. Namnet baseras alltså på H. obscurum Pers. Hos Persoon, Syn. Pl. 2: 79 (1806) – ThK har ändrat i texten enligt detta men är inte övertygad. Att Med-Checklist och Standardliste skriver Celak. och inte (Pers.) Celak. måste bero på att Persoons namn anses ogiltigt av någon anledning (om ”basionymen” är ogiltig ska man betrakta ”omkombinationen” som ett nytt namn). Flora Nordica: Cistaceae xiii BENGT: Detta namn används i Skånes flora 1963 och skulle kanske vara med i synonymiken. Troligen är det illegitimt. Enligt Med-Checklist är det Mérat som är auktorn till H. hirsutum. – BENGTS SVAR: Har svårt att få fram Mérat och noten kan stå kvar för senare kontroll – THOMAS kommentar: OBS att Weimarck anger Vollmann som auktor till basionymet – kanske felcitering? xiv BENGT: skall ref. med måste den utredas mer. Weimarck (1963) anger (trots ”Vollm.”) Cistus hirsutus Thuillier 1799 som basionym – så skulle det kunna tolkas. Har inte hunnit titta I Thuillier / BJ xv [BENGT: Enligt diverse litteratur är namnen Cistus helianthemum, H. chamaecistus och H. vulgare alla synonymer till ssp. obcurum och de har därför flyttats till denna. Men baseras möjligen inte alla på Cistus helianthemum L.? Kanske detta gäller även för epitetet ovatum. – OBS att synonymer med samma typ ska stå i samma stycke och med typen sist. BENGTS Svar: H. chamaecistus Mill. baseras inte på Cistus helianthemum. H. vulgare Gaertn. inkluderar bl.a. Linnés frasnamn för Cistus helianthemum, och citerar det från ”Syst. Veg, 500” och är alltså baserat på C. helianthemum. Har fått fram Viviani och funnit att H. ovatum inte baseras på något annat namn. – ThK har flyttat H. vulgare ovan enligt detta. – Inga oklarheter; kommentaren kvarstår som minneshjälp./MA070829] xvi jfr dansk kommentar på arten /MA xvii Jag har underartsbestämt beläggen av H. nummularium i UPS vilket föranleder en del förslag till ändringar (jfr även arten o nummularium). - Det fanns ytterligare ett ark av ssp. obscurum från Gotland. Det får mig att tro att underarten verkligen har förekommit (eller förekommer) på Gotland. Troligen är den inte medvetet eftersökt under den nu aktuella inventeringen, varför vi inte bör markera den som utgången på kartan. - Slutligen fanns det ett ark av ssp. obscurum från en järnvägsstation i Kalmar. Det är en känd samlare, så uppgiften är nog korrekt, men kanske var det frågan om en tillfällig förekomst. Helianthemum nummularium var. obscurum I utbredningsavsnittet, sist i Sverige, ändra till: ”… Västra Tollstad; Gtl Fardhem 1908, Västerhejde 1892; perhaps casual in Klm Kalmar 1884.” Gtl ändra till ROSLPY+Fardhem 1908, Västerhejde 1892 /GJORT GEOFILER Helianthemum nummularium var. obscurum På Gotland, infoga följande tre rader: Fardhem 9 juli 1908 Torborg Trafvenfelt (UPS; together with untypical ssp. nummularium) Wisby mot Vesterhejde Aug. 1892 Rudolf Larsson (S) Both specimens have a number of large stellate hairs on lower sides of leaves and are thus not fully typical. På Kalmar, infoga följande rad: Sm. Calmar vid jernvägsstationen 7/6 1884 M. Lönnroth (UPS); casual? /ThK sv granskning/GJORT xviii [ATT SPARA i checklista, vanligt fel: slut-l dubbeltecknas i brittisk engelska (labelled), i amerikansk engelska vanligtvis inte / kollat Cambridge Dictionaries online MA 070829] xix Raino Lampinen, 8/23/2005 - Cistaceae - Helianthemum nummularium var. obscurum - Finnish name (used by Henry Väre in the translation of Mossberg / Stenberg): tanskanpäivännouto. xx MA: kolla skrivningen Flora Nordica: Cistaceae xxi Raino Lampinen, 8/23/2005 – Cistaceae - Helianthemum oelandicum - Finnish name (used by Henry Väre in the translation of Mossberg / Stenberg): öölanninpäivännouto xxii Raino Lampinen, 8/23/2005 – Cistaceae - Helianthemum oelandicum var. oelandicum - Finnish name (used by Henry Väre in the translation of Mossberg / Stenberg): kaljuöölanninpäivännouto xxiii BENGT: är typifieringsnoten klar? Nedan de gamla kommentarerna: BENGT: BJÖRN har ett ark från Hartmans herbarium med påskriften ”canescens” Bengts svar: Ja, han har det till låns från UPS. Typifieringen måste ju in i en Fl. Nordica note. BJÖRN: Kan du ordna en scanning av etiketten så att vi ser exakt vad där står och om Hartman själv skrivit? SVAR/BW: Ja, sänder bilder separat. / Har gjort utskrifter / THK CITAT FRÅN E-brev från mig till Björn 15/6 2005: ”Bengt och jag har tittat på bilderna av Hartman-arket i dag. Det är tydligen material från fyra olika lokaler uppfästade på arket. Det innebär att det finns risk för att det är olika taxa och då gäller det att välja ett av dem och det för taxonet ifråga mest utpräglade som typ. Vi måste ha info från dig om de fyra exemplarens morfologi, om de är var. oelandium, var. canescens, mellanting eller obestämbara. Sätt gärna detta i kortform på en bestämningslapp bredvid vart och ett av de fyra exemplaren (klistra fast med minsta möjliga mängd lim men så att de dock inte kan lossna!) Motivera dina bestämningar (gärna utförligt, men det behöver inte vara formulerat för tryckning) i brev till Bengt (gärna kopia till mig). Efter eventuell korrespondens och följdfrågor så skicka tillbaka arket till UPS så att Bengt kan detaljgranska etiketterna och de små siffrorna som verkar finnas på varje exemplar!” I interngranskningsversionen är ovanstående nedkokt till följande: BENGT, BJÖRN, THOMAS förbereder typifiering (typ: [något av de fyra exemplaren på] ett ark från Hartmans herbarium med påskriften ”canescens”) i Fl Nordica note. xxiv [AVKLARAT; kommentaren sparad som minneshjälp: BENGT: A. Hayek är omkombinerande auktor, Feddes Rep. Beih. 30(1): 497 (1925) enligt Med-Checklist. Bengts svar (i 2 omgångar): Beger (in Hegi), också 1925, är från Hylander 1943, men Med.Check List är ju senare och mer auktoritativ, så vi kan skifta till Hayek. – ThK: Hylander hade ju i och för sig kunnat ha rätt – men Hayeks kombination är från februari och Begers från augusti enligt TL-2 så det ska vara Hayek.] xxv THOMAS: blev namnändringen klar? BJÖRN: jag förstår att du helt gått ifrån hårigheten som taxonomisk karaktär och bygger underarterna på skottsystemen. Sen solvända eller sen ölandssolvända skulle kanske vara ett bättre namn. Men det är ju onekligen en viss korrelation mellan hårighet och blomningsstrategi, så att de flesta PF är håriga och de flesta CF är kala, så man kan kanske slippa att ändra namn – vi tycker ju att det krävs väldigt starka indikationer för att ändra ett någorlunda etablerat namn. Jag tar gärna synpunkter och argument (vi har en namnkommitté i Svenska Botaniska Föreningen)./ThK SVAR: Jag tycker att sen ölandssolvända är ett mer adekvat namn, eftersom de största ytorna med var. canescens domineras av icke filthåriga plantor. / BW – Svenska namnet ändras till sen ölandssolvända; jag tar upp det i namnkommittén i augusti!/ThK xxvi Raino Lampinen, 8/23/2005 – Cistaceae - Helianthemum oelandicum var. canescens - Finnish name (used by Henry Väre in the translation of Mossberg / Stenberg): villaöölanninpäivännouto xxvii BENGT kvarstående tveksamhet från Thomas: BENGT: Baseras Fumana vulgaris på Cistus fumana? I så fall ska de stå i samma stycke. Bengts svar: svar: Flora Nordica: Cistaceae Ja, han anför två varieteter och ”alfa minor” baseras på Cistus fumana. – ThKs komm: Jag är osäker på nomenklaturreglerna: innebär detta verkligen att ARTEN Fumana vulgaris baseras på Cistus fumana? Är det inte bara en omkombination under ett nytt artnamn?? xxviii Raino Lampinen, 8/23/2005 – Cistaceae - Fumana procumbens – Finnish name (used by Henry Väre in the translation of Mossberg / Stenberg): rentopäivänkilo xxix THOMAS: kan du kolla detta? BJÖRN: triangular-ovoid och convex-triangular saknas i vår termlista. Convex-triangular torde ha konvexa sidor o skarpa hörn, men triangular-ovoid är jag osäker på. Jag uppfattar ”triangular-ovoid” som ungefär samma form som ”ovoid, convex-triangular in cross section” – om det stämmer bör de formuleras lika, om det inte stämmer bör skillnaden om möjligt förtydligas. /Magdalena SVAR/BW: Ändrar enligt ditt förslag, men är inte riktigt nöjd med beskrivningen av kapselformen. BJÖRN: Jag hade nog inget förslag? Förstod bara inte skillnaden mellan två saker som beskrivits med olika ord (om det finns någon skillnad – finns det det?) och önskade därför ett förtydligande. /Magdalena xxx THOMAS: ”beskrivningen kollas också mot finska exet” är det gjort? xxxi Raino Lampinen, 8/23/2005 Cistaceae Tuberaria guttata TEXT F U Helsinki 1940, on storage place of Moroccan cork MAP U ENALXY See Pettersson, An Alien Flora on Drumsö (Helsingfors) introduced by Cork Bark imported from Morocco and Spain. - Memoranda Soc. Fauna Flora Fennica 27:111-117. Tuberaria guttata FID Helianthemum guttatum PRO U GRI 6672:382 *G2 COM Helsinki SIT Helsingfors, Drumsö HAB Fabrikstomt, upplagsplats för korkbark imp. fr. Marocko NAM Pettersson, Bror DAT 1940-10-03 SER 399181 SOU Herb Flora Nordica: Cistaceae HER H