Cirsium falconeri (Hook.f.) Petr., 9 1912. (Syn: Chamaepeuce horrida DC.; Cirsium falconeri var. horrida (Hook.f.) Aswal & Goel; Cirsium involucratum var. horridum Hook.f.; Cnicus falconeri Hook.f.; Cnicus horridus C.B.Clarke [Illegitimate]); SIR-see-um -- Greek kirsion (kind of thistle) ... Dave's Botanary fal-KON-er-ee -- named for Hugh Falconer, Scottish doctor, geologist and botanist in India ... Dave's Botanary Asteraceae Fortnight Part 2-Discoid heads- Cirsium falconeri from Kashmir-GS30 : Attachments (3). 1 post by 1 author. Cirsium falconeri (Hook.f.) Petrak Syn: Cnicus falconeri Hook.f One of the most beautiful species of Cirsium found at altitudes above 2200 m. The whole plant is covered with whitish spines, even on upper surface of leaves. The heads are very large, cream coloured and nodding, Involucre bracts are woolly and with long pale spines. Photographed from Kashmir. I missed this one. Good, the two images from Gulmarg are correctly identified but the third (don't understand why an image from near Manali would be added) does not match. I shall be commenting further in due course. My focus is on Inula at present. VoF Week: Cirsium falconeri from way to Ghangriya: Cirsium falconeri from way to Ghangriya pls validate Yes ... Very good photographs I was prompted to check postings of Cirsium falconeri on eFI as I mentioned the species in images of the habitat of Inula royleana I have just posted. Of the 3 postings I have taken a very quick look at, this appears closest to C.falconeri, which I shall be posting images of from Kashmir. But I am still uncertain. Shall come back to these images and comment further. Must try to stick to concentrating on Inulas FIRST! But attention should always be drawn to possible, probable or definite misidentifications, at the earliest opportunity. Is it Cirsium falconeri : 5 posts by 4 authors. Attachments (3) Is it 'Cirsium falconeri' Photos taken at 'Aru' 'अडू' wildlife sanctuary, Lidder Valley, Jammu & Kashmir. Date- 05th August 2009. Yes, it is C. falconeri At last, after viewing several postings claiming to be Cirsium falconeri, at last one that does seem to fit! I shall be posting images of C.falconeri myself in due course for comparison purposes. Kashmir thistles and similar plants-8-Cirsium falconeri : 4 posts by 4 authors. Attachments (2) Cirsium falconeri from Kashmir, growing at altitudes above 2400 m, photographed on June 19, 2010 from Khillenmarg. Plant still in vegetative stage. The second out of several postings which looks correct (the location fits). I shall be posting my own images of C.falconeri in due course. Fwd: Cirsium falconeri 'Falconer's Thistle' in Kashmir + an 'Eastern Himalayan Form' : 1 post by 1 author. Attachments (9) Further to my recent posts re: Cirsium falconeri or in some cases thistle that are not this species - even its 'Eastern Himalayan Form'. I am posting images taken during my last visit to Kashmir a few years ago: 1-2 on Khelanmarg 3 expanse on Khelanmarg the Betula utlis on slope above 4-9 in Gulmarg I consider 'Falconer's Thistle' to be a magnificent, showy thistle - at least the one found in Kashmir. Flowers of the Himalaya says this thistle is found in forest clearings and on grazing grounds @ 2700-4300m from Pakistan to SE Tibet. There are, rather unusually 2 images of this thistle in 'Flowers of the Himalaya'. I have just read, for the first time, the text about Cirsium falconeri. Polunin & Stainton state there are two distinct forms, "which may in the future be considered as separate". From the small amount of information I can glean from the photo taken in Nepal, I would suggest they do justify being considered separate species! In case anyone reading this think that there are no mistakes in 'Flowers of the Himalaya'. This is a guide of a very high standard and I am sure I have consulted it more than anyone alive. A few errors did creep in. Such as the misidentification of the Primula photographed in Kulu on Plate 82 (No. 863) of this book - it is not P.reptans but P.minutissima. This has, perhaps, contributed to the long-standing confusion between the two species - the foliage of which, as ... correctly has posted, can readily be told apart, provided you know what you are looking for. So I ask all members of this group who have access to 'Flowers of the Himalaya' to compare the images 731 on Plate 70 photographed on Apharwat (see my attached images from here) with 731 on Plate 71. They do NOT match! Yes, species vary with plants in different locations, geographically, altitudinally or climatically but the specimen in Nepal is certainly a different taxon, I would suggest AT LEAST a different species!! Flowers of the Himalaya described the 'Kashmir Form' as covered with whitish spines giving a silvery appearance. Flower-heads globular, cream-coloured, nodding, 7-8.5cm across, involucral bracts densely woolly with very long pale spines. Leaves linear acute, with triangular toothed or lobed margins with pale spines, leaf-surface covered with spines; stems robust, winged, spiny. Apparently, the 'East Himalayan Form' has smaller purple flower-heads - plus, if the photo on Plate 71 is correct, other different features. Cirsium falconeri is not covered in 'The Supplement to Flowers of the Himalaya'. Nevertheless, my questioning of the postings named as Cirsium falconeri on eFI are not all explained away by them being the 'East Himalayan Form'. Stewart records C.falconeri from N.Pakistan & Kashmir, sometimes common on alpine meadows @ 2300-3600m. The largest species of this genus in the region. Just to confuse things further, 'Himalayan Plants Illustrated' have images of a Cirsium falconeri a & b - 'b' fits the Kashmir form. 'a' is very different. I cannot read Japanese to get any further details but will ask my eldest son (who teaches in Japan) to see if he can help. Important notes covering Cirsium falconeri by Kitamura and Gould within 'An Enumeration of the Flowering Plants of Nepal' Vol III (1982) state "C.falconeri as recognised here is a very variable species. Plants from Kashmir have leaves which are strongly spinsecent above, tomentose beneath, with lobes terminating in spines 1.5-2.5cm. The involucres are woolly and densely coloured in long yellow spines. Plants from the eastern Himalaya have leaves which are often sparsely spinescent above and with shorter spines on the lobes. Tomentum is sometimes absent from the leaves in involucres. , and involucral spines vary in length and density. THE AMOUNT OF VARIATION SUGGESTS THAT SEVERAL SPECIES MAY BE INVOLVED AND FURTHER STUDY IS REQUIRED". They record species from Central & East Nepal @ 3000-4300m but not Western Nepal. Distribution Kashmir to Bhutan, Myanamar, S.Tibet. I have taken a look at Flora of Bhutan Vol 2 Part 3 (1982) which covers Cirsium. Oddly, although they cover C.falconeri, which they do say is EXTREMELY variable in the Bhutan & Sikkim area they do not comment about Kitamura & Gould's assertion that "several species" may be involved. They record the 'species' from open hillsides & forest clearings @ 2745-4265m. There is a line drawing of what they consider to be C.falconeri which DOES NOT match C.falconeri in Kashmir.... They include species such as C.lipskyi, which I cannot at present relate to any species in Nepal (or further West). It would help if I examined pressed specimens of Cirsium at the Natural History Museum herbarium in London (which I visited regularly in the 1980s and 1990s) but do not currently have the funds to do so. Let me next check-out information from 'The Plant List' and any scanned in images from major herbaria. IT WOULD BE USEFUL IF INDIA FOLLOWED SUIT AND STARTED OFFERING, ON-LINE, QUALITY IMAGES, OF QUALITY SPECIMENS SCANNED IN AT HIGH DEFINITION (AS EDINBURGH HERBARIUM HAS STARTED TO DO) AT THEIR MAJOR HERBARIA. The specimen collected for Falconer available on the Kew site is the 'Kashmir' form of C.falconeri see: http://apps.kew.org/herbcat/getImage.do?imageBarcode=K000250071 - although low resolution the large size of this thistle means its habit and details can be seen clearly. This matches with the images I have posted below. There are quite a number of images supposedly of C.falconeri on google but I am sceptical of most - as for the photo taken in Bhutan, it looks ABSOLUTELY nothing like C.flaconeri!! That is MORE THAN ENOUGH for anyone reading all this to digest. I shall be commenting, in due course about the individual postings under the name C.falconeri on eFI and also have some slides of this species from Kashmir and in cultivation which I may share in a separate post. CLEARLY, this is a COMPLEX and COMPLICATED, HIGH VARIABLE THISTLE that requires further study. Thistles are often overlooked, viewed as rather 'weedy' in appearance - though some are highly ornamental, including the 'Kashmir Form' of Cirsium falconeri. I should think another factor is that the larger, spinier thistle would be a handful to collect, dry and press well - thus a further DETERRENT to them being well-represented (and thus better understood) in herbaria. IF species are under-collected and the specimens which exist in herbaria are of poor quality, it will come as no surprise that we do not know them well. I trust anyone taking a close look at my images below will agree that this is a DISTINCTIVE thistle that should not be readily mistaken for. Chris wrote this in 2016 after many threads where he says he will submit his own pictures. I see his pictures and wonder. he seems to only accept the flower heads at the end of their growing cycle as true Falconer's thistle. we should take this with a grain of salt. any flower has many stages of development. take pictures as in a stage of an end of life cycle of the thistle flower. none of his pictures are showing the disk of an open flower at its prime. how does one judge this judge to be a judge of all the cases of this thistle submitted over the years at this site and group emails Fwd: Cirsium falconeri in cultivation : 1 post by 1 author. Attachments (2) Here with a couple of images of the Kashmir form of Cirsium falconeri in cultivation in the UK in the 1980s taken as slides then scanned in. I think these will further emphasise the differences between C.falconeri and other thistles growing in the Himalaya. Names of Plants in India :: Cirsium falconeri (Hook.f.) Petr. : 2 posts by 2 authors. via Species > C > Cirsium falconeri (Hook.f.) Petr. ... family: Asteraceae SIR-see-um -- Greek kirsion (kind of thistle) ... Dave's Botanary fal-KON-er-ee -- named for Hugh Falconer, Scottish doctor, geologist and botanist in India ... Dave's Botanary commonly known as: Falconer's thistle • Nepali: गिद्ध प्वांखे giddh pwankhe botanical names: Cirsium falconeri (Hook.f.) Petr. ... synonyms: Chamaepeuce horrida DC. • Cnicus falconeri Hook.f. • Cnicus horridus C.B.Clarke [Illegitimate] • Cnicus involucratus (C.B.Clarke) Hook.f. ... status at The Plants List (2013). Version 1.1. July 31, 2012 ... Auli Cirsium falconeri :: Ghangaria, Uttarakhand :: Aug 2018 :: ARKSEP-18 : 6 posts by 3 authors. Attachments (5) Saw these in Ghangaria, Uttarakhand in Aug 2018 at the start of the trek to VOF. These have been identified based on the pics available in efi to be occuring in that area. Kindly validate. Yes to me also appear close to images at Cirsium falconeri (Hook.f.) Petr. What was the elevation ...? This was in Ghangaria itself. So it should be around 3050 m. Cirsium falconeri Falconer's Thistle Family - Asteraceae Photographed at Barot Valley, Himachal Pradesh Altitude - 2700 metres asl Dated - 2 September 2018 References: |
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