Lamiaceae |
Salvia recognita |
Salvia L. Salvia recognita FISCH. ET MEY. Ömür: Çok yıllık Yapı: ot Hayat formu: İlk çiçeklenme zamanı: 5 Son çiçeklenme zamanı: 8 Habitat: bozkırdaki kireçtaşı ve volkanik yamaçlar ve hareketli kayalar, meşe çalılıkları Minimum yükseklik: 900 Maksimum yükseklik: 2200 Endemik: endemik Element: İran-Turan Türkiye dağılımı: O., G. ve D. Anadolu Genel dağılımı: Türkiye Bulunduğu kareler :A4 B4 B5 B6 B7 C4 C5 C6 |
S. recognita Fisch. & Mey. in Ann. Sci. Nat. ser. 4, 1:33 (1854). Perennial herb. Stems 40-90 cm, erect, quadrangular, branched above, glandular-villous above and below with long spreading hairs, glabrous and glaucous in middle. Leaves pinnate (rarely simple) with a large oblong-ovate terminal segment, 4-8(-13) x 3-5 cm and 1-2 pairs of small lateral segments, rugose, crenulate, glandular-pilose; petiole 4-8 cm. Verticillasters 4-6-flowered, clearly distant. Bracts to 12 mm, deciduous. Pedicels 3-5 mm, ± erect. Calyx ovate, c. 12 mm, to 18 mm in fruit, glandular-villous, upper lip straight, very shortly tridentate, not mucronate. Corolla lilac-pink, 35-40 mm; tube straight, widening above, ± annulate c. 14 mm from base; upper lip straight. Stamens A. Nutlets ± spherical, c. 3.5 x 3 mm. 2n = 14, 16. Fl. 5-8. Limestone and igneous slopes and screes in steppe, Quercus scrub, 900-2200 m. Type: [Turkey B5 Kayseri] Ali-Dagh, propeKaiseriam, 1849, Tchihatcheff (holo. P?). Mainly C. Anatolia, rare in S. & E. A4 Çankiri: Eldivan Da. above Bakirli, 1550 m, A. & T. Baytop (ISTE 35255)! B4 Ankara: Ankara, 900 m, Balls 2372! B5 Kayseri: Ali Da., 1650 m, Balls 1387! Nevşehir: Ürgüp, 1300 m, Stainton 8466! B6 Adana: Saimbeyli, Maniss. 1007! B7 Tunceli: above Selepur, 1500 m, D. 31607! C4 Içel: 33 km E. of Mut, 1260 m, Hub.-Mor. 9602! C5 Niğde: Ala Da., 1980 m, Wood & Gibson 144! Adana: Ala Da., N. of Pozanti, Bisby 29! C6 Maraş: c. 10 km N. of Andirin, c. 950 m, Sorger 73-13-35! Endemic. Ir.-Tur. element. Characterised by the stem indumentum and large corollas. In the same broad alliance as S. pilifera, S. pinnata and S. tigrina, but clearly differing from them in several features. |