'Rosa elliptica auct. eur.' rose References
HelpMeFind's future is in your hands - Please do not take this unique resource for granted.
Your support of HelpMeFind is urgently needed. HelpMeFind, like all websites, needs funding to survive. We have set a premium-membership yearly subscription amount as low as possible to make user-community funding viable.
We are grateful to the many members who have signed up so far, but the number of premium-membership members remains too small for us to sustain the current support and development level. If you value HelpMeFind and want to see it continue we need your support too.
Yearly membership is only $2.00 per month and adds a host of additional features, and numerous planned enhancements, to take full advantage of the power and convenience of HelpMeFind. Click here to start your premium membership..
We of course also welcome donations of any amount. Click here to make a donation. Donations of $24 or more receive a thank-you gift of a 1-year premium membership.
As far as we have come, we feel HelpMeFind is still in its infancy. With your support we have so much more to accomplish.
Book (1994) Page(s) 263. R. inodora Fries Synonyms: R. elliptica Tausch; R. caryophyllacea Bess; and R. graveolens Gren. & Godr. Related to Rosa rubiginosa, west and central Europe in the S.E. to Albania and Western Ukraine. Scent is stronger and less pleasant that Rosa rubiginosa.
Book (Apr 1993) Page(s) 507. R. inodora (Fries) Species (Old Garden Rose), flowers white or pink (w), (R. agrestis inodora Keller; R. caryophyllacea Besser; R. elliptica Tausch; R. graveolens Grenier; R. klukii [sic] Besser); Cultivated 1875. Allied to R. eglanteria...
Website/Catalog (1986) Page(s) 36. Rosa pulverulent a* (Rosa glutinosa). A short, prickly shrub with small pinkish-white single flowers and small, round fruit. Foliage scented of pine. 1821. P. F. Shade tolerant (S) 3 x 3’.
Book (1917) Page(s) 38. Mr. H. R. Darlington. Some Early-Flowering Species of Roses. The second is R. inodora often sold under the name R. pulverulanta (a name given by Baker, and not Marschall von Bieberstein's plant of that name). The flowers are white and very beautiful, and the plants make a fairly compact bushes of some 2-ft. to 3-ft. high. Though it is apparently now known as R. inodora, the title is something of a misnomer, for if the leaves be crushed or rubbed at the back, the Sweet Briar perfume becomes very marked.
Magazine (Aug 1909) Page(s) 315-316. Dans leur Aide-Mémoire du cêcidiologue pour les Plantes d’Europe et du Bassin de la Méditerranée, MM. G. Darboux et C. Houard indiquent les espèces ou variétés suivantes sur lesquelles ont été observées des galles : Rosa acicularis, agrestis, alba, alpina, alpinaxglauca, alpinaxtomentosa, arvensis, canina, caninaxgallica, carelica, caucasica, centifolia, cinnamomea, coriifolia, dumalis, dumetorum, dumetorumxgallica, eglanteria, farinosa, gallica, glauca, graveolens, inodora, micrantha, montana, pimpinellifolia, rubiginosa, rubrifolia, rugosa, sempervirens, sepium, spinosissima, tomentella, tomentosa, villosa et quelques autres.
[species where rose gall has been observed]
Article (magazine) (1897) Page(s) 141. R. graveolens Gren.
a. Feuille. — Poils simples sur les deux épidermes. Poils glandulifères à la face inférieure des nervures et sur le pétiole. Épiderme supérieur recticurviligne, d'une épaisseur de 21-29 μ, à cellules grandes. Epidémie inférieur recticurviligne ou subonduleux, d'une épaisseur de 1-4-18 μ, à cellules grandes. Stomates d'une longueur de 32-34 μ., plus grands ou plus petits que les cellules environnantes. Mésophylle bifacial, d'une épaisseur de 123-140 μ, composé de 5-7 assises, les deux supérieures transformées en palissades remplissant 1/2-2/3 de l'épaisseur totale. Parenchyme spongieux lacuneux, à cellules courtes, assez irrégulièrement disposées. Faisceaux libéro-ligneux des nervures et du pétiolule avec ou sans fibres péridesmiques bien développées.
b. Tige. — Cuticule très épaisse. Parenchyme cortical composé de 17-20 assises de cellules régulièrement orientées. Liber pourvu ordinairement de fibres mécaniques dans sa moitié externe. Moelle à cellules grandes ou moyennes.
c. Pédoncule floral. — Collenchyme en massifs inégaux. Moelle à cellules grandes ou moyennes.
|