Allium aeginiense

Allium aeginiense is a plant species endemic to Greece.[1] It is known only from the area near Meteora in the Thessaly region.[2]

Allium aeginiense
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Amaryllidaceae
Subfamily: Allioideae
Genus: Allium
Species:
A. aeginiense
Binomial name
Allium aeginiense
Brullo, Giusso & Terrasi

Allium aeginiense produces an egg-shaped bulb up to 25 mm across. Leaves are flat, green, very narrow, up to 10 cm long but rarely more than 1.5 mm wide, covered with hairs up to 2 mm long. Scape is round in cross-section, up to 20 cm tall, hairless, bearing an umbel of up to 40 flowers. Flowers are bell-shaped, pinkish-purple, with yellow anthers and a green ovary.[2]

References

  1. Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families, Allium aeginiense
  2. Salvatore Brullo, Gianpietro Giusso del Galdo, & Maria Carmen Terrasi. 2008. Allium aeginiense Brullo, Giusso & Terrasi, a new species from Greece. Candollea 63:197-203.
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