Crocus sieberi

Species of flowering plant


title: "Crocus sieberi" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["crocus", "garden-plants", "flora-of-bulgaria", "flora-of-greece", "plants-described-in-1831", "taxa-named-by-jaques-étienne-gay"] description: "Species of flowering plant" topic_path: "general/crocus" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crocus_sieberi" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Species of flowering plant ::

|image = Crocus sieberi Tricolor06.jpg |image_caption = Crocus sieberi subsp. sublimis 'Tricolor' |taxon = Crocus sieberi |authority = J.Gay |synonyms ={{species list |Crocus sibiricus|Barr |Crocus sibthorpianus|Herb. |Crocus sibthorpianus var. angustifolius|Herb. |Crocus sibthorpianus var. latifolius|Herb. |Crocus sibthorpianus var. stauricus|Herb. |Crocus sieberi var. heterochromus|Halácsy |Crocus sieberi var. sibthorpianus|(Herb.) Nyman |Crocus sieberi var. versicolor|Boiss. & Heldr. |Crocus sieberianus|Herb.}} |synonyms_ref =

Crocus sieberi, Sieber's crocus, also referred to as the Cretan crocus or snow crocus (as is Crocus chrysanthus), is a plant of the genus Crocus in the family Iridaceae. A small, early blooming crocus, it easily naturalises, and is marked by a brilliant orange which is mostly confined to the stamens and style, fading through the bottom third of the tepal. It grows wild generally in the Balkans: Greece, especially in the island of Crete, Bulgaria, Albania and North Macedonia. There are four subtypes: sieberi (Crete), atticus (Attica area around Athens), nivalis and sublimis. Its cultivars are used as ornamental plants. Height: 3 -.

Subspecies

There are four subspecies of C. sieberi.

  • Crocus sieberi subsp. sieberi - Native to Crete: flowering in April. The white flowers with yellow throats stand up to 8 cm, the outer surfaces of the flowers are marked with varying degrees of purple. The branched styles are deep orange or yellow.

  • Crocus sieberi subsp. *atticus * - Native to the Attica region of Greece, it has lilac-blue or violet flowers with yellow throats. The corm tunics are more coarsely netted than the other subspecies. It is found growing in stony areas in the mountains and in woods and scrub areas usually above 1000 meters, with flowering occurring from March to June.

  • Crocus sieberi subsp. sublimis - Native to the Peloponnese, southern Albania, North Macedonia, and also found in southern Bulgaria, has pale lilac flowers with pale yellow throats.

  • Crocus sieberi subsp. nivalis - Native to the Peloponnese with lilac-blue flowers that have yellow throats.

Uses

*Crocus sieberi *is cultivated in gardens as an ornamental plant for its flowers. It has also been used as food; in Greece the corms are eaten raw - with the flavor said to resemble hazelnuts. In Turkey, the leaves are eaten as greens.

Cultivars

Examples:

  • 'Bowles's White' (white with orange centre)
  • 'Firefly' (lilac)
  • 'Hubert Edelsten' is a cross between Crocus sieberi subsp. sieberi and Crocus sieberi subsp. atticus. (outside deep purple with broad white bands, inside pale lilac with orange center)
  • 'Ronald Ginns' (pale pink to white petals with dark purple feathering on the outside and a yellow throat)
  • 'Tricolor' (gold centre, middle white band, outer rich lilac-blue edge)
  • 'Violet Queen' (deep amethyst-violet flowers, paler within, with a rich, golden centre)
  • Crocus sieberi subsp. sublimis forma tricolor burtt. - from Mt. Chelmos in the northern Peloponnese. Plants are more variable than the cultivar 'Tricolor', with bright lilac flowers that have bright orange throats and a white band.

The cultivars marked have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

File: Crocus sieberi Bowles White1.jpg|Crocus sieberi subsp. atticus 'Bowles White' File: Crocus_sieberi - tricolor.jpg|Crocus sieberi corms

References

References

  1. {{PLANTS
  2. {{BSBI 2007
  3. "Crocus sieberi J.Gay {{!}} Plants of the World Online {{!}} Kew Science".
  4. Phillips, Roger. (1989). "The Random House book of bulbs". Random House.
  5. "RHS Plant Selector - ''Crocus sieberi'' 'Bowles's White'".
  6. "RHS Plant Selector - ''Crocus sieberi'' 'Hubert Edelsten'".
  7. "RHS Plant Selector - ''Crocus sieberi'' subsp. ''sublimis'' 'Tricolor'".
  8. Ruksans, Janis. (2011-01-12). "Crocuses: A Complete Guide to the Genus". Timber Press.
  9. "RHS Plant Selector - ''Crocus sieberi''".

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