Glebionis carinata

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Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture

Chrysanthemum carinatum, Schousb. (C. tricolor, Andr. C. matricaroides, Hort.). Fig. 927. Glabrous annual, 2-3 ft. high: st. much branched: lvs. rather fleshy, pinnatifid: fls. in solitary heads which are nearly 2 in. across, with typically white rays and a yellow ring at the base; involucral bracts carinate (keeled). Summer. The two colors, together with the dark purple disk, gave rise to the name "tricolor." The typical form, intro. into England from Morocco in 1798, was pictured in B.M. 508 (1799). By 1856 signs of doubling appeared (F.S. 11:1099). In 1858 shades of red in the rays appeared in a strain intro. by F. K. Burridge, of Colchester, England, and known as C. Burridgeanum, Hort. (see B.M. 5095, which shows a ring of red on the rays, adding a fourth color to this remarkably brilliant and varied fl., and F.S. 13:1313, which also shows C. venustum, Hort., in which the rays are entirely red, except the original yellow circle at the base). G. 2:307. Gn.W. 24:675. C. annulatum, Hort., is a name for the kinds with circular bands of red, maroon, or purple. R.H. 1869:450. C. Dunnetti, Hort., is another seed grower's strain. There are full double forms in yellow margined red, and white margined red, the fls. 3 in. across (see R.H. 1874:410), under many names. See, also, Gn. 26, p. 440; 10. p. 213; 21:22. R.H. 1874, p. 412. S.H. 2:477. G.W. 14, p. 99.—The commonest and gaudiest of annual chrysanthemums, distinguished by the keeled or ridged scales of involucre and the dark purple disk. CH


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