© David Badke (Photo ID #74382)
General:
Plants perennial, from a single large (3-15 cm across), round, flattened tuber.
Leaves:
Leaves appearing in fall and persisting to spring, ovate-cordate, toothed, margins strongly 5- to 9-angled, glabrous, dark green with pale variegation (centre darker, surrounded by paler area); long-stalked, petioles arising directly from the tuber.
Flowers:
Flowers appearing before the leaves, solitary per scape, terminal, nodding; corollas whitish to pink, usually darker pink towards the throat, 5-lobed; corolla lobes 1-2 cm, very sharply reflexed, with a pair of pale pink or white auricles at the base; calyces green to reddish, puberulent, campanulate, equalling the corolla tube, 5-lobed, lobes triangular to broadly lanceolate; stamens included (giving the corollas a truncate appearance). Flowering Aug-Oct.
Fruits:
Fruits globose capsules.
Stems:
Stems scapose, arising directly from the tuber, ascending to erect (becoming spirally coiled in fruit), glabrous at the base and becoming fine-hairy below the flower, reddish-tinged, 8-9 per tuber, 10-20 cm tall
Source: The Vascular Flora of British Columbia, draft 2014.
Author: Jamie Fenneman
Source: The Vascular Flora of British Columbia, draft 2014.
Author: Jamie Fenneman
Synonyms and Alternate Names:
Cyclamen neapolitanum Ten.
This species blooms in the fall, with the flowers appearing before the leaves, and the leaves persist through the winter and into the following spring. Although reasonably common in the Victoria area, this popular garden species is apparently not naturalized anywhere else in North America.
Source: The Vascular Flora of British Columbia, draft 2014 |