- Source: Primula parryi
Primula parryi, or Parry's primrose, is a herbaceous perennial native to wet areas from the subalpine zone to alpine tundra in the Rocky Mountains from Montana to Arizona and New Mexico.
Flowers are magenta with yellow eyes. In the high mountains, they bloom in summer; at lower elevations, in late spring.
The whole plant has a skunklike smell.
Asa Gray named Parry's primrose for Charles Christopher Parry, who discovered it in 1861. Parry had previously named Grays Peak after him.
References
External links
Media related to Primula parryi at Wikimedia Commons
Data related to Primula parryi at Wikispecies
Southwest Colorado Wildflowers
Primula parryi in the CalPhotos photo database, University of California, Berkeley
Native Plant Identification Network, USDA PLANTS Profile
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Sembulau
- Primula parryi
- Primula
- List of Primula species
- List of Primulales of Montana
- List of Canadian plants by family P–Q
- List of least concern plants
- List of flora of the Sonoran Desert Region by common name
- List of flora of Utah
- Flora of the Sierra Nevada alpine zone
- List of near threatened plants