Thank You Dr Rawat

Androsace must be put in my head now, its one group i always forget since
it did not really get into houseplants  lists  i never bought one and cared
for one etc etc


and thanks for mentioning the upcoming flowering days

So Ashwini now you have a job to do , ha ha...

thanks for showing these ...in their natural habitat..
usha di
ps looking forward to the hot and humid days of their flowering




On Wed, Mar 4, 2015 at 3:47 PM, Ashwini Bhatia <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Thank you Ushadi and Dr Rawat for your advice. I will wait for these to
> flower and post once again for ID confirmation.
>
> Regards,
> Ashwini
>
> On 04-Mar-2015, at 10:46 am, D.S Rawat <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> Usha Di is right in saying that flowering is the exact stage to determine
> exact ID.
> The first one to me is *Sedum rosulatum* and second one (with hairy
> leaves) is an *Androsace* species. But the same thing I will reiterate
> here- *flowering is the exact stage to determine exact ID*.
> And flowering is not too distant, will be visible withing 45-60 days (late
> April-May).
> Most often taxonomists are accustomed to recognize plants in flowering
> only. There are taxonomists which recognize plants only when it is in the
> form of herbarium specimens. Fortunately, we have taxonomists of all types
> in the group. I am sure these plants will be identified once in flowering.
>
> DSRawat Pantnagar
>
> Dr D.S.Rawat
> Department of Biological Sciences, G.B. Pant University of Agriculture &
> Technology Pantnagar-263 145 Uttarakhand, INDIA
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 3, 2015 at 10:30 PM, Ushadi Micromini <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Ashwini
>> these are naturally growing i take..
>>
>> first two are a sedum, one of the himalalyan stonecrop.. species name
>> eludes me right now..
>> may be sedum sedoides , but I may be off base... its supposed to have
>> some hairy leaves ... but best diagnosis is after it flowers...
>>
>>
>> and last three are Sempervium..  of the hens and chicks group of
>> succulents..
>> and these grow in colder mountainous climes
>>
>> Some echeverias can be hirsute also but they grow in mexico
>>
>>
>> Just like in sedum's case best diagnosis is from the flowering stalk and
>> its shape etc and flowers themselves.
>>
>> hope it helps
>>
>> and my be Gurcharanji and Dr Rawat may have more details
>> hope to hear from them
>> usha di
>>
>> On Tue, Mar 3, 2015 at 9:39 PM, Ashwini Bhatia <[email protected]
>> > wrote:
>>
>>> I photographed these on two different locations on different days.
>>> Though the general shape is similar, there is a difference in the surface
>>> texture (the one photographed earlier on a dry day is hairier). I thought
>>> these belong to spurge family but I am most likely wrong. Please advise.
>>>
>>> Mcleodganj, Dharamshala, HP
>>> 1750m
>>> 22 Feb/ 03 March 2015
>>>
>>> Thanks.
>>> Ashwini
>>>
>>> <IMG_2709_3March15.jpg><IMG_2710_3March15.jpg>
>>>
>>> 22 Feb 15
>>>
>>> <IMG_2563_22Feb15.jpg><IMG_2564_22Feb15.jpg><IMG_2564c_22Feb15.jpg>
>>>
>>> --
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>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Usha di
>> ===========
>>
>
>


-- 
Usha di
===========

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