Thanks Gurcharan ji for the clarification. - Tabish On Wednesday, September 5, 2012 3:34:59 AM UTC+5:30, Gurcharan Singh wrote: > > Thanks Tabish ji > I know when you raise some doubt, some thing good comes out. > Clinopodium umbrosum as well as the related species C. vulgare show lot > of variation in leaf size, leaf may be subentire, crenulate to serrate in > both the species, and intergrading forms do occur. Former has loose distant > whorls, smaller bracts barely up to 4 mm long and corolla 6-9 mm longer, > the leaves are more sharply toothed typically. C. vulgare has leaves less > sharply toothed almost subentire, whorls condensed, bracts 5-10 mm long and > corolla 10-15 mm long I agree we should have typical specimens on our > websites for clear reference. . I am uploading some more photographs for > comparison from Kashmir. > The above from Dinesh ji I am sure belong to C. umbrosum. > > -- > Dr. Gurcharan Singh > Retired Associate Professor > SGTB Khalsa College, University of Delhi, Delhi-110007 > Res: 932 Anand Kunj, Vikas Puri, New Delhi-110018. > Phone: 011-25518297 Mob: 9810359089 > http://www.gurcharanfamily.com/ > http://people.du.ac.in/~singhg45/ > > > > On Sun, Sep 2, 2012 at 12:48 PM, Dinesh Valke > <[email protected]<javascript:> > > wrote: > >> Tabish, I do not see toothed margin described for leaf at FOI. >> Do we re-validate both: posted plant and that at FOI ? >> Regards. >> Dinesh >> >> >> >> >> >> >> On Mon, Sep 3, 2012 at 12:41 AM, Tabish <[email protected] >> <javascript:>>wrote: >> >>> The angle of your shot made it deceptive. It is an interrupted spike, >>> but the shot, although very beautiful, makes it appear as a continuous >>> spike. >>> Still can't believe it is the same as this: >>> http://www.flowersofindia.net/catalog/slides/Shady%20Calamint.html >>> - Tabish >>> >>> -- >>> >>> >>> >>> >> >> -- >> >> >> >> > > > > >
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