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31 December 2016 Salvia ali-askaryi (Lamiaceae), a New Species from Kurdistan, Iraq
Saman A. Ahmad
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Salvia ali-askaryi (Lamiaceae), a new species from Kurdistan Iraq, is described and illlustrated, and its distinguishing characters are discussed. It is easily separated from S. microstegia by having broadly ovate or elliptic-oblong (vs. ovate to oblong), irregularly serrate or dentate (vs. obtusely lobed) leaves, 12–23- (vs. 4–6)-flowered verticillasters, shortly bilobed or emarginate (vs. shortly tridentate, and median tooth much shorter) upper lip, and globose (vs. ovoid) nutlets 3–4 mm in diameter (vs. 3 × 2.5 mm). It differs from S. argentea by having usually eglandular lanate (vs. not lanate) lower stems, irregularly serrate or dentate (vs. irregularly erose) leaf margins, and white (vs. white, with a violet tinged) upper corolla lip.

© President and Fellows of Harvard College, 2016
Saman A. Ahmad "Salvia ali-askaryi (Lamiaceae), a New Species from Kurdistan, Iraq," Harvard Papers in Botany 21(2), 227-229, (31 December 2016). https://doi.org/10.3100/hpib.v21iss2.2016.n7
Published: 31 December 2016
KEYWORDS
Azmar-Goihza Mts.
Iraq
Kurdistan
Lamiaceae
Salvia
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