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''Paeonia sterniana'' is a perennial, herbaceous peony of approximately 45 cm high in cultivation, with white or sometimes pinkish flowers. It grows in the wild in southeastern Tibet. This peony is very rare in cultivation. It produces blue seeds in autumn. Its common name in Chinese is 白花芍药 (bai hua shao yao), which means "white peony".


Description

''Paeonia sterniana'' is a hairless
perennial A perennial plant or simply perennial is a plant that lives more than two years. The term ('' per-'' + '' -ennial'', "through the years") is often used to differentiate a plant from shorter-lived annuals and biennials. The term is also wid ...
herbaceous plant Herbaceous plants are vascular plants that have no persistent wood, woody stems above ground. This broad category of plants includes many perennial plant, perennials, and nearly all Annual plant, annuals and Biennial plant, biennials. Definition ...
of up to 90 cm high, with leaves alternately set along the stems, which flowers in it home range in May, while the seeds are ripe as off September. It is a diploid
nothospecies #REDIRECT Hybrid name In botanical nomenclature, a hybrid may be given a hybrid name, which is a special kind of botanical name, but there is no requirement that a hybrid name should be created for plants that are believed to be of hybrid origin. T ...
with ten chromosomes (2n=10), that results from hybridisation between ''P. lactiflora'' and ''P. mairei''.


Root, stem and leaves

It has thick tapering roots, that are reminiscent of carrots and are up to 30 cm long and 1½ cm thick. The lower leaves consist of three sets of three or more leaflets, those in the middle with three main segments and each one incised, while the side leaflets have two unequal segments. The leaflets are dark green above and glaucous beneath, linear-oblong or lanceolate in shape, 5–12 cm long and 1-2½ cm wide, with a base that gradually narrows into the leaflet stalk segments, lobed or with an entire margin and a pointy tip. The number of segments and lobes may be between twenty and forty. ''cited on''


Flowers, fruits and seed

The flowers occur with one together at the end of the stem, are 8–10 cm in diameter, although sometimes aborted flower buds may be found in the axil of highest leaves. Each flower is subtended by three or four unequal leaflet-like bracts. Each flower has three, rarely four roundish
sepal A sepal () is a part of the flower of angiosperms (flowering plants). Usually green, sepals typically function as protection for the flower in bud, and often as support for the petals when in bloom., p. 106 The term ''sepalum'' was coine ...
s of 2-2½ × 1½-2 cm, more or less extending into a narrow tip. The white or pale pink petals have an inverted egg-shape and are about 3½ × 2 cm. Both the filaments and anthers are yellow. There is very short yellow disk which encloses the base of two to four green and hairless carpels, which are topped by white styles capped by red to purple stigmas. The carpels later develop into ovoid fruits called follicle of 2½-3 cm long and about 1 cm wide. Mature seeds are indigo-blue while the inside of the follicles is bright red.


Differences with related species

'' Paeonia emodi'' is much alike ''P. sterniana'', having white flowers with entirely yellow stamens, and segmented leaflets. ''P. emodi'' however is with up to 1 m much taller, has only one or rarely two carpels developing per flower which are softly hairy, has several flowers per stem, and ten to fifteen segments in each lower leaf, while in ''P. sterniana'' flowers are solitary, have two to four hairless carpels and the lower leaves consist of twenty to forty segments and lobes. ''cited on'' The seeds ''P. emodi'' ripen much later than those of ''P. sterniana'', which are already shed in August.


Taxonomy

''Paeonia sterniana'' resulted from hybridisation between '' P. lactiflora'' and '' P. mairei'' which in the past probably were sympatric in the Himalayas, but are no longer present in the same area where ''P. sterniana'' occurs. ''P. sterniana'' was discovered for western science in 1938, by
Frank Ludlow Frank Ludlow OBE (10 August 1885 – 25 March 1972) was an English officer stationed in the British Mission at Lhasa and a naturalist. Life He was born in Chelsea, London and studied at West Somerset County School and Sidney Sussex College, Ca ...
and George Taylor. Seeds were brought to the West in 1947, and subsequently cultivation started at
Kew Gardens Kew Gardens is a botanic garden in southwest London that houses the "largest and most diverse botanical and mycological collections in the world". Founded in 1840, from the exotic garden at Kew Park, its living collections include some of the ...
.
Harold Roy Fletcher Harold Roy Fletcher FRSE (14 April 1907 – 27 August 1978) was an English botanist and horticulturalist. He was Regius Keeper of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh from 1956 to 1970 and Her Majesty's Botanist 1966 to 1978. As an author he is kno ...
described the species in 1959. In 1997
Joseph Halda Josef Jakob Halda (born 7 December 1943) is a Czech botanist who worked at the Institute of Botany of the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic. He became a member of the Czech Botanical Society in 1987. He studied the flora of the Czech Republic and m ...
thought this taxon not worthy of full species status and reduced it to ''P. emodi'' subsp. ''sterniana''. This view however is not supported in the most recent literature.


Etymology

The species was named in honor of Frederick Claude Stern, who supported plant hunting in China and wrote a comprehensive book on peonies. ''cited on''


Distribution

''Paeonia sterniana'' grows among shrubs on stony slopes, and in oak forest, between 2800–3500 m altitude, in southeastern
Tibet Tibet (; ''Böd''; ) is a region in East Asia, covering much of the Tibetan Plateau and spanning about . It is the traditional homeland of the Tibetan people. Also resident on the plateau are some other ethnic groups such as Monpa, Taman ...
( Tsangpo Valley), particularly in Kongbo, Tamnyen, and Gyala. ''cited on''


Cultivation

This species is said to be easy to grow, though requiring well-drained soil, and thought to be particularly suited for rock gardens.


References

{{Taxonbar, from=Q7124103 sterniana Endemic flora of Tibet Plants described in 1959 Garden plants of Asia