6Th Lily Supplement
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
The International Lily Register & Checklist (2007) Sixth Supplement © 2019 The Royal Horticultural Society 80 Vincent Square, London SW1P 2PE, United Kingdom www.rhs.org.uk Charity registration number 222879 / SC038262 International Registrar: Duncan Donald E-mail: [email protected] All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright holder ISBN 9781907057960 Printed and bound in the UK by Page Bros, Norwich (MRU) The previous supplement (Fifth Supplement) was published on 13th February 2017 Cover: Lilium ‘Willcrovidii’; drawing of Award of Merit plant by Winifred Walker, 1932. Image courtesy of RHS Herbarium, Wisley The International Lily Register and Checklist 2007 Sixth Supplement Introduction page 1 Notes on the entries page 2 Horticultural Classification page 4 Register and Checklist page 6 List of registrants page 116 The lily epithets listed here were registered between 1 September 2014 and 31 August 2016. Details of lilies with unregistered names are published also, as a Checklist, as are significant amendments to existing registrations. Epithets which conformed to the Articles (and, ideally, Recommendations) of the 2009 edition of the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants (ICNCP) were deemed acceptable for registration [though entries have subsequently been updated to the 2016 edition, including the new use of adopted epithets]. Although registration is a voluntary procedure and does not confer any legal protection on the plant, the Royal Horticultural Society – as International Cultivar Registration Authority for Lilium – urges all hybridizers, raisers and introducers to register their lily names, to minimize potential confusion caused by new epithets the same as, or very similar to, existing names. Registration, for which a certificate can be issued on request, is free of charge, and should take place before a plant is released or described in a catalogue. Registration forms are available from https://www.rhs.org.uk/plants/plantsmanship/plant-registration/ lily-cultivar-registration as an online download; from Duncan Donald (International Registrar) at RHS Garden, Wisley, Woking, Surrey GU23 6QB or via e-mail: [email protected]; or from the Regional Representatives listed below. The Royal Horticultural Society is indebted to the following Regional Representatives for their efforts to encourage the registration of lily names and for contributing amendments to The International Lily Register and Checklist and its Supplements: • Australia: Mr Neil Jordan, 27 Scarfe Street, Camdale, Tasmania 7320 E-mail: [email protected] • Czech Republic: Ing. Břetislav Mičulka, 687 07 Velehrad 225 E-mail: [email protected] • The Netherlands: Mrs Saskia Bodegom, Koninklijke Algemeene Vereeniging voor Bloembollencultuur, Postbus 175, 2180 AD Hillegom E-mail: [email protected] • New Zealand: Formerly Mrs Merle I. Lepper, P.O. Box 1394, Christchurch E-mail: [email protected]; latterly Mrs Claire Patten, 40 Macdonald’s Road, Christchurch 8051 • Russia Dr Alex Otroshko, 2-Pugachiovskaja, Moscow 107061 Russia E-mail: [email protected] International Lily Register & Checklist 2007 6th Supplement 1 Notes on the entries The format of entries is broadly similar to the layout adopted forThe International Lily Register and Checklist 2007. Parentage Where known, the seed parentage is given first. Where the seed parent is unknown, the parents are given in alphabetical order. The hybrid sign × separates the two parents; if a parent is itself an unnamed cross, the hybrid parent is enclosed in parentheses [e.g. (‘Peachwood’ × ‘Cherrywood’)]. Where necessary for clarity, a larger multiplication sign, X, may be used to distinguish between parental formulae [e.g. ‘Foggy Morning’ X (‘Peachwood’ × ‘Cherrywood’)]. Roles The sequence and explanation of the abbreviations is as follows: S: Selected by H: Hybridizer G: Grown to first flowering by N: Named by I: Introduced by REG: Registrant Since the last Supplement was issued, the EU General Data Protection Regulations have been implemented, with significant consequences for the way in which personal data can legitimately be stored or published. Registrants are currently requested to note and agree to the following statement: Personal Data Processing Notice and Agreement In completing and submitting this form you are agreeing for the Royal Horticultural Society, as International Cultivar Registration Authority (ICRA), to process your personal data for purposes of the ICRA plant name registration and for scientific and historical research purposes and statistical purposes. Under the data protection legislation this will be processed lawfully under this agreement. When registering the plant name we will ask you to provide the following: your full name, your postal and email addresses. As part of the registration process, you may also supply personal data about other people involved in the origin and development of the plant such as the raiser of the plant. Where this is the case, the RHS ICRA rely on our legitimate interest under the Data Protection Act 2018 and the General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR) to process third party personal data that you may provide to us for the purposes set out above. Where you are registering a plant on behalf of another individual such as the raiser of the plant, as the registrant you will be required to confirm that you have the written consent from that individual to supply their personal data to the RHS for the purposes of ICRA plant name registration. The personal data we collect is required for the purposes of the ICRA plant name registration which requires RHS as the ICRA to maintain a record and knowledge of who has been involved in creating a plant for the purposes of tracing the origin and lineage. The RHS ICRA will publish your name and abbreviated address (home town, county/state and country) in print and online as required to complete the registration. The RHS ICRA will publish the name only of any other individual associated with the development of the plant from the information you supply. The publication is required for purposes of providing information of the origins and lineage of the plants. Where you have supplied information to explain the choice of the name for plant being registered, and that information is about another individual, the RHS ICRA will store and publish in abbreviated format that information. Where it relates to a child under the age of 16, written consent from the person with parental responsibility for the child must be provided to the RHS ICRA along with the application to register the plant name giving you and the RHS ICRA permission to process and publish the child’s personal data as explained above. The RHS ICRA will retain your and any other individual’s personal data you provide permanently in our plant registration database for archiving purposes in the public interest, and for scientific and historical research purposes and statistical purposes and the published data will be retained permanently in an abbreviated format. The RHS ICRA will share the published data (as defined above) about you with other organisations in other countries, including to plant registration organisations in the USA and European Economic 2 International Lily Register & Checklist 2007 6th Supplement Area, with a specific interest in the plants the ICRA registers solely for the purpose of promoting knowledge of the registered plants. The transfer of your personal data will be strictly carried out in accordance with the Data Protection Act 2018 and the GDPR and controlled under formal Standard Contractual Clauses, issued by the EU Commission and ICO, between the RHS and the organisation receiving the data. The RHS ICRA undertakes to hold all such personal data securely, and commits to upholding the rights and freedoms of individuals in line with the Data Protection Act 2018 and the GDPR. For more information on how we process and protect your personal data and your rights, please see our RHS Privacy Policy on our website. The list of hybridisers, registrants and others – published at the end of previous Supplements – has been modified accordingly: in this Supplement, only people or firms whose new registrations appear in this edition have been listed. Colour Numbers and letters in parentheses refer to the RHS Colour Chart (1966 (reprinted 1986), 1995, 2001, 2007 and 2015). The colour names preceding aColour Chart reference are mainly taken from A Contribution toward Standardization of Color Names in Horticulture: Application of the Universal Color Language to the Colors of the Royal Horticultural Society’s Colour Chart by R.D. Huse and K.L. Kelly (ed. D.H. Voss; The American Rhododendron Society, 1984). Nomenclatural Standard Sharp colour images, clearly showing the characteristics of the plant(s), and/or, if practicable, pressed specimens, are very helpful and greatly appreciated. These, with the completed form, constitute a permanent, definitive record (nomenclatural standard) of the cultivar or Group. Those held in the RHS Herbarium at Wisley are given a designated WSY reference number. Non-Roman scripts Where possible, when epithets have been transliterated from non-Roman alphabetic scripts or transcribed from non-alphabetic scripts (e.g. Japanese Katakana characters), the original scripts have been included in the notes.