The Field ElmcultivarUlmus minor 'Cretensis' [:from Crete] was first mentioned by Nicholson in Kew Hand-List Trees & Shrubs Vol.2 (1896), as Ulmus campestris var. cretensis, without description.[1][2] A 1908 herbarium specimen at Kew Gardens with an accompanying description[3] suggests that 'Cretensis' is not synonymous with Ulmus minor var. canescens, also present on Crete.[4][5]
Description
On the Kew Herbarium specimen Augustin Ley added the description: "All parts [of the shoots and upper leaf-surface] very glabrous and smooth; [on the leaf underside] axils and leaf-surface along mid-rib hairy; non glandular".[3] The specimen shows obovate leaves, 4 to 6 cm long by 3 to 5 wide, with a small tapering tip, biserrate or triserrate margin, and a 5 mm petiole.
It is not known whether 'Cretensis' remains in cultivation. An old field elm by the 11th-century Byzantine church of St Nicholas, Kyriakosellia, Apokoronas, western Crete,[6] is in the locality where 'Cretensis' herbarium specimens were collected in the early 20th century, [7] and outside the small area in central Crete where 'Canescens' has been found.[5] Sfikas (2011), however, refers to 'Canescens' in the Apokoronas area.[4]
References
^Nicholson, George (1896). Hand-list of trees and shrubs. Vol. 2. p. 135.