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'Rosa bordzilowskii Chrshan. synonym' rose References
Book  (2018)  Page(s) 540.  Includes photo(s).
 
Rosa micrantha Sm.
...western, southern and central Europe, southern Russia, Crimea, Caucasia, Turkey, Armenia, Libanon and northwestern Africa. Grows in our country around Kırklareli, İstanbul, Çanakkale, Balıkesir, İzmir, Manisa and Konya....
Article (magazine)  (2009)  Page(s) 30.  
 
R. micrantha Borr. er ex Sm.  Source Córdoba (Spain) Chromosome Number 35
Book  (2001)  Page(s) 532.  Includes photo(s).
 
Species-group Rosa rubiginosa L.
0,5-3 m high shrubs with strong, sickle-shaped, flat prickles, up to 1 cm wide at their base. 7 or 5 leaflets, doubly glandular serrated, more or less pubescent beneath, with many red glands, apple fragrance. Blooms red to almost white. Diameter 2.5-4 cm. Sepals partly foliaceous. Fruit globular to ovoid, orange to red, glandular or glabrous.

Rosa micrantha Sm. Kleinblütige Rose, Rosier à petites fleurs, Rosa balsamina minore. Leaflets rounded at their base. Pedicels as long as the fruit or longer, always with many glands, often also with bristles. Blooms mostly white or pale pink. Styles more or less glabrous. Sepals reflexed after blooming, fall off. June. Dry and warm places, hilly-mountaneous areas. ..2n=28, 35, 42.
Book  (2000)  Page(s) 232.  
 
Rosa micrantha Borrer ex Sm. Kleinblütige Rose. ..Similar to [Rosa agrestis Savi], but with broad ovoid to elliptical leaflets, which are broadly rounded at their base, seldom narrower and slightly wedge-shaped (few leaves on the shrub). Petals pale pink to whitish pink...Pedicel, often also the fruit more or less densely glandular, often conspiciously narrow (top or bottle-shaped). ...Stable transitory types to Rosa rubiginosa L.
Book  (1993)  Page(s) 136.  
 
R. micrantha is known immediately as one of the Sweet Briars by the sweet-scented, viscid brown or translucent glands on leaflets, petioles, stipules, pedicels and sepals. It is separated from R. rubiginosa by its taller climbing habit, more equal prickles, absence of acicles [the much smaller prickles that are interspersed among much larger, stout prickles on the canes of very prickly roses such as R. rugosa], and smaller flowers.
Book  (1976)  Page(s) 176.  
 
Botanical roses on the territory of the USSR, whose independence requires precising...
R. bordzilowskii Chrshan. - according to Chrshanowskii close to R. eglanteria and R. horrida, marked by intermediate chracteristics. According to "Flora Europa" R. micrantha Borrer ex Sm.

R. chomutoviensis Chrshan. - according to Chrshanowskii similar to R. klukii Bess., differs by bare midrib, missing hair on foliage and stipules, by straight and somewhat downward slanting prickles. According to "Flora Europa" R. micrantha Borrer ex Sm.
Book  (1976)  Page(s) 179.  
 
Botanical roses on the territory of the USSR, whose independence requires precising...
R. psammophylla Chrshan. - according to "Flora Euopa" R. micrantha Borrer ex Sm.
Book  (1971)  Page(s) 369-370.  
 
R.micrantha Smith in Sowerby, Engl. Bot. XXXV (1812) tab. 2490; Boiss., Fl. Or. 11(1872)687; Christ in Boiss., I.e. Suppl. (1888)219; Crep., Bull. Soc. bot. Belg. XVIII (1879) 415, XXIX, 2 (1890) 15 et in A. H. P. XVI (1900) 1 41; Bouleng. in Bull. Jard. Bot. de I'Etat Bruxelles XIII (1935) 231.- R.floribunda Stev. ex Bess., Cat. hort. Crem. (1811) Suppl. IV, 19; M. B., Fl. taur.-cauc. Ill (1819) 343. - R. rubiginosa micrantha Shmal'g., Fl. Sr. Yuzh. R. (1895) 344.- Ic: Hegi, II. Fl. IV, 2, f. 1224.
High (2 m) shrub with long arcuate branches; prickles usually equal, large, hamately curved, gradually and strongly broadened toward base, rarely mixed with small erect pricklets or bristles; leaflets 5—7, medium-sized, 2—3 (to 4.5) em long, ovate or elliptic, slightly tapering toward base, generally acuminate, sparingly pubescent on both sides, especially beneath, more or less densely glandular beneath, smooth or sometimes with few glands above, doubly glandular -serrate, with 14—24 teeth at each side;
petioles pubescent and glandular, with small curved pricklets; stipules rather narrow, glandular below and along margin. Flowers 1—8; pedicels long, 0.7— 2.8 cm, frequently glandular -hispid, pubescent; hypanthia often like the sepals glandular -hispid; sepals 14—23 mm long, recurved, caducous before ripening; corolla 25— 30 mm in diameter; petals small, pink, rarely white; style head pediceled, glabrescent; fruit globose or ovoid. June.
Hills.— European part: Crim.; Caucasus: Cisc, Dag., W., E. and S. Transc, Tal. Gen. distr.: Centr. and Atl. Eur., Scand., Arm. -Kurd. Described from England.
Website/Catalog  (1923)  Page(s) 53.  
 
Rosa micranta. Flesh-red.
Magazine  (Aug 1909)  Page(s) 315-316.  
 
Dans leur Aide-Mémoire du cêcidiologue pour les Plantes d’Europe et du Bassin de la Méditerranée, MM. G. Darboux et C. Houard indiquent les espèces ou variétés suivantes sur lesquelles ont été observées des galles : Rosa acicularis, agrestis, alba, alpina, alpinaxglauca, alpinaxtomentosa, arvensis, canina, caninaxgallica, carelica, caucasica, centifolia, cinnamomea, coriifolia, dumalis, dumetorum, dumetorumxgallica, eglanteria, farinosa, gallica, glauca, graveolens, inodora, micrantha, montana, pimpinellifolia, rubiginosa, rubrifolia, rugosa, sempervirens, sepium, spinosissima, tomentella, tomentosa, villosa et quelques autres.

[species where rose gall has been observed]
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