Primula halleri_1
Primula halleri
Haller's Primrose
Slo.: dolgocvetni jeglič
Dat.: between 1964 and 1968
Lat.: 46.3 Long.: 13.9
Code: None
Habitat: alpine grassland, on a flat ridge, calcareous ground, sunny, open place, exposed to direct rain and wind, average precipitations > 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 0-2 deg C, elevation 2.300 m (7.500 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.
Substratum: humus soil
Place: Next to the trail from alpine hut Dolič to south ridge trail of Mt. Triglav, East Julian Alps, Gorenjska, Slovenia EC
Comment: Growing solitary. Quite a rare fund in Slovenia, however protected neither by 'Uredba o zavarovanih prosto živečih rastlinskih vrstah' Ur.l. RS, št. 46/2004 nor enlisted in
the Slovene Red List of rare and endangered species. Given coordinates only approximate.
Ref.:
(1) A.Martinči et all., Mala Flora Slovenije, Tehnična Založba Slovenije (2007), p 481.
(2) M.A.Fischer, W.Adler, K.Oswald, Exkursionsflora Oesterreich Liechtenstein, Suedtirol, LO Landesmuseen, Linz, Austria (2005), p 674.
Primula halleri_1
Primula halleri
Haller's Primrose
Slo.: dolgocvetni jeglič
Dat.: between 1964 and 1968
Lat.: 46.3 Long.: 13.9
Code: None
Habitat: alpine grassland, on a flat ridge, calcareous ground, sunny, open place, exposed to direct rain and wind, average precipitations > 3.000 mm/year, average temperature 0-2 deg C, elevation 2.300 m (7.500 feet), alpine phytogeographical region.
Substratum: humus soil
Place: Next to the trail from alpine hut Dolič to south ridge trail of Mt. Triglav, East Julian Alps, Gorenjska, Slovenia EC
Comment: Growing solitary. Quite a rare fund in Slovenia, however protected neither by 'Uredba o zavarovanih prosto živečih rastlinskih vrstah' Ur.l. RS, št. 46/2004 nor enlisted in
the Slovene Red List of rare and endangered species. Given coordinates only approximate.
Ref.:
(1) A.Martinči et all., Mala Flora Slovenije, Tehnična Založba Slovenije (2007), p 481.
(2) M.A.Fischer, W.Adler, K.Oswald, Exkursionsflora Oesterreich Liechtenstein, Suedtirol, LO Landesmuseen, Linz, Austria (2005), p 674.