nfoto Posted July 1, 2014 Share Posted July 1, 2014 Rørslett, B. 2014. Helianthemum nummularium (L.)Mill. ssp.obscurum (Čelak.) Holub (Cistaceae). Common Rock-Rose. Flowers photographed in visible and ultraviolet light. http://www.ultraviol...mmon-rock-rose/ Helianthemum nummularium (L.)Mill. ssp.obscurum (Čelak.) HolubSyn. Helianthemum chamaecistus Mill.; Helianthemum. chamaecistus Mill. ssp. hirsutum (Vollm.) Weim; Helianthemum ovatum (Viv.) Dunal (ssp. obscurum) NO: Vanleg solroseSE: SolvändaDK: Filtet Soløje (ssp. nummularium); Bakke-Soløje (ssp. obscurum) FI: Päivännouto DE: Gewöhnliches Sonnenröschen (ssp. nummularium); Ovalblättriges Sonnenröschen (ssp. obscurum) EN: Common Rock-rose This is a creeping small dwarf shrub of dry meadows, native to Europe and found in elevations from sea level to mountain ranges. The vernacular names reflect the plant's ability to track the sun's position throughout the day. There are a number of recognised races commonly treated as taxa at the subspecies level. The material collected here corresponds to the ssp. obscurum and has leaves that are green on the underside. Plants collected in the Durmitor National Park of Montenegro, at around 1200 m a.s.l., 20 June 2014. Image reference: HELI_NUM_G1406200689_VIS.jpgVisible light: Nikon Df, Voigtländer APO-Lanthar 125 mm f/2.5 lens, daylight. Image reference: HELI_NUM_I1406201645_UV.jpgUltraviolet light: Nikon D3200 (modified), Coastal Optics 60 mm f/4 APO lens, internal Baader U2"(Venus) filter, SB-140 flash. The ultraviolet signature shows highly reflective corolla and large basal UV-dark patches. [Published 1 July 2014] Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted July 1, 2014 Share Posted July 1, 2014 Sometimes one of UVP's flower fotos will just grab one's attention for whatever reasons. Such is the case here. I really like this one. Those little UV-dark pollen grains scattered across the petals are interesting. The foto composition is nice too. This Helianthemum is somewhat Potentilla like in its UV signature. Link to comment
nfoto Posted July 2, 2014 Author Share Posted July 2, 2014 As it was blowing hard on this open mountain slope at high altitude, these flowers were not amongst the easiest to photograph in the field. Using the Liveview functionality of my D3200 camera, I observed similar UV signatures on another Helianthemum species nearby, but a violent downpour thwarted all plans of capturing it on camera. This plant had much smaller flowers and probably was H. oelandicum. Before the onset of inclement weather, I did a few other flowers in UV though, and these (Myosotis alpestris, Ornithogalum sp., and Senecio vernalis) will be published subsequently. Link to comment
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