Re: What's in a name?
Posted: Fri Mar 23, 2018 8:41 pm
Well ... there's probably more to the story, but here's what we can quickly piece together.
Pimpinella is the Italian name for "burnet", which is a fairly unremarkable genus of flowering plants, shrubby little things with a pinnate leaf - i.e., the leaf midrib forms a stem, with a row of leaflets on either side.
Rosa pimpinellifolia is a type of wild rose, whose leaf reminded someone of burnet, the Latin meaning "burnet leaf rose".
Pimpinellifoliae is a taxon of rose species of interest only to botanists, and also there's a rust that afflicts the burnet rose, Phragmidium rosae-pimpinellifoliae. The Latin meaning "related to burnet leaf rose."
Pimpinella is the Italian name for "burnet", which is a fairly unremarkable genus of flowering plants, shrubby little things with a pinnate leaf - i.e., the leaf midrib forms a stem, with a row of leaflets on either side.
Rosa pimpinellifolia is a type of wild rose, whose leaf reminded someone of burnet, the Latin meaning "burnet leaf rose".
Pimpinellifoliae is a taxon of rose species of interest only to botanists, and also there's a rust that afflicts the burnet rose, Phragmidium rosae-pimpinellifoliae. The Latin meaning "related to burnet leaf rose."