An iris is a rhizomatous or bulbous perennial herbaceous plant in the genus Iris (family Iridaceae), comprising nearly 300 species native to temperate regions worldwide and renowned for its striking, symmetrical flowers with three upright standards and three drooping falls. These elegant blooms, often featuring beards, veining, or signal patches on the falls, display a rainbow of colors and symbolize faith, wisdom, and valor, making irises staples in gardens, floristry, and heraldry.
Botanical Characteristics
Irises grow from either creeping rhizomes (bearded types) or bulbs/corms (bulbous types), producing sword-like or grass-like basal leaves in fans and erect, branched or unbranched stems bearing one to several flowers. Each flower exhibits bilateral symmetry with six petaloid tepals (three outer falls, three inner standards), three style branches hiding stamens, and an inferior ovary maturing into a capsule with numerous seeds.
- Floral diversity: Falls often bear a fuzzy “beard” (trichomes) or colorful crests to guide pollinators; colors span blue, purple, yellow, white, orange, and near-black, with some scented. Rhizomatous species have robust, exposed stems; bulbous forms feature tunicated bulbs or fleshy roots.
- Growth habit: Heights range from dwarf (10 cm) to tall (90+ cm), with seasonal dormancy in some; heliotropic in bud stage.
Taxonomy and Major Groups
The genus Iris divides into subgenera like Iris (bearded rhizomatous), Xiphium (bulbous Spanish/English), Scorpiris (Juno with persistent roots), and others, with over 300 species grouped by rootstock, aril presence, and geography. Key horticultural classes include bearded (e.g., I. germanica hybrids), Siberian (I. sibirica), Japanese (I. ensata), Louisiana (I. fulva hybrids), and Pacific Coast natives.
- Bearded irises: Tall German (I. germanica), dwarf (I. pumila); Siberian: slender, moisture-loving; bulbous: Dutch hybrids from I. xiphium. Centers of diversity in Eurasia, with hybrids numbering thousands.

Cultivation Practices
Irises thrive in full sun, well-drained soil (pH 6.5–7), with rhizomatous types needing division every 3–5 years to prevent crowding; plant rhizomes shallowly at 45° angle. Bulbous types require winter chill; zones 3–9 hardy depending on type, with bearded most tolerant.
- Specific needs: Bearded dislike wet crowns; Siberian/Japanese prefer moist, acidic soils; mulch for moisture, stake tall stems. Pests include iris borer, borers; diseases like soft rot—mitigate with sanitation.
Floristry and Economic Uses
Cut irises last 5–7 days in vases, prized for bold form in arrangements; Dutch iris dominates trade for uniformity. Rhizomes yield orris root for perfumery (iris butter); some toxic if ingested.
Cultural and Symbolic Significance
Named for rainbow goddess Iris, they emblem France (fleur-de-lis), Japan (hanashobu festivals), and Christianity (hope); purple for royalty, yellow for passion. Ancient Egyptian/Mesopotamian use in art underscores enduring prestige.


