TerraForums Venus Flytrap, Nepenthes, Drosera and more talk
Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!
Does this cultivar flower?
Does it yield a high volume of seed, if so does the Progeny follow through.
I can't find out much about leaf pull success rate on this cultivar.
How many offshoots does in provide over a season?
Plants grown from seeds from a cultivar are *never* that same cultivar..they are no cultivar at all.
(unless one of them is worthy to become a cultivar in the future..but if so, it will be a *different* cultivar than its parent)
children are never identical to their parents..
you can only reproduce a cultivar vegetatively..
And I agree about it needing to be culled..
If I owned that plant, I would destroy it before it had the chance to reproduce and weaken the VFT gene pool further..
humans are really beginning to make hideously awful VFT mutants..its not a good thing IMO..
If you want to own such a plant PLEASE dont let it reproduce!
(but I know people will..to see if they can create something even worse..)
just to clarify on the whole what makes a cultivar thing which has been discussed to death in many threads. Seedgrown plants from a particular cultivar can still be that cultivar as long as a few conditions are met, the first being that the original cultivar description allows for seed propagation as an acceptable form of propagation (this is rare, at least in the CP world), the second is that the resulting seedgrown progeny have the unique trait(s) described in the original cultivar description. Again this situation is rare and it does not typically apply to VFTs. Just wanted to clarify
I can't answer this question for sure, but I did have two plants flower this spring. The flower stalks were thinner than the average flytrap so I suspect that they would not produce much seed. I cut them off and used them for tissue culture, so I don't know this for a fact. As for the sexually produced offspring being true-to-type, I don't know this either. I've been surprised at which traits seen in unusual flytraps seem to be easily inherited and which traits seem to be hard to pass along through sexual propagation. I might have a chance to produce some 'Fondue' seed next year and get some idea of what percentage, if any, of the offspring have the odd traps like the parent plant.
*gag* I must agree. I never was fond of those hideously melted flytraps out there.
But if the plant meets specific criteria, it could be considered a cultivar. Or you could just label it as "Dionaea '(insert cultivar name here)' x self".
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.