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Queen of Hearts is a species in its own right!!

  • #21
Wow!

I own a new and endangered species. 8|
 
  • #23
Well, congratulations to Rob Cantley! (and my apologies for suggesting this might have been a marketing ploy!)Tthis is quite exciting to have these individuals recognized as a distinct species, and a bonus to get it named after you. Kudos to Dr. cheek for recognizing the subtle differences that suggested this was a previously unknown species. I'm sure everyone lucky enough to have one of the seedlings is thrilled with this news.

Paul
 
  • #24
Very cool,Iam tempted to buy a couple more now.
 
  • #25
strange i checked my usual cp nurserey he was advertising this plant yesterday and not today,maybe he needs to revise his prices,of course he may of sold out, glad i got one before they were famous
 
  • #27
i believe i beat you to that C12 :p
 
  • #28
i find ep post under rob cantley quite interesting,follow carnivour12 link
 
  • #29
Very fascinating that it has been relegated/elevated to a new species indeed. I personally find that it is very different from the typical truncata plants. Heck...thankfully the two individual F1 generation hybrids that I bought also seem to be very different with each other. One looks like the queen, the other looks like the king. Not as colourful, but shapely. ;)

But yeah...I would be really interested to reading the actual article. Unfortunately my university doesn't have access to that journal. I hope we can somehow get a copy. I think this opens up a whole can of worms with N. alata and N. maxima group of species.
 
  • #30
I always thought it looked too different to be a truncata.

Good point on the N. alata and maxima complexes. I think it's weird that there are no subspecies in the Nepenthes genus. I think the red form of alata we have at Meadowview might be a different species, or a subspecies. If only it were this easy to convince people of new Sarracenia species...... It's about time the ancestral form of rubra was named.
 
  • #31
lol! its true.... heck....if u could do DNA analysis, I think we can split a lot of nepenthes/sarr varieties into new species.
 
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