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Quote from: Maggi Young on December 19, 2008, 01:12:10 PMVegetable cultivars is just that.... cultivar names of turnips, potatoes, courgettes, etc.Now I'm totally confused. Does this mean that only vegetables can be clonal.
Vegetable cultivars is just that.... cultivar names of turnips, potatoes, courgettes, etc.
With regard to the plants which are the subject of this thread. ‘Nylon’ has been discussed in earlier posts. It is not the name of a clone but of a Group. As such, if I understand the code correctly, it can also be a cultivar name.
We retired people have to occupy ourselves with trivia like this to ward off Alzheimers & to keep us from rioting in the streets).
But presumably seedlings would be just Narcissus Nylon Group? Many thanks Gerry, and relieved to hear that you're neither rioting nor rotting
Quote from: Jim McKenney on December 18, 2008, 11:28:37 PMQuote from: Lesley Cox on November 17, 2008, 07:32:36 PMRe Narcissus 'Nylon,' I'm not too sure whether it should be 'Nylon' which is a cultivar name and implies a single clone, so every one identical,I don't think cultivar names really imply clones: think of all the vegetable cultivars grown from seed as annuals. Jim - I agree with this. I think a cultivar raised from seed would strictly be described as a strainQuote from: Jim McKenney on December 18, 2008, 11:28:37 PMAlso, the components of a clone are not necessarily identical, certainly not for horticultural purposes. See reply 50 here: http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=2644.45I'm not sure I agree with this. A clone (in the plant world) is conventionally regarded as a group of individuals derived from a single individual by vegetative propagation. Consequently, and barring somatic mutation, all these individuals are alike and will be identical with the original, given the same conditions of cultivation. I think 'identical' here is used in the everyday sense that we speak of two things as being identical & not in some esoteric sense.
Quote from: Lesley Cox on November 17, 2008, 07:32:36 PMRe Narcissus 'Nylon,' I'm not too sure whether it should be 'Nylon' which is a cultivar name and implies a single clone, so every one identical,I don't think cultivar names really imply clones: think of all the vegetable cultivars grown from seed as annuals.
Re Narcissus 'Nylon,' I'm not too sure whether it should be 'Nylon' which is a cultivar name and implies a single clone, so every one identical,
Also, the components of a clone are not necessarily identical, certainly not for horticultural purposes. See reply 50 here: http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=2644.45
NOOOOOO!! Not the Julia Jane and Joy Bishop epic again! See http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=245.0 and http://www.srgc.org.uk/discus/messages/321/23059.html.
NOOOOOO!! Not the Julia Jane and Joy Bishop epic again! See http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=245.0 and http://www.srgc.org.uk/discus/messages/321/23059.html. Just when I thought I had it sorted. Technically members of a clone have to be identical genetically, so only vegetative propagation can be used to produce them. Some variation can occur in clones if there are mutations or sporting, which I assume is what happens when vegetatively propagated snowdrops do not come true.
representative government, the consent of the governed and all that.
Jim McK,Do you set out to confuse people? Getting into semantics on a point like the definition of a clone is as far as I can see only designed to do that, unless you're talking to serious botanists. It's why I have never opened the topic on latin pronunciation, because I imagine it will just become a point-scoring effort (or at least that is what I have seen in other discussions on other lists elsewhere). A lot of us here are just gardeners, not serious botanists. Does telling people that a clone is "technically" in some obscure way not that really help? It's another word I guess I have to stop using now because it is no longer clear, or else every time I use the word I now need to put a sentence to clarify what I mean (which sort of defeats the purpose). A shame really, as it used to be useful for indication something of identical genetic material that has been propagated by division/cuttings etc. Now you tell us it is not in certain senses. I give up!