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D. brunnthaleri hort. ex Eret ex Matk
Here is a photo of the receptacle from D. brunnthaleri hort. ex Eret ex Matk (2009)
The central yellow zone of flowers within some Delosperma species, for. ex. your/Marek's D. aff. hirtum or D. dyeri var. laxum, is rather due to an external pigment coating effekt of pollen. This can be received from very heavy dew or water-supply during opening times of the flower.
The identification of a white flowered Delosperma from northern Lesotho and Natal under D. hirtum is relating to Elsa Pooley in Mountain Flowers - A Field Guide to the Flora of the Drakensberg and Lesotho (2003: 72-73) and based on the unpublished description of D. hirtum var. niveum by Mary Gwendoline O'Connor-Fenton (née Lavis) - see also BOL131458;; BOL131459; BOL131460; BOL131461; BOL131462 and BOL131463 (with a on a certain Facebook entry). Both Ladies were erroneously identifying this species under D. hirtum, but representing rather a southern white flowered variety of D. carolinense N.E. Brown.
Hermann Jacobsen also published a photo (taken by K. Josefský) of the white flowered variety of D. carolinense erroneously twice under D. brunnthaleri (Jacobsen: Die Sukkulenten 1933: 112 & Handbuch der sukkulenten Pflanzen III 1955: 1307).
Quote from: Tiny Light on November 16, 2011, 05:59:52 AMHere is a photo of the receptacle from D. brunnthaleri hort. ex Eret ex Matk (2009)It is not.
The centre of aff. hirtum is pea green if observed in indirect light and luminous yellow if observed in direct sunshine.
It may really be coloured by pollen dye but in ashtonii and deleeuwiae the pollen doesn't influence centre colour.
aff. hirtum is not the white-flowered plant in the pictures presented above. The leaves are considerably different, linear and greyish.The plant presented by you really might be Delosperma carolinense, our certainly not.
Thrice, in Sukkulentenlexikon is the image reprinted too.
Quote from: Great Moravian on November 22, 2011, 11:38:17 AMQuote from: Tiny Light on November 16, 2011, 05:59:52 AMHere is a photo of the receptacle from D. brunnthaleri hort. ex Eret ex Matk (2009)It is not.Very comfortable and almost academic argumentation, Josef.
Quoteaff. hirtum is not the white-flowered plant in the pictures presented above. The leaves are considerably different, linear and greyish.The plant presented by you really might be Delosperma carolinense, our certainly not.Yes, indeed. And already very obvious viewable. But now you know already one very probable ancestor of your shown aff. hirtum, performing here likely suspected the main influence in the flower.
Quote from: Tiny Light on November 27, 2011, 03:42:39 PMQuote from: Great Moravian on November 22, 2011, 11:38:17 AMQuote from: Tiny Light on November 16, 2011, 05:59:52 AMHere is a photo of the receptacle from D. brunnthaleri hort. ex Eret ex Matk (2009)It is not.Very comfortable and almost academic argumentation, Josef. It is an image of a flower and not an image of receptacle structure showing glands and ovary top.My argumentation was absolutely topical.
The seeds collected in Lesotho resulted in uniform seedlings. So the mother plant dwellingsomewhere in Lesotho was not a hybrid. Fertilization of all ovules by the pollen ofa different, but one, species is unlikely.
Your argumentation is pretty nice homegrown but sure not "absolutely topical", Josef I rather suggest taking a deeper look on the simple, but splendid illustrated explanation according a receptacle on wikipedia:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Receptacle_%28botany%29In this case the Colour of Hope is not pea-green, but nebulous-grey...
On your own Czech homepage following information can be found a. o.:receptakulum téměř kyjovité, u vrcholu poněkud stažené = receptacle subclavate, near apex somewhat constricted (D. basuticum)receptakulum obráceně kuželovité, uprostřed víceméně stažené = receptacle obconic, near middle more or less constricted (D. congestum)What kind of view do you think might have been described here by Mrs. Bolus?
QuoteThe seeds collected in Lesotho resulted in uniform seedlings. So the mother plant dwellingsomewhere in Lesotho was not a hybrid. Fertilization of all ovules by the pollen ofa different, but one, species is unlikely.Did not argue that aff. hirtum is a hybrid, nor that all ovules were fertilized by the pollen of one species, but trying to show you already the first rising of a reasonable suspected phylogenetic line. Great to hear that the F1 generation is already homogenous, but this is still not a sufficient evidence for not being a hybrid - here you need to check up also the F2 generation for being homogenous or not.I suggest you should become more familiar with the work of Gregor Johann Mendel [1822-1884], today referred to as the laws of Mendelian inheritance, especially with the 2nd rule ("Spaltungsregel").http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregor_Johann_Mendel
QuoteOn your own Czech homepage following information can be found a. o.:receptakulum téměř kyjovité, u vrcholu poněkud stažené = receptacle subclavate, near apex somewhat constricted (D. basuticum)receptakulum obráceně kuželovité, uprostřed víceméně stažené = receptacle obconic, near middle more or less constricted (D. congestum)What kind of view do you think might have been described here by Mrs. Bolus?You broke in my private files. The content is not viewed by google as I checked because it is notdirectly accessible. I should realize how you could do it.