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As far as I know both the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature (ICBN) and the International Code of Nomenclature of Cultivated Plants (ICNCP) define a hybrid only as a cross between 2 species. Geographically Mt Javpo in Nagaland and the Ukhrul district of Manipur (where the holotype comes from) are not that far apart so it would be very likely the old light pink and the new dark pink are colour variants.So "Tantallon" would be a cross between 2 colour variants of the same species and only if distinct enough could be given the cultivar status with that name. Lilium x "Tantallon" therefore would certainly be incorrect and I even doubt an intermediate colourform is distinct enough to be granted a cultivar status.
Are there two different hybrids? (I suppose they are not technically hybrids, just crosses of colour forms within the species).
Hi, yes the white form I have is grown from bulbs given to me by Peter Cox, you can see differences between the origonal form and the dark form. The new white form is much earlier flowering but it is to soon to say what will happen next year as I grew the bulbs under cover until they flowered. I have spoken to Peter Cox who grows it outside and It flowers early such a beautiful form, will keep you posted next year also, cheers Ian the Christie kind.
Quote from: Diane Clement on July 09, 2010, 05:50:06 PM Are there two different hybrids? (I suppose they are not technically hybrids, just crosses of colour forms within the species). Diane,a hybrid is the offspring of any two taxon. A taxon is a described entity, which would include colour forms, sub-species, varieties, etc., as long as they are a defined entity. Random crossing of seedlings within the same taxon are not considered hybrids. Therefore F2 generation seedlings are not hybrids in and of themselves, although they may actually represent a hybrid. Confusing, isn't it!
Quote from: Regelian on July 09, 2010, 09:36:43 PMQuote from: Diane Clement on July 09, 2010, 05:50:06 PM Are there two different hybrids? (I suppose they are not technically hybrids, just crosses of colour forms within the species). Diane,a hybrid is the offspring of any two taxon. A taxon is a described entity, which would include colour forms, sub-species, varieties, etc., as long as they are a defined entity. Random crossing of seedlings within the same taxon are not considered hybrids. Therefore F2 generation seedlings are not hybrids in and of themselves, although they may actually represent a hybrid. Confusing, isn't it! Sorry, I was just using the word in the way it had been used before in the thread, to try and avoid confusion! I do understand they are not hybrids. What I would really like to know is whether the Taylors have two different forms/cultivars, or whether the one they call "Tantallon" is the same as the one derived from the "new" Nagaland form crossed with the "old" Manipur form. I think only they can alnswer that one, perhaps via Liz, unless Ian knows.