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If it's being re-introduced Brian, are these non-fertile, micropropagated plants or is there another seed source somewhere.
Brian, if a plant that is extinct in the wild (only surviving in cultivation) is in the pink (?) List, what does it take to include it in the Red one?
William Thompson, the founder ofThompson and Morgan Seed Merchants,first brought this tuberous rooted halfhardyperennial to Britain in 1835.Although it received an Award ofGarden Merit from the RHS in 1938, anddespite velvet maroon flowers with thedistinctive chocolate perfume itdisappeared from gardens. Living stockhad been preserved at the Royal BotanicGardens, Kew since the 1970s and duringthe 1990s material was micropropagatedand cryogenically preserved. Untilrecently Cosmos atrosanguineus wasthought to be extinct in the wild andKew’s material was repatriated to Mexicoto attempt reintroduction. However, thepresent gene pool in cultivation onlyderives from one or two introductionsand as cross-pollination is required toproduce viable seeds it was not certainwhether the reintroduction programmewould be successful.All is not lost, though, since from NewZealand has come the first instance of aself-fertile clone, registered for PlantBreeders Rights in New Zealand as ‘PinotNoir’. Plants have also more recentlybeen rediscovered in the wild.
2 plants of the commercial clone were kept in a greenhouse last winter, which got down to -7C. The NZ plant is up and looking fine, but the other 2 were killed.