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Crocus season starts here in November.Between the first to flower today there is this particular one.It was given to me by David Stephens 3 years ago as a tiny corm of C. mathewii.Yesterday, when in bud, i thought it to be virused, but today when opened it looks healthy....
It was given to me by David Stephens 3 years ago as a tiny corm of C. mathewii.Yesterday, when in bud, i thought it to be virused, but today when opened it looks healthy....
Quote from: Oron Peri on November 02, 2011, 08:41:54 AMIt was given to me by David Stephens 3 years ago as a tiny corm of C. mathewii.Yesterday, when in bud, i thought it to be virused, but today when opened it looks healthy....Oron - in my opinion it is impossible to decide, purely on the basis of appearance, whether this is a virus infection or a genetic variant.
Quote from: Gerry Webster on November 03, 2011, 09:13:31 PMQuote from: Oron Peri on November 02, 2011, 08:41:54 AMIt was given to me by David Stephens 3 years ago as a tiny corm of C. mathewii.Yesterday, when in bud, i thought it to be virused, but today when opened it looks healthy....Oron - in my opinion it is impossible to decide, purely on the basis of appearance, whether this is a virus infection or a genetic variant.Gerry, it is common mistake of many amateur growers, especially between Iris growers. Plants are rare, difficult to grow and then come out "theories" about genetic changes, chimeras, hybride origin etc., etc. We so love our plants, that it is difficult to throw them away (destroy) especially when they are grown from seed so many years till first blooming. May be sometimes they are healthy, but as I wrote before better destroy 10 healthy than left one infected. In this case flower definitely looks as virus infected.Janis
The Ray Cobb laevigatus ios very handsome.I had a seed pod on the gold backed laevigatus a couple of weeks ago. Just 4 seeds though.
Janis - I can think of at least three causal explanations for the appearance of Oron's crocus:1. Virus infection.2. Genetic mutation with morphologically variable expressivity.3. Somatic mutation.While I agree that this looks rather like virus infection I still maintain that one cannot make a decision between these alternatives based purely on appearance - this really would involve the (unsubstantiated) "theories" of "amateur growers". Whether it is always better to assume the worst or to wait & see is an individual decision.
Quote from: Lesley Cox on November 03, 2011, 08:33:24 PMThe Ray Cobb laevigatus ios very handsome.I had a seed pod on the gold backed laevigatus a couple of weeks ago. Just 4 seeds though.Lesley - The rather similar C. laevigatus recently posted by David (reply #3, November 02) also came from Ray Cobb via Alan Edwards. Ray apparently had it from Ronald Ginns, so it has a distinguished pedigree. Seedlings from this form are very variable; some have 'gold' backs, though the colour fades very quickly.