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I feel like I stirred a hive
they all looked like the photos that Jennie posted.
In a PM, Mark suggested that mine might be seedlings
I would rather have my very yellow 'Bill Clark'
In the meantime, if Jennie's photo is what true 'Wendy's Gold' looks like then I would rather have my very yellow 'Bill Clark' no matter how you spell it.
Carolyn, I did think that the ovary on your yellow was even more elongated than in 'Bill Clark', and it is a very bright clean yellow. When saying it looked like 'Bill Clark' I was thinking that the entire stock that yours came from might turn out to be 'Bill Clark' supplied wrongly named. But if the rest are all 'Wendy's Gold' then you may well have a new seedling, possibly from a pod that was overlooked.Snowdrops tend not to self-pollinate readily, generally needing to cross with a different clone to set seed reliably, but it can happen, and if Wendy's Gold did manage to self-pollinate and set a seed or two then the seedlings ought to come yellow as it's effectively a yellow crossing with a yellow so the recessive yellow gene expresses itself in the seedlings. What normally happens is that Wendy crosses with a nearby green-marked snowdrop (unless deliberately pollinated with another yellow) and the seedlings all come green(ish). I have a theory that sometimes a snowdrop will be partially pollinated by another nearby flower and also gets some of its own pollen in its stigma, and the foreign pollen overcomes the self-pollination inhibitors, allowing the flower's own pollen to fertilise ovules. But it's just a theory.In any case, I think it's looking increasingly likely to be a seedling. Unless the original stock was mixed and by pure chance you got the only 'Bill Clark' bulbs. I think you need to check all the other flowers to be sure there isn't any variation.
I have a theory that sometimes a snowdrop will be partially pollinated by another nearby flower and also gets some of its own pollen in its stigma, and the foreign pollen overcomes the self-pollination inhibitors, allowing the flower's own pollen to fertilise ovules. But it's just a theory.
(I feel like I stirred a hive)
Quote from: Martin Baxendale on February 02, 2012, 11:03:24 PM I have a theory that sometimes a snowdrop will be partially pollinated by another nearby flower and also gets some of its own pollen in its stigma, and the foreign pollen overcomes the self-pollination inhibitors, allowing the flower's own pollen to fertilise ovules. But it's just a theory.Martin - Interesting concept.Does anyone know exactly how many tubes are in the stigmatic column of a Galanthus? i.e. How many fathers can a single pod contain? In Rhododendron of course you can have mutliple fathers for the seed produced by one seedpod (ovary). I know this has nothing to do with your theory above but it sure throws some expectations out the window when we do a deliberate cross and do not emasculate & protect the stigma afterwards. Sad there has een so little research done on fertility in Galanthus. Do we even have solidly verified chromosome counts for the species and inter-specific hybrids?johnw
Does anyone think the extremely cold weather we are are now enduring could damage our snowdrops considering how far advanced they are after the mildest January on record?