More on the asymetrical L. Purpurata
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  #1  
Old 05-22-2020, 01:06 PM
Oyarzabal Oyarzabal is offline
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More on the asymetrical L. Purpurata Male
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I have been doing some research and I found this site for the University of Florida

PropG - Plant Propagation Glossary ? Environmental Horticulture ? University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences ? UF/IFAS

Here are the results.
The phenomenon is called Variegation and can happen in leaves, flower, and fruits. There are different kinds of variegation.
-Normal. This is regular pattern in flowers.
-Pathological. These are the virus breaks
-Transposons. These are jumping genes and are genetic mosaics. They are not chimeras since they can transfer by seeds. A good example of this type is the maize multicolored corn cob.
-Chimeras. This is a changes in the cellular on of the meristem layers LI, LII, or LIII. Based on what layer the mutated cells are, chimeras can be:
-Periclinal (this is the most stable)
-Mericlinal (Unstable)
-Sectorial (half of all meristem layers have the mutation. This is semi stable)

I think my flower is one of the unstable types, so the whole thing will go away, or color will change withing flowers. Long and strange post, but I am a sucker for this things.
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Old 05-22-2020, 02:42 PM
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Roberta Roberta is offline
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More on the asymetrical L. Purpurata Female
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Thanks for the research! Interesting! I also look forward to updates on your plant.
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Old 05-22-2020, 03:56 PM
SouthPark SouthPark is offline
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Definitely an interesting thing - flowers quite different than usual due to the cell behaviour - or arrangement or configuration.

These two photos of phals seen on the internet are worth to see!

Link 1

Link 2

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chimeras, flower, flowers, unstable, variegation


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