Quote:
Originally Posted by camille1585
I guess I got confused since many commercial cultivar names of horticultural crops don't include the apostrophes, making it read as a hybrid name.
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Totally agree! It can be quite confusing!
The general hybrid cross name - that says something about the cross parentage, or parents that were crossed - is basically 'grex'.
The cultivar name is basically something like clonal name, right?
So --- a hybrid cross is made between two parents ----- and the group or collection of the results/products of the hybrid cross is known as a 'grex'.
And each individual off-spring of that cross or grex is a cultivar. And if somebody wants to register the name of an individual offspring cultivar plant, and if they also produce clones or copies of it (eg. mericlone or plant division), then the registration results in an official cultivar (or clonal) name .... the cultivar name (clonal name) having the apostrophes.
Eg. Rlc. Xanthette × C. Ann Follis is a hybrid crossing .... and the 'grex' name associated with this hybrid cross is
Memoria Helen Brown. The seedpod gives rise to a whole bunch of plants from this crossing - and each individual seedling plant (cultivar) that can be grown from the seeds of that pod will have their own particular features.
And a particularly wonderful (and
unique) cultivar ie. individual off-spring from this hybrid cross is
'Sweet Afton'.
So one of the individual plants that became cloned and sold was
Rlc. Memoria Helen Brown 'Sweet Afton', where Memoria Helen Brown is the cross/grex name, and 'Sweet Afton' is the cultivar/clonal name.
It used to be called Blc. Memoria Helen Brown 'Sweet Afton', until the re-classification to Rlc.
That's how I think it is. Feel free to add corrections.
If anyone hasn't seen this plant's flower, then just click here:
Rlc. Memoria Helen Brown 'Sweet Afton' which is well matched to an AOC awarded one seen (
here), as well as the original plant seen
here.
Unfortunately, there are plants being sold or passed around having orchid tags with the above name written on it, but the flowers of these question-mark plants have significantly different appearance (eg. lip shape, colour, petal features etc) when compared with the original plant - pointing to cases of mistaken identity, mutation, false-labeling, misrepresentation etc.
For example - the plant seen
here (click here) is
unlikely to be what the owner believes it to be. It probably has the correct '
grex' name, but has the wrong cultivar/clonal name. The serrated edges around the lip, and plastic-looking petals are not seen in the original plant.
Another example of
mistaken identity is the first image of: (
click here) - perhaps correct
grex name, but wrong clonal name. That is - it could be of
grex Memoria Helen Brown, but is unlikely to be the cultivar 'Sweet Afton'.