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Originally Posted by Shoreguy
Is Tenkobai registered?
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No
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shoreguy
I was not expecting this if Tenkobai is registered and suspected it was a hybrid especially do to the shape of the tepals and lip.
...could it be that in its VERY distant past that Tenkobai had a non neof. ancestor that somehow manifested itself during the two mutations involved in the formation of Mebina?
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While I personally have no strong stance either way, there is some minor suspicion around that Tenkobai might be a hybrid, although most authoritative sources state that it was found wild on the Amami Islands.
More so than the flower shape, the way it produces its pigmentation is the most suspicious trait. The flower shape isn't so strange and is closely associated with mutations that cause short stocky leaves. The same shape has arisen from numerous other Neo lineages, many of which cannot reasonably be thought to be a hybrid, and it can even be temporarily induced chemically in a standard Neo using certain hormone blockers.
Also, let me know if you have seen one, but I have never seen a fully documented neo hybrid with this flower shape where the shape wasn't already present in the Neo parent.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shoreguy
I know you are adamant about the rigorous effort before a Neofinetia is registered but an event that occurred 50,000 years or so ago, who knows? Not trying to be argumentative, but this plant seems too strange (and I like its uniqueness).
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Are you implying that mutations cannot happen without the intrusion of genes from another species? I ask because by that logic, the theory of evolution would not work.
Strangeness is hardly significant evidence for hybridization. There are plenty of common mutations in many different species that result in extraordinarily strange individuals without the need for introducing those genes by hybridization. For example, while it was historically seen to be extremely strange, can you say that that strangeness is evidence that the gene causing hypertrichosis was originally introduced to those individuals by past hybridization between human and another species?
Maybe it's best to think of Neos outside of the perspective of western orchid horticulture, but with the mindset of other plant species known for their mutations. Western style orchid horticulture tends to shun most mutations as undesirable and doesn't bother to research them while other horticultural circles often celebrate these types of mutations. There is much more extensive research done on mutations of those species such as Hostas. It might be best to read up on the mutations and mutagenesis of those species as an analogue to those found among Neos.