Quote:
Originally Posted by Shoreguy
What do they really mean and what is the difference?
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A
grex is a name given to an orchid hybrid as defined by its parentage. It is a name given only to hybrids and as such, a pure species does not have a grex. However, Grexes are pretty much only used in western style orchid horticulture (e.g. RHS, AOS) and its offshoots (e.g. JOGA, TOGA, etc). Outside of the orchid world,
a different naming system is used.
So, for example, Neostylis Lou Sneary is a Grex. This is because it is the name given to the cross between Neofinetia falcata and Rhyncostylis coelestis regardless of its visible characteristics.
However, there is also a Neostylis Lou Sneary 'Bluebird'. In this case 'Bluebird' is a cultivar of the Lou Sneary grex.
Cultivar is a portmanteau of the words Cultivated Variety. This is a bit more complicated due to different horticultural circles using the term cultivar a bit differently. However the use of term cultivar, using one definition or another, is pretty much universal in the horticultural world as a whole.
The
AOS basically states that the cultivar of an orchid is defined by its genes, so that only genetically identical plants (i.e. divisions and mericlones) can share a cultivar name.
However, the Neo world uses the word cultivar in a different manner, basically following the definitions provided by the
International Code for Nomenclature of Cultivated Plants.
There, it states:
2.3. A cultivar is an assemblage of plants that (a) has been selected for a particular character or combination of characters, (b) is distinct, uniform, and stable in these characters, and (c) when propagated by appropriate means, retains those characters....
2.4. Cultivars differ in their mode of origin and reproduction, for example as described in Art. 2.5-2.19. Whatever the means of propagation, only those plants which maintain the characters that define a particular cultivar may be included within that cultivar.
...
2.20. In considering whether two or more plants belong to the same or different cultivars, their origins are irrelevant. Cultivars that cannot be distinguished from others by any of the means currently adopted for cultivar determination in the group concerned are treated as one cultivar.
In articles 2.5-2.19, it explains the various different means that a cultivar may be propagated, including division, cloning, seed propagation, hybridization, line-breeding, grafting, etc. Basically as long as the plants comprising the cultivar retain the same set of defining characteristics, no matter how wide or narrow that set of characteristics is, it can be considered part of the cultivar regardless of how it was propagated.
This definition does happen to fly in the face of what many western orchid growers believe, because the AOS requires that an orchid cultivar that they register be strictly bound by its genetic identity. However, in reality, it fits together just fine because genotype in the end is simply the defining characteristic used by the AOS to define the cultivars that they register. Incidentally, the
RHS explicitly concedes that the naming of grexes and cultivars are governed by the ICNCP, although the RHS itself does not register cultivars of orchids, only Grexes.
(On a side note, Neos on the other hand could never really be adapted to fit into the AOS' definition of cultivar partly because of the complexities involved with chimerism present in many neo varieties. For example, 'Oemaru-shima', 'Daidomaru' and 'Mikado' are all technically genetically identical, but due to chimerism and meristem structure, they each have different stable phenotypes.)
I apologize for the long spiel, but I'm trying to be specific here and showing references because I've come across way too many orchid growers who are hard headedly adamant that the AOS definition is the only correct definition, and that it applies to all plants.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shoreguy
For each of the following, which applies?
Neof. Tamakongo
Neof. Bulihwan
Neof. Manjushage
Neof. Mangekyo
Neof. Beniougi
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All of these are cultivar names. Pure neos being a pure species do not have a Grex.
Of the neo hybrids that are commonly traded in Japan, they would have a Grex only if the parentage is known. Unfortunately, due to the lack of importance historically placed on Neo hybrid parentage, most of them are now unknown. Because of this, the names that they come with are usually cultivar names. Some examples of these hybrid cultivars include 'Ogonmaru', 'Kibana-Manjushage', 'Myeongwol', 'Choukou' etc.