Quote:
Originally Posted by Shoreguy
In other words, if a plant is known to be a pure Neofinetia but the Neofinetia cultivars in its background are either known or unknown, it would be referred to as Neofinetia ‘cultivar'
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If the plant is known to be pure Neofinetia, then you'd simply use the binomial name. The individual pure species cultivars used to create it don't alter its status as pure, so the species name is still used:
Neofinetia falcata 'Cultivar'
e.g. Neofinetia falcata 'Daishōgun'
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shoreguy
If the genuses are known, the the plant would be given the intergeneric name ‘cultivar'.
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If the genuses of the parents are known, the accepted method in the western orchid world would be:
Nothotaxon Grex 'Cultivar'
e.g. Neostylis Lou Sneary 'Bluebird'
In this case, Neostylis is the nothotaxon, which because the parentage involves just two genera, it's created by combining the two genera names, Neofinetia and Rhyncostylis. (Nothotaxa involving 4 or more different genera are named using a person's name + -ara. e.g. Darwinara). The nothotaxon simply describes the genera involved in the hybridization, but doesn't tell you how the cross was made. Knowing just the nothotaxon, you wouldn't be able to recreate a hybrid.
Lou Sneary is the grex. The grex defines the exact parentage of the plant down to its species level and also the breeding sequence. So knowing the grex, you would be able to recreate a hybrid.
'Bluebird' is the cultivar name.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Shoreguy
If the plant is known to include other plants of another genus which are not known, the plant would be referred to as Neofinetia hybrid ‘cultivar’.
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If the parentage is not fully known, but is fairly certain that it involves another genus, then there doesn't seem to be a consistent universal method to naming these, so whatever method you use to designate that they are hybrid, I think it's important to just be clear about it, and the method that I usually use is:
Neofinetia Hybrid 'Cultivar'
e.g. Neofinetia Hybrid 'Gongju'