Sorry, not sure how I missed this post.
Houmeiden & Jitsugetsukou, as well as Amanogawa, Benihotaru, and a few others have a very similar type of variegation. However, this type of variegation is not given a unique name and is usually simply referred to as Tora-fu 虎斑. Some people will call it Houmeiden type variegation. It can also be seen as a type of akebono-fu 曙斑, variegation that only shows up on new leaves and disappears as the leaves mature. (The variety akebono does not have akebono-fu
) Yes, once the variegation turns green, it will not come back and the variegation is best when the plant is growing fastest.
Hanagoromo, as well as Kinroukaku, Koganenishiki, Kinyuuko, and Kinboshi have the same type of variegation. These are definitely affected by light levels. The more light you give a given plant, the brighter the variegation (within reason!). This type of variegation is reversible, and can freely go from green to yellow to back to green depending on light levels. These varieties are interesting in that given good strains and high enough light, the plant can turn almost solid yellow and still grow well.
Akogare is described as basic Akebono-fu, which is a subset of tora-fu. The new leaves should emerge solid yellow, and later darken to green, but I've heard that it's fussy, and needs very particular growing conditions to do this well. I personally have not owned this variety so I'm not certain what conditions it needs.
Your other questions:
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Originally Posted by Neodex
1) How much of the variegation seems to be laid down during leaf emergence and is there generally more of it during the fastest growth periods.
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This depends on each variety. In varieties like Hanagoromo, Kinkujaku, and similar variegation types, the variegation only appears after the leaf has matured. Growth cycles don't affect the variegation on these much. However, akebono-fu types tend to show the variegation best when the plant is growing fastest. Growth stages, speed or season sometimes do affect the variegation other varieties as well.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neodex
2) Is the variegation reversible; either green to yellow/white or back again ?
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Depends on the variety again. In a variety like Houmeiden, once the leaf turns green, it will not turn white again. In varieties like Kinkujaku though, the variegation freely goes back and forth between green and yellow depending on light levels.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neodex
3) Is it light dependent and if so can this be replicated under artificial lighting?
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Some types are light dependant, and yes it can be replicated under artificial lighting.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neodex
4) Are there any temperature effects on variegation.
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Certain tora-fu types seem to show best in specific temperatures. Houmeiden for one, will less likely show it's white if the temperatures are very high.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neodex
What I lack in my collection are any of the classic yellow tigers that seem to have more stable variegation, so if any of you have these please join in.
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While some varieties are more likely to have more stable variegation than others, tora-fu and akebono-fu type variegation is inherently unstable and requires you to learn the specific needs of the variety to produce the best variegation. These types are notoriously difficult to grow to show quality, much more so than the chimeral types of variegation.
Out of my collection, varieties of these types that have the most reliable variegation are Byakko, Kyokusho. Byakko has Setsuzan type greenish white mottling, and Kyokusho has beautifully shaded yellow sectors on the leaf. Byakko seems to be fairly consistently well variegated among other growers, but I've heard mixed stories about getting Kyokusho to be nicely variegated.
Byakko:
I've found this variety as well as similarly variegated varieties gets it's best variegation in low light, with no big consideration for temperature or growing season. Too much light and the variegation tends to disappear.
Kyokusho:
I've found this variety to like relatively higher light to get the best variegation. Yellow sectors will emerge white-yellow and later deepen to solid yellow, while green sectors will emerge pale green, then later deepen in color to dark green. I think shifts in temperature and light both work together in triggering the color of each sector. Variegation once it appears seems to stay in place, though keeping it in insufficient light seems to permanently turn the yellow sectors green.