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Sockhom 18th August 2010 06:30 AM

Nepenthes thorelii paper
 
Hello,
Here is one of my last papers. It is an account on N. thorelii . It summarizes all our current knowledge on this enigmatic species. It has been published in the appendix of Stewart McPherson's last book.
http://www.carnivorousplants.it/thorelii.history.pdf
Cheers,
François.

NepNut 18th August 2010 02:38 PM

Re: Nepenthes thorelii paper
 
Thanks François for your contibutions... but I really hope this won't be your "last" ever paper on Nepenthes...*biggrin2* Good work !! :1thumbup:

tanphobia 18th August 2010 04:48 PM

Re: Nepenthes thorelii paper
 
Does the phrase "not hipped" refer to having no "shoulders"? I just wonder
http://www.neofarmthailand.com/image...7/Viking-C.jpg
http://http://www.neofarmthailand.co...7/Viking-C.jpg

marcellocatalano 18th August 2010 09:14 PM

Re: Nepenthes thorelii paper
 
Yes, that part of the pitcher is called hip, and it seems that while some species have a stable hip in the middle or lower part of the pitcher, some others have a hip that can be in the middle or along the whole upper part and even absent, that giving a rounder shape to the pitcher.
A curious thing that I would like to understand more, is that "mirror" species like andamana-suratensis, kerrii-kongkandana, mirabilis-var.globosa and probably others seem to split one from the other by using that feature, I don't know why.
Plants of var. globosa have been classified in grades depending on where the hip is, but that's a horticultural thing, as "the upper goes the hip and the better the pitcher looks" :) It has nothing to do with taxonomy, as in the wild you can find var. globosa plants with hip in all positions, randomly going from the middle to absent.

tanphobia 18th August 2010 11:24 PM

Re: Nepenthes thorelii paper
 
It's funny that one of my nepenthes named as "thorelii" has globose shape like the one in the picture (in the pdf), except that my plant is slightly hipped :laugh:
The whole plant
http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3010/...99daa00e_b.jpg
The pitcher
http://i923.photobucket.com/albums/a...cture114-1.jpg

marcellocatalano 18th August 2010 11:39 PM

Re: Nepenthes thorelii paper
 
Hi Tan, nice plant :) Well, N. kampotiana also has round pitchers and it grows in southern Vietnam. It's much more common in cultivation and of course it's sold as "thorelii". But it's glabrous, while N. thorelii is hairy. At the bottom of this page you can find a table to distinguish all the Indochinese species: http://www.carnivorousplants.it/desc.holdenii.pdf
If your plant is hairy, congratulations, it's probably one of the poached plants that has been put for sale in your Country. Actually, even if it's kampotiana, I can see a massive rootstock at the base of your plant, and that makes me think that it has been poached from the wild anyway...

NepNut 18th August 2010 11:55 PM

Re: Nepenthes thorelii paper
 
Hey tanphobia,
Good to have you in Petpitcher. I have to say your nep is an interesting specimen. Do you have more, mind share more detailed pics of the leaves, stems and pitchers?? Thankyou.

François and Cello,
So is this possibly a N. thorelii ??

marcellocatalano 19th August 2010 12:00 AM

Re: Nepenthes thorelii paper
 
Well, it's a young specimen, so the leaves and structure of the plant are not very clear, and a kampotiana with red pitchers looks exactely like that and it's quite common. The only difference is in the indumentum. If you have a hairy plant from Vienam that looks like that, yes, you probably have a N. thorelii.

tanphobia 19th August 2010 02:30 PM

Re: Nepenthes thorelii paper
 
I took the picture of the leaves this morning and the funny thing is that there are hair on the leaves but they don't stick out, as if they are glued to the leaves. Here are the pictures. Sorry if it's blurry :tongue:
https://forum.petpitcher.net/%3Ca%20h...h_IMG_5392.jpg

http://i923.photobucket.com/albums/a...h_IMG_5392.jpg

http://i923.photobucket.com/albums/a...h_IMG_5395.jpg
So, what do you think ?

https://forum.petpitcher.net/%3Ca%20h...%20%3E%3C/a%3E

kevyn chan 19th August 2010 04:06 PM

Re: Nepenthes thorelii paper
 
hmm....i think at last we get to see the holy grail of N. thorelli 'live'!!!


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