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Nepenthes Everything about Tropical Pitcher Plants |
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cindy: N. adnata and N. sibuyanensis x hamata
cindy
Global Moderator member is offline Joined: Aug 2007 Posts: 412 Location: Singapore N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Thread Started on Nov 15, 2007, 9:57pm » N. adnata (Fauzi) The plant - barely 3" tall. The first pitcher formed in my conditions. N. sibuyanensis x hamata (BE) is pitchering! runk: There are two pitchers ballooning...I'll post more pics when they are fully developed. Link to Post - Back to Top 165.21.154.91 sweethalo Full Member member is offline Joined: Oct 2007 Gender: Female Posts: 119 Location: Singapore, Seletar Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #1 on Nov 16, 2007, 3:06am » wow Cindy! so the sibu x hamata can actually pitcher here! How nice! Link to Post - Back to Top 202.156.14.10 cindy Global Moderator member is offline Joined: Aug 2007 Posts: 412 Location: Singapore Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #2 on Nov 16, 2007, 11:36am » Audrey, this hybrid is from seeds so each individual will be different. I won't be able to tell if another sibu x hamata will pitcher for me. Link to Post - Back to Top 165.21.154.116 sweethalo Full Member member is offline Joined: Oct 2007 Gender: Female Posts: 119 Location: Singapore, Seletar Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #3 on Nov 16, 2007, 12:35pm » ooo... so depending which parent 'genes' are stronger in that seedling? Link to Post - Back to Top 202.156.14.10 cindy Global Moderator member is offline Joined: Aug 2007 Posts: 412 Location: Singapore Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #4 on Nov 17, 2007, 3:46pm » Both N. sibuyanensis and N. hamata does not grow well here outdoors but hopefully hybrid vigor will give it a boost. Some may turn out more hamata than sibuyanensis...mine seems more of the latter, having rounder pitchers. But if the peristome is like hamata then it is a bonus. Link to Post - Back to Top 165.21.154.14 jeff1u Junior Member member is offline Joined: Jul 2007 Posts: 61 Location: Singapore Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #5 on Nov 19, 2007, 2:54pm » I was shocked and impressed by your hybrid. The name itself already my life. Hope it turns out stable and can grow on lowland condition. Link to Post - Back to Top 166.121.36.12 cindy Global Moderator member is offline Joined: Aug 2007 Posts: 412 Location: Singapore Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #6 on Nov 19, 2007, 9:51pm » Jeff, the pitchers are still ballooning! Link to Post - Back to Top 165.21.154.115 cindy Global Moderator member is offline Joined: Aug 2007 Posts: 412 Location: Singapore Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #7 on Nov 20, 2007, 11:30pm » I cannot resist posting the pics before the pitchers develop fully...they are having very nice colour! First pitcher, 3/4" Second pitcher, 1" Link to Post - Back to Top 165.21.154.112 rainforestguy Senior Member member is offline Joined: Jul 2007 Posts: 386 Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #8 on Nov 24, 2007, 5:12am » Since this plant is a seed origin plant, it should have a better chance to grow to maturity than over a tc one. It will require many long years before even these so-called experts come to realize that anything seed origin as a true seed grown plant will perform greatly over all of the exact same tc clones. I have experienced these differences between seed original and tc clones. Those of even species from seeds have outperformed almost all of those from tc. Examples include N. lowii (seed grown actually making uppers) while tc plants suffering even to stay alive. It will be much time before many nurseries resort to selling seed grown over tc grown plants. M Link to Post - Back to Top 74.61.72.115http://www.lhnn.proboards107.com/index.cgi borneo Advisor - Nepenthes member is offline Joined: Oct 2007 Posts: 23 Location: Sri Lanka Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #9 on Nov 27, 2007, 4:01pm » Talking about N. lowii producing uppers, here's a young plant from TC photographed in 2003: Four years later the very same plant is here at the 2007 Chelsea Flower show. You can just about see it in the middle. Then we brought it back from London bare rooted, put it back inot the nursery and it continues to pitcher as if nothing had happened: Despite it's terrible weakness being a TC plant, it seems to have performed quite well really. Hmmm..... Link to Post - Back to Top 124.43.223.38 isaacgoh Senior Member member is offline Joined: Jan 2007 Posts: 503 Location: Antara Ipoh dan K. Lumpur Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #10 on Nov 27, 2007, 4:10pm » Very good insights you showed on that particular Lowii's journey. I feel lucky now that I bought a small tc lowii plant from you through Fauzi this year. Cheers, Isaac Link to Post - Back to Top 60.51.206.97 cindy Global Moderator member is offline Joined: Aug 2007 Posts: 412 Location: Singapore Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #11 on Nov 27, 2007, 4:12pm » 3/4" pitcher is open...not a very interesting peristome yet though. Seeing double? This is a sibuyanensis pitcher which was produced on the plant I got last December. The plant died this July with the heat. « Last Edit: Nov 27, 2007, 4:13pm by cindy »Link to Post - Back to Top 165.21.154.75 rainforestguy Senior Member member is offline Joined: Jul 2007 Posts: 386 Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #12 on Nov 28, 2007, 1:32am » Unfortunately growers who grow their highland-intermediate plants in highland conditions, could never know the difficulties in making highland species-hybrids grow well. I am speaking with ACTUAL growing techniques, I also live in the tropics, and after many many years of careful cultivation, I have yet to see tc plants perform well. I hope for those who are growing both tc and seed grown plants you are already experiencing the great differences in growing them side by side. Time itself will dictate what growers want and what will sell in the marketplace. The success stories of plants such as N. sp. Viking, thorelii, rafflesiana, and so forth has not been of tc plants but of original seed grown material, whether from cuttings from older plants or just matured established seedlings. Imagine where we'd be today if N. hamata were available from seed. M Link to Post - Back to Top 74.61.72.115http://www.lhnn.proboards107.com/index.cgi borneo Advisor - Nepenthes member is offline Joined: Oct 2007 Posts: 23 Location: Sri Lanka Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #13 on Nov 28, 2007, 12:27pm » The so-called "success story" of N. sp. Viking is that it has been pillaged wholesale from it's natural habitat to satisfy the cravings of a few. This is to the undoubted detriment of wild populations. Fortunately though, seed has been widely circulated and the release of tissue cultured clones in the near future will hopefully alleviate this problem, perhaps in time to save the wild populations from being entirely decimated or perhaps too late. Time will tell. Of course, as usual, the clones from TC can be expected to be far more vigorous to cultivate than wild-collected plants, being free from nematodes and other pathogens that infest nearly all wild Nepenthes. « Last Edit: Nov 28, 2007, 1:49pm by borneo »Link to Post - Back to Top 124.43.221.122 phissionkorps Advisor - Nepenthes member is offline if you don't grow from seed, toughen up! Joined: Oct 2007 Gender: Male Posts: 307 Location: Republic of Texas Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #14 on Nov 28, 2007, 1:20pm » Actually, the species was never formally described, so it's still sp. Viking. Kurata withdrew his proposal, and now feels that it is a geotype of N. mirabilis. Link to Post - Back to Top 75.111.173.137Natura non facit saltum Species seed is worth its weight in platinum Valhalla when I die borneo Advisor - Nepenthes member is offline Joined: Oct 2007 Posts: 23 Location: Sri Lanka Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #15 on Nov 28, 2007, 1:47pm » Thanks Ron, I wasn't aware of that. Guess someone ought to update Wickepedia etc. I've edited the N. globosa reference out of my post. Link to Post - Back to Top 124.43.221.122 phissionkorps Advisor - Nepenthes member is offline if you don't grow from seed, toughen up! Joined: Oct 2007 Gender: Male Posts: 307 Location: Republic of Texas Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #16 on Nov 28, 2007, 2:18pm » To be honest with you...I have no idea what to call the thing (guess I'll stick w/ sp. Viking until its described though). Regarding affinity to mirabilis, I can see some similarities (like the leaves), but I think its a different species, especially considering its rhizome, and the fact that it has been found growing along beaches, etc. Problem is, it hybridizes frequently with mirabilis in the wild. Of course there are some "pure" mirabilis here and there that look like sp. Viking, and some "pure" sp. Viking that look like mirabilis, which further complicates the matter. Regarding Wikipedia, I got the info from a post by Trent Meeks probably about a month or 2, so its fairy recent devcelopment I suppose. I'm sure he knows more than I do about the situation. As of October of this year, Barry's FAQ still had it listed as "unpublished". I don't know if it was published and retracted, or never published, but I do know that it apparently isn't globosa "yet". In ref to its conservation status, IUCN has it listed as data deficient. On Nong's site, he says IIRC, it is endemic to an island that only a few locals (I think of the same family) know about...but of course this could've changed. Until someone does some work on the Indochinese Nepenthes, a lot of stuff is up in the air. If the species is endemic to one small island, which is in monsoon territory, outlook looks bleak, so I'm glad it has gotten it into cultivation. Cindy, I really hope that those plants take some sort resemblance in the peristome to hamata, but then again....don't we all. While the teeth of predator aren't as pronounced as hamata, the teeth of rokko 'A' x hamata bear more of a resemblance. Here's hoping... And as I've said before...wish adnata was more available in the US. (or available at all for that matter) « Last Edit: Nov 28, 2007, 2:25pm by phissionkorps »Link to Post - Back to Top 75.111.173.137Natura non facit saltum Species seed is worth its weight in platinum Valhalla when I die rainforestguy Senior Member member is offline Joined: Jul 2007 Posts: 386 Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #17 on Nov 28, 2007, 3:15pm » Tissue cultured plants are just inferior to seed grown plants. A weak seedling can be kept alive and vigorous in vitro and success ending in failure to keep them alive once removed from this perfect environment. For those who have germinated seed, grown them out, have already discovered so many misconceptions regarding nepenthes culture as a whole. « Last Edit: Nov 28, 2007, 10:39pm by David »Link to Post - Back to Top 74.61.72.115http://www.lhnn.proboards107.com/index.cgi cindy Global Moderator member is offline Joined: Aug 2007 Posts: 412 Location: Singapore Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #18 on Nov 28, 2007, 6:40pm » PK, I am already very excited that the hybrid is pitchering for me. There were quite a number of growers here who bought the seedlings from BE but mine is first to pitcher. The peristome is red, which is very promising. Sibuyanensis itself has got quite a defined peristome too but if hamata lends its genes to this hybrid, it will turn out very nice. My concern is also the heat which I have to contend with during the hot months, humidity too can drop pretty low (40%) suddenly at my balcony. I got this plant in September when the weather was beginning to be cooler. So far, I don't see any sources for N. adnata. This plant was from Fauzi who is also on this forum. Not sure if he ships to US though. Link to Post - Back to Top 165.21.154.13 cindy Global Moderator member is offline Joined: Aug 2007 Posts: 412 Location: Singapore Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #19 on Nov 28, 2007, 8:42pm » The 1" pitcher is open. Now this peristome shows more potential. Link to Post - Back to Top 165.21.154.11 |
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Re: cindy: N. adnata and N. sibuyanensis x hamata
David
Administrator member is online Joined: Dec 2006 Gender: Male Posts: 2,326 Location: Kuala Lumpur Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #20 on Nov 28, 2007, 10:52pm » Mike, I have deleted a few paragraph in your last post above as it violates forum regulations. Your understanding in the matter would be very much appreciated. Link to Post - Back to Top LoggedMy Wantlist peterp New Member member is offline Joined: Dec 2007 Posts: 5 Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #21 on Dec 6, 2007, 11:17am » rainforest is the guy who is obssessed with seed grown nepenthes?. we heard your point, how many more times we have to listen to it. Link to Post - Back to Top 203.49.73.83 rainforestguy Senior Member member is offline Joined: Jul 2007 Posts: 386 Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #22 on Dec 7, 2007, 11:59am » Oddly, I find it interesting that someone who once said a remark regarding hybrids "plastered across the forum" should stoop so LOW as to create hybrids and sell them as SEEDLINGS! I guess if you wait long enough, Lions will learn to be vegetarians too! M Link to Post - Back to Top 74.61.72.115http://www.lhnn.proboards107.com/index.cgi David Administrator member is online Joined: Dec 2006 Gender: Male Posts: 2,326 Location: Kuala Lumpur Re: N. adnata and N. sbuyanensis x hamata « Reply #23 on Dec 8, 2007, 9:19am » Ok guys! Please concentrate your conversations on growing Nepenthes and just enjoy our passion together. I do not want to hear any more sarcasm or personal attacks on anyone on this forum. I appreciate the contributions of everyone on this forum but this is not a place to attack others whether directly or indirectly. If you wish to do so, please PM or email that person directly. This have been written out in the forum regulations. All members may share their cultivation experience or views on this forum. You may share your views/experience/knowledge if you do not agree with what someone else say. But that's it! You may not critisize others or insists that others is wrong. At least respect the forum rules and regulations if you do not respect its members or administrative staff. This thread is lock. « Last Edit: Dec 8, 2007, 9:42am by David »Link to Post - Back to Top LoggedMy Wantlist |
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