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... Also a nice form of Trillium luteum (I have another form of it -or hybred with mud coloured flowers)
Quote from: PeterT on May 01, 2011, 10:20:23 PM... Also a nice form of Trillium luteum (I have another form of it -or hybred with mud coloured flowers)Peter, I've seen brown-ish flowered T. luteum growing in Gatlinburg, Tennessee, far from the nearest T. cuneatum or any other brown or red sessile trillium. A friend collected a piece of that clump, but I did not get any of it for DNA testing. It seems to be a color form that occurs in populations of wild luteum, but at a very low rate. DNA testing would confirm this, I suspect. T. cuneatum and T. luteum have strikingly different DNA amounts.Jim
Thanks Gote Trillium chloro divided late April 2010----shows new roots growing--with a close up of previous seasons roots --some damaged but others with an active root tip.Cheers Dave