Calochortus Bulbs & Seeds

Kipp McMichael kimcmich@hotmail.com
Sat, 23 Dec 2017 21:23:59 PST
Greetings,


  First off, a responsible seed collector should be collecting from many plants and taking only some from each. You can ask the source about this to confirm.


  Variation in the forms of a given species are not always present throughout the population. Calochortus venustus has forms that are a solid, deep red or purple, for instance. These are found usually mixed in populations where white predominates. That does not mean, however, that seed from any population of the white C. venustus will yield these deeper colors.


  Even if you can get seed from such a population, it is rare that the collector would know the color of the parent plants. And even if the parent color was known, wild Calochortus do not breed true enough to guarantee the offspring will share their parents' color.


  All this is to say: If you are after specific forms of a given species, your only sure bet is to find clones/offsets from a bulb of known form. Since some species do not form bulbils or divide, this can be a challenge. Luckily, the most variable species, C. venustus, readily divides and develops bulbils on its stems.


  I'm not sure if the popular commercial forms of C. venustus offered by Dutch companies are produced from true-bred seed or bulbils - other listers can chime in on that score.


-|<ipp

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