Off-topic info on P. warmingii
- Subject: Off-topic info on P. warmingii
- From: &* <S*@ExoticRainforest.com>
- Date: Sat, 16 Aug 2008 09:03:40 -0500
Hi Carol. Names rarely change despite what is written on
many garden websites. What happens is a knowledgeable botanist doing
research learns that the name currently being used is not the correctly
accepted name and verifies the true name, which was the first name
published to science that is correct to genus.
But collectors don't always like to accept botanical
science. Collectors appear to prefer a different name for anything that
does not look alike. Despite beliefs posted on the internet that botanists
are perpetually toying with names and are "constantly changing" those names, the
scientific fact is botanists are simply following the rules of botany as
outlined by Linnaeus
and no one has changed anything! These
botanical scientists are simply following those rules as defined for centuries
in an effort to get back to the first species name published that is correct to
the genus.
Here's a great example. Collectors want to put a
different tag on many of their collectable Philodendron species if they
look even slightly different. But in fact Philodendron
acrocardium, Philodendron cuspidatum, Philodendron hoffmannii,
Philodendron microphyllum, Philodendron pittier, Philodendron micans, Philodendron oxycardium, and
Philodendron scandens
are all the same species: Philodendron
hederaceum! Just because the blades have a slightly different
appearance does not make them different species. The arguement about those
names now dates back over 180 years and botanists decided way back then the
correct name for all of them was Philodendron hederaceum. But
collectors just won't allow those names to go away and continue to claim they
are all different species.
That's why it is important to use a site like TROPICOS and
once you find your name check to see if it is the "accepted name". You'll
find that right up in the header. Then look to see if there are
synonyms. Sometimes you'll find you have a species that has several
natural variations and also several names.
It may be confusing, but it worth knowing what you are really
growing.
Steve Lucas
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