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Re: Small philo from Brian Williams, he got it from John Banta
- Subject: Re: Small philo from Brian Williams, he got it from John Banta
- From: E* <S*@ExoticRainforest.com>
- Date: Thu, 22 Jul 2010 17:28:11 -0500
Thanks Marcus. I believe the specimen I have is now three
years old or older based on info Brian gave me but the Banta says in 21
years his have apparently gotten no large. He also said today it was
possible the plant came from Panama since the collector also visited
there often but since the original collector is no longer alive there
is no way to verify any of this. Banta has not seen an inflorescence
either since he received the plant from the collector in Rio in 1989.
It may well be a very slow grower.
Steve
www.ExoticRainforest.com
On 7/22/2010 05:28, Marcus Nadruz wrote:
Friends,
This
may be a young individual of Philodendron glaziovii, a species
that has distribution in the states of Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo.
Marcus
2010/7/21 ExoticRainforest <S*@exoticrainforest.com>
I know a bit more this morning about this unknown Philodendron.
This
came
from John Banta this morning. It appears this plant originated in
Brazil.
"Hi Steve, I know the philodendron very well. I got it from
Dimitri
Sucre in Rio in 1989. He called it "Sucre's Slim". Other than that I
don't know any more about it. Banta"
If anyone else is growing this please post what you know about
it.
Steve
www.ExoticRainforest.com
On 7/20/2010 06:03, ExoticRainforest wrote:
Another apparently unknown Philodendron.
I received this small Philodendron from Brian Williams almost exactly two years ago. Brian tells me he acquired it from John Banta.
I'm trying to learn anything possible about this Philo so if you have grown it or have seen the inflorescence (especially if you have a
photo) I'd love all the info possible. The petiole is terete near the apex (top) but there are are striations on the flattened adaxial
surface near the base, the blades have not grown larger than 8 inches and the petioles are around double the length
of the blade. The widest point on the blade is barely 1 inch. The young blades emerge from a petiolar sheath but there are also
cataphylls visible in the photos. The plant appears to grow as a clumping form but I have no idea if it is an epiphyte or terrestrial.
Unless this is simply a very slow grower this one may also qualify as one of the smallest Philodendron species known. I have zero
collection data but would like to know where it originated.
For size comparison, the pot is 8 inches across.
If you have it or know anything about it please post the information here.
Thanks!
Steve Lucas
www.ExoticRainforest.com
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--
Marcus A. Nadruz Coelho
Pesquisador Titular
Diretoria de Pesquisas
Instituto de Pesquisas Jardim Botanico do Rio de
Janeiro/MMA
21 32042144
( http://www.jbrj.gov.br)
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