Re: Arisaema disease
- Subject: Re: Arisaema disease
- From: S* M* <samarak@gizmoworks.com>
- Date: Sun, 30 Jul 2017 17:46:20 -0500
|
Anton, I've experienced exactly what you describe here in NW Arkansas. None of the Asian species I've tried outdoors here, including sikokianum, candidissimum, ringens, fargesii, and others, last more than about 5 years outdoors. They look good for a couple of years, less good for a couple more, then just don't appear one spring. The few I have now I keep in pots in the greenhouse, where they do fine if I store them in the coldest corner over the winter. We do have the arisaema rust here in native populations, and we do grow the native species in the yard, but some of the Asian species declined and disappeared without ever showing the characteristic orange pustules you mention. Steve On 7/30/2017 3:27 PM, a*@aol.com
wrote:
Just wondering if anyone can shed some light on the possible truth that the native species of Jack and the pulpit can spread disease to the more exotic members of the genus? |
_______________________________________________ Aroid-L mailing list Aroid-L@www.gizmoworks.com http://www.gizmoworks.com/mailman/listinfo/aroid-l
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Arisaema disease
- From: &* A* &*
- Re: Arisaema disease
- References:
- Arisaema disease
- From: a*
- Arisaema disease
- Prev by Date: Admin screwup re Jason's post from 7/18
- Next by Date: Re: Amorphophallus gigas
- Previous by thread: Arisaema disease
- Next by thread: Re: Arisaema disease