Two species of Zamioculcas?
- Subject: Two species of Zamioculcas?
- From: &* <S*@ExoticRainforest.com>
- Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 10:46:01 -0500
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According to TROPICOS there are four species. I can't
find a lot of information on anything other than Zamioculcas
zamiifolia.
Steve Lucas
----- Original Message -----
From:
e*@earthlink.net
To: aroid-l@gizmoworks.com
Sent: Wednesday, October 10, 2007 11:49
PM
Subject: [Aroid-l] Two species of
Zamioculcas?
There are two forms of Zamioculcas floating around - the now
ubiquitous form labeled as Z. zamiifolia or "ZZ plant" and another type
that seemed to pop up from time to time before the mass-produced form
apparently drowned it out in the marketplace. I was wondering if anyone
has looked into whether the less common version is possibly a seperate
species, regional variant, or what?
I have both forms in my office,
so I end up staring at them when on the phone, day dreaming, etc and
notice the many differences between them. Both plants are about the same
size, potted in the same mix, and receive the same amount of light and
water (they are kept right next to each other). Here are the differences I
have noticed in my plants:
The uncommon type has half the amount of
leaflets than the common form, and they are spaced much further apart (the
common type has leaflets so close together they appear to overlap). The
leaflets on the uncommon form are also twice as long and noticably
oblanceolate (broadest point towards the tip), while the common form is
shorter and more elliptical (broadest in the middle). The margin is also
slightly wavy in the uncommon form. The geniculum is also positioned lower
on the uncommon form, while the common form has a geniculum much closer to
the lower set of leaflets. The shape of petiole between the geniculum and
the soil line also is noticably different. In the common form the petiole
thickens below the geniculum to its widest point but then abruptly
tapers back down just above the soil line. In the uncommon form the
petiole broadens below the geniculum very gradually to a point just
above the soil line, at which point it then abruptly broadens even more
to its widest point at the soil line (almost like a pony-tail palm -
Beaucarnea/Nolinia sp). I have not had either of them flower yet so I
haven't compared their inflorescensces.
Any ideas? Can anybody else
growing the two forms confirm my observations with their
plants?
Thanks! Adam
Black
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