Varieties Panamerican Seed / New for 2021
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(12) United States Plant Patent (10) Patent No.: US PP12,313 P2 Cascante (45) Date of Patent: Dec
USOOPP12313P2 (12) United States Plant Patent (10) Patent No.: US PP12,313 P2 Cascante (45) Date of Patent: Dec. 25, 2001 (54) DOUBLE IMPATIENS PLANT NAMED (58) Field of Search ................................................ Plt./317 “CAMEO SALMON” Primary Examiner Bruce R. Campell (75) Inventor: Xenia Cascante, Alajuela (CR) Assistant Examiner Michelle Kizilkaya (74) Attorney, Agent, or Firm-C. A. Whealy 73) AssigSCC Ogl evee Ltd., Connellsville,C Ilsville, PA (US (57) ABSTRACT (*) Notice: Subject to any disclaimer, the term of this A new and distinct cultivar of Double Impatiens plant named patent is extended or adjusted under 35 Cameo Salmon, characterized by its large Salmon pink U.S.C. 154(b) by 0 days. colored flowers; fully double flower form; freely flowering habit with flowers positioned above the foliage; compact, (21) Appl. No.: 09/712,315 mounded, spreading, densely foliated, and freely branching plant habit; rapid growth rate; and large rounded dark green (22) Filed: Nov. 15, 2000 leaves. 51) Int.nt. Cl.Cl." ....................................................... A01H 5/00 (52) U.S. Cl. .............................................................. Pit/317 1 Drawing Sheet 1 2 BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Plants of the new Impatiens are more compact and The present Invention relates to a new and distinct culti more mounded than plants of the cultivar Conflection Rose. Var of Double Impatiens plant, botanically known as Impa 2. Leaves of plants of the new Impatiens are more tiens walleriana, and hereinafter referred to by the cultivar rounded than leaves of plants of the cultivar Conflection name Cameo Salmon. Rose. The new Impatiens is a product of a planned breeding 3. -
Untangling Phylogenetic Patterns and Taxonomic Confusion in Tribe Caryophylleae (Caryophyllaceae) with Special Focus on Generic
TAXON 67 (1) • February 2018: 83–112 Madhani & al. • Phylogeny and taxonomy of Caryophylleae (Caryophyllaceae) Untangling phylogenetic patterns and taxonomic confusion in tribe Caryophylleae (Caryophyllaceae) with special focus on generic boundaries Hossein Madhani,1 Richard Rabeler,2 Atefeh Pirani,3 Bengt Oxelman,4 Guenther Heubl5 & Shahin Zarre1 1 Department of Plant Science, Center of Excellence in Phylogeny of Living Organisms, School of Biology, College of Science, University of Tehran, P.O. Box 14155-6455, Tehran, Iran 2 University of Michigan Herbarium-EEB, 3600 Varsity Drive, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108-2228, U.S.A. 3 Department of Biology, Faculty of Sciences, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, P.O. Box 91775-1436, Mashhad, Iran 4 Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Gothenburg, Box 461, 40530 Göteborg, Sweden 5 Biodiversity Research – Systematic Botany, Department of Biology I, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Menzinger Str. 67, 80638 München, Germany; and GeoBio Center LMU Author for correspondence: Shahin Zarre, [email protected] DOI https://doi.org/10.12705/671.6 Abstract Assigning correct names to taxa is a challenging goal in the taxonomy of many groups within the Caryophyllaceae. This challenge is most serious in tribe Caryophylleae since the supposed genera seem to be highly artificial, and the available morphological evidence cannot effectively be used for delimitation and exact determination of taxa. The main goal of the present study was to re-assess the monophyly of the genera currently recognized in this tribe using molecular phylogenetic data. We used the sequences of nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and the chloroplast gene rps16 for 135 and 94 accessions, respectively, representing all 16 genera currently recognized in the tribe Caryophylleae, with a rich sampling of Gypsophila as one of the most heterogeneous groups in the tribe. -
In Vitro Callus Culture of Dianthus Chinensis L. for Assessment of Flavonoid Related Gene Expression Pro Le
In Vitro Callus Culture of Dianthus Chinensis L. for Assessment of Flavonoid Related Gene Expression Prole R. Sreelekshmi University of Kerala Elenjikkal A Siril ( [email protected] ) University of Kerala https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4956-8428 Research Article Keywords: China pink, In vitro avonoid production, Friable callus, 2,4- D, Chalcone synthase Posted Date: March 17th, 2021 DOI: https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-320486/v1 License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Read Full License Page 1/27 Abstract Dianthus chinensis L. is an edible, ornamental herb used to prepare the Dianthi Herba, a Chinese traditional rejuvenating medicine. Owing to the rapid proliferation of callus tissues, in vitro production of avonoids has their own specic importance. Callus cultures raised followed by auxin directed biosynthesis of avonoid through related transcript prole were carried out. Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium fortied with 2,4- Dichlorophenoxy acetic acid (2,4- D) or picloram induced formation of friable callus from internode derived cultures of D. chinensis. Culture medium containing 2,4- D (10 µM) produced the highest avonoid content, 4.44 mg quercetin equivalent per gram (QE g− 1) under incubation in continuous dark condition, while maximum dry weight yield (0.38 g/ culture) was obtained from 10 µM 2,4- D under 16 h light / 8 h dark condition (50 µmol m− 2 s− 1 irradiance) at 60 days of incubation. The callus raised in light condition in 10 µM 2,4- D selected to analyze avonoid related gene expression prole viz., chalcone synthase (CHS), chalcone isomerase (CHI), avanone-3-hydroxylase (F3H), and avonol synthase (FLS) at specic time intervals. -
Impatiens Downy Mildew
Spring 2013 PRESS Impatiens downy mildew: A curse and opportunity for smart gardeners Impatiens downy mildew is a challenging new disease of impatiens walleriana that opens doors for exploring many other types of shade plants. Rebecca Finneran, Michigan State University Extension Dozens of Michigan gardeners reported last summer or other plants. The disease is favored by moist that the impatiens in their landscape showed signs conditions that are commonly found in an irrigated of a disease known as downy mildew. To avoid landscape bed. My first reaction to the sight was that disappointment, they are hoping to make some smart I had forgotten to water the plants, but as I inspected choices for plants this season. This underhanded the undersides of the leaves where the pathogen pathogen can attack plants even when they appear resides, I found fuzzy white spores – and didn’t even to be growing nicely in need my glasses. the landscape. With the Font: Noteworthy bold right weather conditions The sky is falling! Well, really it’s not (cool temperatures and plenty of moisture), downy Even though the impatiens downy mildew pathogen mildew can infect a patch can persist in the soil and keep us from planting of impatiens seemingly Impatiens walleriana cultivars for years, it does overnight. cause a gardener or landscape manager to think outside the box and get creative. In truth, the options A flower bed at the Kent are endless. Now is the time to be thinking that our County Michigan State cup is half full – no, it’s overflowing with planting University Extension possibilities. -
Impatiens Walleriana (Balsaminaceae)
Phytotaxa 3: 62–62 (2010) ISSN 1179-3155 (print edition) www.mapress.com/phytotaxa/ Correspondence PHYTOTAXA Copyright © 2010 • Magnolia Press ISSN 1179-3163 (online edition) Typification of ornamental plants 4: Impatiens walleriana (Balsaminaceae) MAARTEN J. M. CHRISTENHUSZ Department of Botany, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, United Kingdom. Impatiens walleriana Hook.f. in Oliver (1868: 302). Protologue: “Mozambique District, Moramballa, 2000 ft., on stones in streams”. Syntypes: J. Kirk s.n. (K!); H. Waller s.n. (K!). Lectotype (designated here): Mozambique, Moramballa, 0-3000 ft., Zambesi Expedition, H. Waller s.n. (K!-000419538). Notes: The name was published as ‘Walleriana’, which according to the ICBN (McNeill et al., 2006) is not a correctable error. The species is sometimes erroneously cited as ‘I. wallerana’. The other syntype, J. Kirk s.n. (K!), is also the holotype of Impatiens sultanii Hooker (1882: t. 6643), a synonym. The well-known bedding plant ‘busy lizzie’, Impatiens walleriana (Balsaminaceae), is a species occurring naturally in East Africa, where it can be found locally abundant in Kenya, Tanzania and Mozambique. It is frequently associated with wet or humid habitats and can thus be found near streams, waterfalls and in gorges or in the understorey of wet forests. Elsewhere in the tropics and subtropics the species can commonly be found naturalised along roads, in secondary forests and other disturbed habitats, where it can form dominant stands, competing out other species (Richardson et al. 2000, Tabak & Wettenberg 2008). Impatiens walleriana was first discovered during one of Dr David Livingstone’s expeditions up the Zambezi River, where he travelled with Dr John Kirk and Ref. -
Inventario De Flora Y Fauna En El CBIMA (12.6
ii CRÉDITOS Comité Directivo José Vicente Troya Rodríguez Representante Residente del PNUD en Costa Rica Kryssia Brade Representante Residente Adjunta del PNUD en Costa Rica Coordinado por Miriam Miranda Quirós Coordinadora del proyecto Paisajes Productivos-PNUD Consultores que trabajaron en la realización del estudio José Esteban Jiménez, estudio de plantas vasculares Federico Oviedo Brenes, estudio de plantas vasculares Fabián Araya Yannarella, estudio de hongos Víctor J. Acosta-Chaves, estudios de aves, de anfibios y de reptiles Susana Gutiérrez Acuña, estudio de mamíferos Revisado por el comité editorial PNUD Rafaella Sánchez Ingrid Hernández Jose Daniel Estrada Diseño y diagramación Marvin Rojas San José, Costa Rica, 2019 iii RESUMEN EJECUTIVO El conocimiento sobre la diversidad 84 especies esperadas, 21 especies de biológica que habita los ecosistemas anfibios y 84 especies de reptiles. naturales, tanto boscosos como no boscosos, así como en áreas rurales y La diversidad acá presentada, con urbanas, es la línea base fundamental excepción de los hongos, es entre 100 y para establecer un manejo y una gestión 250% mayor respecto al estudio similar adecuadas sobre la protección, efectuado en el 2001 (FUNDENA 2001). conservación y uso sostenible de los La cantidad de especies sensibles es recursos naturales. En el Corredor baja para cada grupo de organismos Biológico Interurbano Maria Aguilar se respecto al total. El CBIMA posee una encontró un total de 765 especies de gran cantidad de especies de plantas plantas vasculares, (74.9% son nativas nativas con alto potencial para restaurar de Costa Rica y crecen naturalmente en espacios físicos degradados y para el CBIMA, un 3.5% son nativas de Costa utilizar como ornamentales. -
Fragrant Annuals Fragrant Annuals
TheThe AmericanAmerican GARDENERGARDENER® TheThe MagazineMagazine ofof thethe AAmericanmerican HorticulturalHorticultural SocietySociety JanuaryJanuary // FebruaryFebruary 20112011 New Plants for 2011 Unusual Trees with Garden Potential The AHS’s River Farm: A Center of Horticulture Fragrant Annuals Legacies assume many forms hether making estate plans, considering W year-end giving, honoring a loved one or planting a tree, the legacies of tomorrow are created today. Please remember the American Horticultural Society when making your estate and charitable giving plans. Together we can leave a legacy of a greener, healthier, more beautiful America. For more information on including the AHS in your estate planning and charitable giving, or to make a gift to honor or remember a loved one, please contact Courtney Capstack at (703) 768-5700 ext. 127. Making America a Nation of Gardeners, a Land of Gardens contents Volume 90, Number 1 . January / February 2011 FEATURES DEPARTMENTS 5 NOTES FROM RIVER FARM 6 MEMBERS’ FORUM 8 NEWS FROM THE AHS 2011 Seed Exchange catalog online for AHS members, new AHS Travel Study Program destinations, AHS forms partnership with Northeast garden symposium, registration open for 10th annual America in Bloom Contest, 2011 EPCOT International Flower & Garden Festival, Colonial Williamsburg Garden Symposium, TGOA-MGCA garden photography competition opens. 40 GARDEN SOLUTIONS Plant expert Scott Aker offers a holistic approach to solving common problems. 42 HOMEGROWN HARVEST page 28 Easy-to-grow parsley. 44 GARDENER’S NOTEBOOK Enlightened ways to NEW PLANTS FOR 2011 BY JANE BERGER 12 control powdery mildew, Edible, compact, upright, and colorful are the themes of this beating bugs with plant year’s new plant introductions. -
PLANT YOUR YARD with WILDFLOWERSI Sources
BOU /tJ, San Francisco, "The the beautiful, old Roth Golden Gate City," pro Estate with its lovely for vides a perfect setting for mal English gardens in the 41st Annual Meeting Woodside. Visit several of the American Horticul gardens by Tommy tural Society as we focus Church, one of the great on the influence of ori est garden-makers of the ental gardens, plant con century. Observe how the servation, and edible originator of the Califor landscaping. nia living garden incor Often referred to as porated both beauty and "the gateway to the Ori a place for everyday ac ent," San Francisco is tivities into one garden the "most Asian of occi area. dental cities." You will Come to San Fran delight in the beauty of cisco! Join Society mem its oriental gardens as bers and other meeting we study the nature and participants as we ex significance of oriental plore the "Beautiful and gardening and its influ Bountiful: Horticulture's ence on American horti Legacy to the Future." culture. A visit to the Japanese Tea Garden in the Golden Gate Park, a Please send me special advance registration information for the botanical treasure, will Society's 1986 Annual Meeting in offer one of the most au San Francisco, California. thentic examples of Japa NAME ________ nese landscape artistry outside of Japan. Tour the Demonstra Western Plants for Amer ~D~SS _______ tion Gardens of Sunset Explore with us the ican Gardens" as well as CITY ________ joys and practical aspects magazine, magnificent what plant conservation of edible landscaping, private gardens open only efforts are being made STATE ZIP ____ which allows one to en to Meeting participants, from both a world per joy both the beauty and and the 70-acre Strybing spective and a national MAIL TO: Annual Meeting, American Horticultural Society, the bounty of Arboretum. -
SPS 2021 Plant List
SPRING 2021 ONLINE PLANT SALE ASSORTMENT - UPDATED 3.24.21 PLANT VARIETY SZ RETAIL ANNUALS AGERATUM HYBRID AGERATUM, ARTIST BLUE QT $ 6.00 ALTERNANTHERA DENTATE ALTERNANTHERA, BRAZILIAN RED HOTS QT $ 6.00 ALTERNANTHERA DENTATE ALTERNANTHERA, PURPLE PRINCE QT $ 6.00 ANGELONIA ANGUSTIFOLIA ANGELONIA SERENITA, RASPBERRY QT $ 6.00 ANGELONIA ANGUSTIFOLIA ANGELONIA SERENITA, PURPLE QT $ 6.00 ANGELONIA ANGUSTIFOLIA ANGELONIA SERENITA, WHITE QT $ 6.00 BEGONIA X HYBRID BEGONIA, DRAGONWING RED QT $ 6.00 BEGONIA X SEMPERFLORENSCULTORUMBEGONIA, WHOPPER RED BRONZE LEAF QT $ 6.00 BEGONIA X SEMPERFLORENSCULTORUMBEGONIA, WHOPPER PINK GREEN LEAF QT $ 6.00 CALADIUM CALADIUM, FANCY LEAF WATER'S EDGE 4" $ 3.00 CALADIUM CALADIUM, STRAP LEAF HOT 2 TROT 4" $ 3.00 PLUMBAGO AURICULATA CAPE PLUMBAGO, BLUE QT $ 6.00 CELOSIA ARGENTA CELOSIA, INTENZ QT $ 6.00 PLECTRANTHUS SCUTELLARIODESCOLEUS, CAMPFIRE QT $ 6.00 SOLENOSTEMON SCUTELLARIODESCOLEUS, ELECTRIC LIME 4" $ 3.00 SOLENOSTEMON SCUTELLARIODESCOLEUS, FLAMETHROWER CHILI PEPPER QT $ 6.00 SOLENOSTEMON SCUTELLARIODESCOLEUS, FLAMETHROWER SALSA ROJA QT $ 6.00 SOLENOSTEMON SCUTELLARIODESCOLEUS, KONG MOSAIC QT $ 6.00 SOLENOSTEMON SCUTELLARIODESCOLEUS, SUN PREMIUM WATERMELON QT $ 6.00 CUPHEA ILAVEA CUPHEA, BAT-FACED QT $ 6.00 CUPHEA HYSSOPIFOLIA CUPHEA, ALLYSON MEXICAN HEATHER QT $ 6.00 DICHONDRA ARGENTEA DICHONDRA, SILVER FALLS QT $ 6.00 DURANTA ERECTA DURANTA, SAPPHIRE SHOWERS 1G $ 12.00 EVOLULUS GLOMERATUS EVOLULUS, BEACH BUM BLUE QT $ 6.00 SCAEVOLA AEMULA FAN FLOWER, SCALA BLUE 4" $ 3.00 GERBERA GARVINEA GERBERA DAISY, -
BALSAMINACEAE 1. IMPATIENS Linnaeus, Sp. Pl. 2: 937. 1753
BALSAMINACEAE 凤仙花科 feng xian hua ke Chen Yilin (陈艺林 Chen Yi-ling)1; Shinobu Akiyama2, Hideaki Ohba3 Herbs annual or perennial [rarely epiphytic or subshrubs]. Stems erect or procumbent, usually succulent, often rooting at lower nodes. Leaves simple, alternate, opposite, or verticillate, not stipulate, or sometimes with stipular glands at base of petiole, petiolate or sessile, pinnately veined, margin serrate to nearly entire, teeth often glandular-mucronate. Flowers bisexual, protandrous, zygomorphic, resupinate to through 180° in axillary or subterminal racemes or pseudo-umbellate inflorescences, or not pedunculate, fascicled or solitary. Sepals 3(or 5); lateral sepals free or connate, margins entire or serrate; lower sepal (lip) large, petaloid, usually navicular, funnelform, saccate, or cornute, tapering or abruptly constricted into a nectariferous spur broadly or narrowly filiform, straight, curved, incurved, or ± coiled, swollen at tip, or pointed, rarely 2-lobed, rarely without spur. Petals 5, free, upper petal (standard) flat or cucullate, small or large, often crested abaxially, lateral petals free or united in pairs (wing). Stamens 5, alternating with petals, connate or nearly so into a ring surrounding ovary and stigma, falling off in one piece before stigma ripens; filaments short, flat with a scalelike appendage inside; anthers 2-celled, connivent, opening by a slit or pore. Gynoecium 4- or 5-carpellate, syncarpous; ovary superior, 4- or 5-loculed, each locule with 2 to many anatropous ovules; style 1, very short or ± absent; stigmas 1– 5. Fruit an indehiscent berry, or a 4- or 5-valved loculicidal fleshy capsule, usually dehiscing elastically. Seeds dispersed explosively from opening valves, without endosperm; testa smooth or tuberculate. -
Plant Maturity and Vernalization Affect Flowering in Dianthus Japonicus Thunb
This article is an Advance Online Publication of the authors’ corrected proof. Note that minor changes may be made before final version publication. The Horticulture Journal Preview e Japanese Society for doi: 10.2503/hortj.UTD-090 JSHS Horticultural Science http://www.jshs.jp/ Plant Maturity and Vernalization Affect Flowering in Dianthus japonicus Thunb. Do Lee Yun**, Su Jung Song*** and Yoon Jin Kim* Department of Horticulture, Biotechnology and Landscape Architecture, Seoul Women’s University, Seoul 01797, Korea Dianthus japonicus Thunb. (D. japonicus) is a biennial with promising floricultural traits, but its commercial appeal is limited by the long time between propagation and flowering. We assessed the effect of juvenile phase, vernalization, and photoperiod on flowering of D. japonicus. Plants were grown in a plug until they had acquired nine, 14, or 16 leaf pairs, and then exposed to a vernalization period of 0, 3, 6, or 12 weeks at 5°C. At the end of the vernalization period, plants were transferred to either long-day treatment or short-day treatment for 10 weeks. In D. japonicus, the numbers of new nodes and leaves were correlated with the vernalization period. Plant height was correlated with the number of leaf pairs. As the vernalization period lengthened, the plants produced more nodes and leaves regardless of their growth stage. The maximum plant height increase was over 24.7 cm in the plants that had 16 leaf pairs at 10 weeks after the start of the photoperiod treatment, regardless of the photoperiod. Plants with 14 or 16 leaf pairs and a vernalization period of 12 weeks flowered regardless of photoperiod treatment. -
FLORA of AUSTRALIA Guide for Contributors
www.ausflora.org.au Guide for Contributors Australian Biological Resources Study 2019 FLORA of AUSTRALIA Guide for Contributors www.ausflora.org.au Australian Biological Resources Study 2018 © Commonwealth of Australia 2018 Licenced for distribution under CC-BY. Published by the Australian Biological Resources Study, Australian Government Department of the Environment and Energy GPO Box 787, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, 2600 Comment Version Date (review / amendment type) Russell Barrett drafts, incorporating language of book 0.1-0.9 2016-2017 FoA contributor Guidelines 1.0 2018-onwards Collaborative redraft, focusing on concision. 3 CONTENTS 1 Introduction ........................................................................................................................................ 7 1.1 Overview .................................................................................................................................... 7 1.2 Purpose and scope of the Flora ................................................................................................... 7 1.3 Geographical coverage ............................................................................................................... 7 1.4 The digital Flora ......................................................................................................................... 7 1.5 Terminology used in this guide .................................................................................................. 8 2 Contributing to the Flora ...................................................................................................................