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Post by vermicelli on Mar 3, 2014 5:11:09 GMT
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Post by vermicelli on Mar 3, 2014 5:11:58 GMT
This is what I get from abroad strain flytrap, do not know the name, is a tissue culture, I think his life as a new species. How to do? Request identi
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Post by vermicelli on Mar 3, 2014 5:14:01 GMT
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Post by vermicelli on Mar 3, 2014 5:14:20 GMT
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Post by vermicelli on Mar 3, 2014 5:14:35 GMT
They are the same plant.
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Post by sykosarah on Mar 3, 2014 5:34:33 GMT
All Venus flytraps are the same species, you mean cultivar. Put something by the plant so we can see how big it is, it might help a lot.
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Post by vermicelli on Mar 3, 2014 10:24:44 GMT
All Venus flytraps are the same species, you mean cultivar. Put something by the plant so we can see how big it is, it might help a lot. I do not really understand what you mean, you see this form of what varieties of plants like it?
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Post by vermicelli on Mar 3, 2014 10:36:15 GMT
All Venus flytraps are the same species, you mean cultivar. Put something by the plant so we can see how big it is, it might help a lot. I do not really understand what you mean, you see this form of what varieties of plants like it? Clip about 4cm.
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Post by hcarlton on Mar 3, 2014 15:49:26 GMT
All flytraps represent one species, Dionaea muscipula. There are multiple cultivars, or cultivated varieties, that have been named, but all are still the same kind of plant. If you do not know a specific cultivar name for your plant, you cannot label it anything other than a typical flytrap, even if it is unusually large or has lots of color.
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Post by vermicelli on Mar 3, 2014 22:40:31 GMT
All flytraps represent one species, Dionaea muscipula. There are multiple cultivars, or cultivated varieties, that have been named, but all are still the same kind of plant. If you do not know a specific cultivar name for your plant, you cannot label it anything other than a typical flytrap, even if it is unusually large or has lots of color. I know there are a number of varieties Venus flytrap, I want to know is this a variation of my Venus flytrap how to do.
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Post by sykosarah on Mar 4, 2014 4:57:30 GMT
Well, you can at least eliminate some possibilities by looking at others. I can tell from the pics that it isn't any of the all red cultivars, that eliminates a few. To be frankly honest it just looks like a typical Venus flytrap to me, with its coloration and size. The "teeth" on the trap are a bit on the longer side, and the ratio of trap size to lead width is different than in any typical one I have seen though. If it is a cultivar, I would focus on ones with longer teeth and somewhat bigger traps, and ignore coloration mostly. It should help you at least eliminate a few and narrow down the possibilities.
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Post by hcarlton on Mar 4, 2014 5:17:58 GMT
Like I said before though, since there is nothing major that makes this plant stand out in particular (there are a number of large forms, and plenty of variation naturally in tooth size), it can't be labeled as anything other than "typical" unless the exact origin is known or can be traced.
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Post by vermicelli on Mar 4, 2014 5:35:29 GMT
Well, you can at least eliminate some possibilities by looking at others. I can tell from the pics that it isn't any of the all red cultivars, that eliminates a few. To be frankly honest it just looks like a typical Venus flytrap to me, with its coloration and size. The "teeth" on the trap are a bit on the longer side, and the ratio of trap size to lead width is different than in any typical one I have seen though. If it is a cultivar, I would focus on ones with longer teeth and somewhat bigger traps, and ignore coloration mostly. It should help you at least eliminate a few and narrow down the possibilities. The seller told me it's not a typical Venus flytrap.
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Post by sykosarah on Mar 4, 2014 6:29:42 GMT
Why didn't the seller tell you what cultivar it was?
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Post by sykosarah on Mar 4, 2014 6:36:38 GMT
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