Query results: Cultivar names only


N: $[Dionaea ' Akai Ryu ' {R.Gagliardo}]
P: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.25:50 (1996)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: Registered 10. 11. 1998 (JS)
B: R.Gagliardo, Atlanta Bot. Gardens, before 1996
Nominant: R.Gagliardo
Registrant: R.Gagliardo
Translation: [Dionaea ' Red Dragon ' {R.Gagliardo}] (English)
Description: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.25:50 (1996)
"Growth habit and flower morphology are typical for this species. The leaf petiole, blade and trap exhibit dark maroon to burgundy coloration. Any green coloration has only been noted around the center of the plant in mid-winter. The entire trap, interior and exterior, exhibits dark burgundy coloration throughout the year. Grown under laboratory conditions, where nutrient levels can be comparatively high, the plants still exhibit partial burgundy coloration in the traps and leaf blade."
Standard: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.25:50 (1996)
Propagation: vegetative reproduction (originally in vitro culture)
Etymology: after red colouration of plants (Japanese: "Red Dragon")
image: dionaea/DionaeaXakaiXryu: closed trap and prey
image: dionaea/vft01: All red Akay Ryu horticultural form
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Big Mouth ' {T.Camilleri}]
P: Carniv.Pl.:16 (1998)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: name not registered with IRA, description insufficient
B: ?, before 1998
Nominant: T.Camilleri, 1998
Description: Carniv.Pl.:16
"A comparison of a conventional sized trap and the [Dionaea ' Big Mouth ' {T.Camilleri}] variety (sic!) which produces large traps on very short leaves."
Standard: Carniv.Pl.:16 (1998)
Etymology: after comparatively big leaf lamina
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Clayton's Red Sunset ' {C.Clayton}]
P: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.33:21 (2004)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: Registered 8. 9. 2004 (JS)
Introducer: C.Clayton, Keysborough, Vic., AU, from seed from US, 1991
Nominant: C.Clayton
Registrant: C.Clayton, 31. 3. 2003
Description: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.33:21 (2004)
"This plant is an all red flytrap which I have named [Dionaea ' Clayton's Red Sunset ' {C.Clayton}]. It regularly grows up to 25 cm (10 inches) across, although extremely slowly, and is one of the wonders of the flytrap world. + The features which make this cultivar different from other red flytraps (such as [Dionaea ' Red Dragon ' {R.Gagliardo}] or [Dionaea ' Red Piranha ' {E.Read}] are the following: A)The petioles are almost always long and thin. The other red flytraps have quite wide petioles, especially during the winter. B)During the winter, this cultivar totally loses its leaves, at least when grown in a Mediterranean climate. The other red flytraps retain at least some of their leaves. + C)This plant is totally red, except for the teeth on immature traps, which are yellow. [Dionaea ' Red Dragon ' {R.Gagliardo}] incorporates green as part of its coloration at some time during its growth cycle. D)The color of this cultivar is a deeper, darker red than the other currently named red flytrap cultivars. It becomes almost black in the summer if exposed to full sunlight. E)The marginal spines on this cultivar are normal, and not sawtooth as in [Dionaea ' Red Piranha ' {E.Read}]."
Standard: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.33:22 (2004)
Propagation: vegetative
Etymology: after introducer and colouration
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Clumping Cultivar ' {D'Amato}]
P: Savage Garden:66 (1998)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: registration preliminary (standard missing)
B: ?P.D'Amato
Nominant: P.D'Amato, 1998
Description: Savage Garden:66 (1998)
"these plants produce clumps of rosetted growing points, which result in a mound of densely packed leaves."
Standard:
Etymology: after growth form
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Cupped Trap ' {S.Stewart}]
P: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.33:84 (2004)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: Registered 30. 12. 2004 (JS)
B: staff at Agri-Starts III, Inc, Eustis, Fla., USA, 1998
Nominant: S.Stewart, Sanford, Fla., USA
Registrant: S.Stewart, 29. 7. 2003
Description: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.33:84 (2004)
"It forms traps that are distinct from all other cultivars of this species, in that the traps are fused at the distal end, forming a cupped appearance when the trap is open. (...) The trap cilia on the margins retain their coiled position until after the traps open, displaying the circinate growth form. Despite these mutations, the traps still effectively capture insects."
Standard: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.33:86 (2004)
Propagation: vegetative
Etymology: because of the strange form of the traps
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Dentate ' {D'Amato}]
P: Savage Garden:66 (1998)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: the established name for the same cultivar is [Dionaea ' Dentate Traps ' {B.Meyers-Rice}]
B: ?P.D'Amato
Nominant: P.D'Amato, 1998
Description: Savage Garden:66 (1998)
"Both (this and [Dionaea ' Dente ' {D'Amato}]) are tissue-cultured mutations. The teeth are numerous, short and jagged, like a beartrap."
Standard:
Propagation: vegetative (tissue culture)
Etymology: after dentate (not ciliate) margin of lamina
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Dentate Traps ' {B.Meyers-Rice}]
P: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.29:16 (2000)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: Registered 30. 3. 2000 (JS)
GR: Dentate Traps Group {B.Meyers-Rice}
GRP: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.29:16 (2000)
B: L.Song, Jr., before 1990
Nominant: B.Meyers-Rice, 30. 9. 1999
Registrant: B.Meyers-Rice, Davis, USA, 20. 10. 1999
Description: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.29:16 (2000)
"A wild collected [Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}] plant was selected because its marginal spines were noticeably mutated. Instead of being long and filiform (as is usual), the spines of [Dionaea ' Dentate Traps ' {B.Meyers-Rice}] are short and triangular. This feature is not always apparent on small traps, or those produced early in the season, but the traps on mature plants in full growth are unmistakably dentate."
Standard: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.29:15 (2000)
Propagation: vegetative only
Etymology: the marginal trap tentacles are small and fimbriately notched
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Dente ' {D'Amato}]
P: Savage Garden:66 (1998)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: the established name for the same cultivar is [Dionaea ' Dentate Traps ' {B.Meyers-Rice}]
B: ?P.D'Amato
Nominant: P.D'Amato, 1998
Description: Savage Garden:66 (1998)
"Both (this and [Dionaea ' Dentate ' {D'Amato}]) are tissue-cultured mutations. The teeth are numerous, short and jagged, like a beartrap."
Standard:
Propagation: vegetative (tissue culture)
Etymology: after dentate (not ciliate) margin of lamina
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Fused Tooth ' {D'Amato}]
P: Savage Garden:66 (1998)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: Registered 30. 12. 2004 (JS)
B: T.Carow, Muennerstadt, DE, 1990
Nominant: P.D'Amato, 1998
Registrant: P.D'Amato & T.Carow, 12. 4. 2004
Description: Savage Garden:66 (1998)
"A tissue-cultured mutation. The teeth are few and fused together by "webbing." "
Standard: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.33:101 (2004) {T.Carow}
Propagation: vegetative (tissue culture)
Etymology: after fused cilia at margin of lamina
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Green Dragon ' {M.Erbacher & M.Stoeckl}]
P: Taublatt 51:25 (2005)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. Ex Ellis}]
HC: Registered 24. 11. 2005 {JS}
B: unknown, offered misleadingly as [Dionaea ' Akai Ryu ' {R.Gagliardo}]
Nominant: anonymus ex M.Erbacher & M.Stoeckl, Ahaus & Moenchengladbach, DE
Registrant: M.Erbacher & M.Stoeckl, 19. 4. 2005
Description: Taublatt 51:25 (2005) (in German)
"(...) e.g. again and again one receives plants that display green margins even in adult leaves and under intense sunlight. In this case we are dealing with [Dionaea ' Green Dragon ' {M.Erbacher & M.Stoeckl}]."
Standard: Taublatt 51:25 (2005)
Etymology: after the colouration of the plants
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Holland Red ' {M.Erbacher & M.Stoeckl}]
P: Taublatt 51:21 (2005)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. Ex Ellis}]
HC: Registered 24. 11. 2005 {JS}
B: a commercial breeder in the Netherlands, 1970s
Nominant: anonymus ex M.Erbacher & M.Stoeckl, Ahaus & Moenchengladbach, DE
Registrant: M.Erbacher & M.Stoeckl, 19. 4. 2005
Description: Taublatt 51:21 (2005) (in German)
"[Dionaea ' Holland Red ' {M.Erbacher & M.Stoeckl}] grows like the nominate form. This plant follows the already described annual cycle. The plant starts in spring with the first set of prostrate leaves with short petioles, after flower these are followed by long petiolate mid- summer leaves, to form the last set of wider short petiolate winter leaves in late summer or autumn. The leaf rosette reaches a diameter of ca. 10 cm and individual traps may attain a size of up to ca. 3 cm. The red colouration of the leaves depends, however, strongly on light conditions. Only plants exposed to full sunlight colour more or less intensely red or red-brown. In winter the plants frequently get green leaf margins or even whole plant portions that do not receive sufficient light remain dark green. As soon as the plants are exposed to more intense sunlight, the colour begins to change to typical again."
Standard: Taublatt 51:20&21 (2005)
Propagation: by seed or vegetatively
Etymology: after the location of the nursery that first made the plants available and after the colouration of the plants
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Jaws ' {L.Song}]
P: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.30:111 (2001)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: Registered 28. 2. 2002 (JS)
GR: Dentate Traps Group {B.Meyers-Rice}
GRP: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.29:16 (2000)
B: L.Song, Jr., Fullerton, CA, USA, 3. 6. 1993
Nominant: L.Song, Jr., ca. 1995
Registrant: L.Song, Jr., 20. 10. 1999
Description: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.30:111 (2001)
"I crossed [Dionaea ' Dentate Traps ' {B.Meyers-Rice}], (...) with its marginal tentacles mutated into short teeth, with a plant we grow which is noteworthy for its consistently extra large, moderately red- colored traps. This plant was selected from the seedlings. The margins of the trap are dentate like the pollen parent. Like the seed parent, the traps are consistently large, with good coloration. The plant is vigorous and even though the traps do not have normal cilia, they do trap insects."
Standard:
Propagation: vegetative only
Etymology: the partially closed traps look like a shark's jaws
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Kinchyaku ' {K.Kondo}]
P: Proc.4.Intl.Carniv.Pl.Conf.Tokyo:inside fron cover (2002)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: name not registered with ICRA
B: K.Kondo, Hiroshima, JP, 1999
Nominant: K.Kondo
Description: Proc.4.Intl.Carniv.Pl.Conf.Tokyo:inside fron cover (2002)
"[Dionaea ' Kinchyaku ' {K.Kondo}] (=means purse), which has imperfect trap closure but somewhat quite similar to [Drosera {L.}] trap movement, was produced by Katsuhiko Kondo using a gene engineering in vitro condition in 1999 and is now under mass propagation."
Standard: Proc.4.Intl.Carniv.Pl.Conf.Tokyo:back cover (2002)
Etymology: after the trap shape
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Louchapates ' (R.Anfraix}]
P: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.33:100 (2004)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: Registered 30. 12. 2004 (JS)
B: R.Anfraix, Lyon, FR, from a batch of [Dionaea ' Fused Tooth ' {P.D'Amato}] plants, 2000
Nominant: R.Anfraix
Registrant: R.Anfraix, 13. 8. 2003
Translation: [Dionaea ' Noodle Ladle ' {R.Anfraix}] (English)
Description: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.33:100 (2004)
"Growing within this batch of plants was a small individual that differed from the others by a regular fusion of only a few spines into each of its teeth. The result was that each tooth was about 2 mm wide and was flattened in cross section, in contrast with the normal capillary nature of typical [Dionaea {L.}] plants. The tips of the teeth on this peculiar plant are often are multiply divided, revealing the fused nature of the teeth. The teeth are oriented normally, unlike the distorted positioning as is often observed with [Dionaea ' Fused Tooth ' {P.D'Amato}]. (...) Another peculiarity with [Dionaea ' Louchapates ' {R.Anfraix}] is exhibited near the apex of the trap, opposite the petiole. In normal specimens of [Dionaea {L.}], this region of the leaf lobe margins lacks spines. But in [Dionaea ' Louchapates ' {R.Anfraix}], marginal teeth are present on both lobes, all the way to the midpoint of the two lobe margins. This feature is also seen in [Dionaea ' Cupped Trap ' {S.Stewart}], although that cultivar also has trap that is cupped like a spoon. After three years of cultivation, [Dionaea ' Louchapates ' {R.Anfraix}] has undergone normal dormancies and has been propagated vegetatively. The progeny are showing the same features as the parent plant. This cultivar is not a member of the [Dionaea {L.}] Dentate Traps Group since its teeth originate from a fusion of multiple marginal spines, and are not short and triangular."
Standard: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.33:101 (2004)
Propagation: vegetative
Etymology: after the culinary tool of the same shape that is used for serving spaghetti noodles
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Red Burgundy ' {M.Erbacher & M.Stoeckl}]
P: Taublatt 51:22 (2005)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. Ex Ellis}]
HC: Registered 24. 11. 2005 {JS}
B: unknown, 1970s, more intensely propagated since 1996
Nominant: anonymus ex M.Erbacher & M.Stoeckl, Ahaus & Moenchengladbach, DE
Registrant: M.Erbacher & M.Stoeckl, 19. 4. 2005
Description: Taublatt 51:22 (2005) (in German)
"The intensely dark red colouration has baptized [Dionaea ' Red Burgundy ' {M.Erbacher & M.Stoeckl}]. The comparatively strong and rapid (for a red cultivar) growth, the trapping leaves up to 5 cm large, and the up to 15 cm long petioles of the summer rosette are typical characteristics. The unusual dark red colour intensity makes this cultivar so exceptional. Even under normal light conditions the plant attains full colouration, which reaches an optimum with increasing sunlight and temperatures. At the end of summer and under corresponding growth conditions the plant colours particularly strongly dark red (burgundy). The winter leaves appearing in autumn are short petioled and wider. Smaller traps are formed and the red colouration retreats due to enhanced chlorophyll production."
Standard: Taublatt 51:22 (2005)
Propagation: by seed or vegetatively
Etymology: after the colouration of the plants
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Red Piranha ' {E.Read}]
P: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.28:99 (1999)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: Registered 18. 9. 1999 (JS)
GR: Dentate Traps Group {B.Meyers-Rice}
GRP: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.29:16 (2000)
B: E.Read & I.Snyder, Hawthorne, California, USA, 20. 6. 1995
Nominant: E.Read, 1999
Registrant: E.Read, 1999
Description: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.28:99 (1999)
"(...)The plants varied greatly in trap bar (cilia on leaf margin) size and shape, but one plant in particular was just what I wanted. Because it is red and has trap bars that look like piranha teeth, I named it [Dionaea ' Red Piranha ' {E.Read}]. As with other red Venus Flytraps the intensity of red coloration varies according to cultivation and season. It has been noted by growers who cultivate it next to other popular red Venus Flytraps that its red coloration equals, if not supercedes, their red color."
Standard: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.28:99 (1999)
Propagation: probably vegetative reproduction (not specified in description)
Etymology: it is red and has trap bars that look like piranha teeth
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Red Rosetted ' {D'Amato}]
P: Savage Garden:66 (1998)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: registration preliminary (standard missing)
B: ?P.D'Amato
Nominant: P.D'Amato, 1998
Description: Savage Garden:66 (1998)
"The leaves are rosetted all year, with deep red interior traps."
Standard:
Etymology: after colour and growth form of plant
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Royal Red ' {AUPBR 464}]
P: Au.Pl.Var.J.7:16 (1994)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: name not registered; national registration authority refuses to provide data, January 1999 (JS)
B: G.Mansell (application 93/069)
Nominant: G.Mansell
Introducer: G.Mansell, before 1993
Registrant: G.Mansell, 1993
Patents: AUPBR 464; application 93/069
Description: Au.Pl.Var.J.7:16 (1994)
"Distinct from other varieties (sic!) of [Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}] in that all parts of the plant, with the exception of the margins of the traps (see fig. 12), are dark red in colour (RHS 59A). [Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}] produces rosettes of petiolate (<= 85mm long), bi-lobed (<= 26mm long * <= 17 mm high), decumbent to erect leaves, the size of which varies with season. Do not exhibit any physical differences to other [Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]. Green margins and red inner surfaces of the trap are characteristics common to both [Dionaea ' Royal Red ' {AUPBR 464}] and the normal form of [Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}], and it is the colour of the other plant parts which make [Dionaea ' Royal Red ' {AUPBR 464}] distibctive. Plants in winter dormancy and those grown in conditions of low light may lose some of the red pigmentation (as do most other carnivorous plants), but still retain appreciably more red pigment than typical [Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]."
Standard: Au.Pl.Var.J.7:Fig. 12 (1994), not available
Propagation:
Etymology: from red colouration of plants
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder
N: $[Dionaea ' Sawtooth ' {B.Meyers-Rice}]
P: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.29:16 (2000)
S: =[Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}]
HC: Registered 30. 3. 2000 (JS)
GR: Dentate Traps Group {B.Meyers-Rice}
GRP: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.29:16 (2000)
B: T.Carow, Muennerstadt, DE, before 1989
Nominant: P.D'Amato, 1998
Registrant: B.Meyers-Rice, Davis, USA, 20. 10. 1999
Description: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.29:16 (2000)
"This [Dionaea muscipula {Soland. ex Ellis}] is of uncertain origin, but has been distributed without an established name. As such, the commonly used name [Dionaea ' Sawtooth ' {B.Meyers-Rice}] is being registered. [Dionaea ' Sawtooth ' {B.Meyers-Rice}] is a remarkable plant in the Dionaea Dentate Traps Group {B.Meyers-Rice}. Its marginal trap spines are reduced to small triangular teeth, as in [Dionaea ' Dentate Traps ' {B.Meyers-Rice}]. Unlike that latter cultivar, however, the teeth of [Dionaea ' Sawtooth ' {B.Meyers-Rice}] are frequently minutely divided into two or more tiny teethlets, so the trap has an almost fringed appearance. Late in the season, the interior of the traps may be deeply red, although this is not visible in young traps."
Standard: Carniv.Pl.Newslett.29:15 (2000)
Propagation: vegetative only
Etymology: the marginal trap tentacles are small and fimbriately notched
image: Check Bob Ziemer's Photo Finder