monocot seedlings without chlorophyll
Rodney Barton via pbs (Mon, 01 Feb 2021 08:04:10 PST)
I've seen white seedlings in irises, but it's not that common. It may be that the particular clones you have carry mutations.
Rod
On Monday, February 1, 2021, 7:32:13 AM CST, Kathleen Sayce via pbs <pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net> wrote:
I am curious to know how typical it is for seedlings in monocot groups to have no chlorophyll.
This fall I noticed a tall Agapanthus in my garden had a few seeds on the stalk, so I gathered those that were left and sprouted them on a window sill, along with seeds from a Watsonia. So far, 14 of the 16 Agapanthus have chlorophyll, 2 do not, 12.5 percent.
The Watsonia pot has 12 seedlings, 11 have chlorophyll, 8.3 percent.
12.5 percent seems high for a known fatal condition among photosynthetic species.
How common is this condition?
Kathleen
Zone 8, PNW coast, with strafing rain
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