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1

Mittwoch, 5. November 2014, 14:28

who am i

Hello!

can give me EV. who tell what kind it is - I have this species a few years (4-5 or so) - has but yet not flourished.
At the time I bought it napalensis as A. - but the images that I have so far seen by napalensis do not fit to the master.

Maybe, who of you knows what it's his species...

Ciao
Martin
»Lord.Maso« hat folgende Bilder angehängt:
  • napalensis1.jpg
  • napalensis2.jpg
  • napalensis3.jpg

2

Mittwoch, 5. November 2014, 14:36

Hi Martin,

do you have a picture of the tuber? Is the type of breed bulb?

Happy id-ing, Bernhard.

3

Mittwoch, 5. November 2014, 14:54

I got a little older picture of smaller specimens.

and jap - make nearly as many breeding arms as konjac
»Lord.Maso« hat folgendes Bild angehängt:
  • napalensis knollen.jpg

4

Mittwoch, 5. November 2014, 16:22

Hi Martin,

the petiole coloring I had thought of albus, but breeding arms don't look like the Cormels of konjac...

Happy id-ing, Bernhard.

5

Mittwoch, 5. November 2014, 19:52

I would also say that it is A. albus.


A.napalensis is actually excluded. They are differently coloured and rarely form offshoot.

So if the sheet look: http://www.aroid.org/genera/serveimage.php?key=1967

My napalensis looks exactly

6

Mittwoch, 5. November 2014, 20:41

Hmmm - I have also a. albus in my collection - you see but definitely different different from (possibly something) much brighter and more speckled green - you are also not so great - my biggest albus had so far more than 30-35 cm.
of this kind I have with a good 60 cm height.

7

Mittwoch, 5. November 2014, 21:25

It is good that you can exclude albus, then I have only 1 guess...
Could it be henryii? Many photos on the net that has stains, but my henryii has almost none. Also the plant looks quite compact and squat, what would fit in well. The primary Cormels are just sitting and not at foothills as albus or konjac and if you say that the plant makes breeding arms as in konjac, which would in turn speak against henryii...

Am going to go next "Happy id-ing":D

8

Donnerstag, 6. November 2014, 10:48

henryi it is not - I have those in my collection – which have but a white leaf margin.

but thanks for the tips.

I guess in 2-3 months wirds something unique - because my biggest of which has never flourished - and I guess, that move it after the time will be ready.

9

Donnerstag, 6. November 2014, 11:13

Hi Martin,
my "A. napalensis" - also still not flourished - looks the same, many breeding arms makes... now I even confused; can there be a variety, or is it actually what else?
You got that from a local seller on much-discussed platform called S...?
Love greetings
Michael

10

Donnerstag, 6. November 2014, 11:40

Many breeding arms are already a sign that it is not napalensis, because this type rarely makes offshoot. I have several years of my plant, but never I have had spin-off

11

Donnerstag, 6. November 2014, 13:58

that may well be the only way, where I no longer knows exactly who was the seller - I bought the times on ebay for about 5 years ago.
still poorly description remember, where a picture of napalensis (flower) was that they found in the google first, if they were looking for after...

Ortwin

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12

Donnerstag, 6. November 2014, 16:46

I guess I have the same plant; I got yunnanensis them than A. in the year 2012. If that's true I do not know of course.
I think you will have to wait until it blooms to determine them.

Greeting
Ortwin

13

Donnerstag, 6. November 2014, 17:25

I had also suspected yunnanensis. Because, probably, you will be waiting a flower to tell it exactly.

14

Donnerstag, 6. November 2014, 21:12

I would tap firmly albus A.. The sheet is similar to my two albus plant, whereas my yunnanensis completely different looks. I don't have other ideas, napalensis I don't own A. namely.

Philipp

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15

Donnerstag, 6. November 2014, 21:33

I would also tap albus. Got yunnanensis also Schonmal one, which in reality identical with my A. was albus. A more A. albus turned out eventually fuscus with me as A., this species is actually quite small and has more spotted stalks with more reddish ground color. A. albus is very flowering lazy for me, the last flower she had about 5 years ago, although the bulb every year large was enough and had no damage.

VG Philipp

16

Freitag, 7. November 2014, 14:53

direkter vergleich zwischen albus und der unbekannten

here a few pictures - albus and the "howsoever" side by side.

therefore should I suspect if there are varieties with albus??
»Lord.Maso« hat folgende Bilder angehängt:
  • albus blatt plus stamm.jpg
  • albus stamm.JPG
  • napalensis blatt.jpg
  • napalensis stamm.jpg

Philipp

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17

Sonntag, 9. November 2014, 19:12

Looks to me that both after A. albus. A certain range of variation is normal in most species. But we all know how it is a safe destination there are unfortunately only with flower...

VG Philipp

18

Sonntag, 9. November 2014, 19:32

I have 2 versions of A.albus, in the spring when the shoots one can distinguish that even very good.
One has a pink tip and the other a green.

19

Dienstag, 11. November 2014, 09:57

Hi everybody,.
It seems really hard to distinguish his albus and napalensis. "g50g50", which is already to be trusted, sold just an A. napalensis, which root looks quite similar to. (see photo)
At my A. albus, A. napalensis (which then also always like... be it) I have noticed that my much earlier drove albus and also is the way, which had the biggest problem with spider mites, which is why I also gave away.
Love greetings

Michael
»musa« hat folgendes Bild angehängt:
  • $_57.jpg

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