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Author Topic: silene species needs identification  (Read 572 times)
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Middleton
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« on: February 15, 2010, 07:03:12 PM »

This plant germinated quickly from a package of NARGS seed labelled Frasera!  I like it's simple style and colour and would like to offer seed.


* P9270176.JPG (664.22 KB, 2288x1712 - viewed 70 times.)
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Sharon
Zone 5 Georgian Bay, Central Ontario, Canada
Todd Boland
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« Reply #1 on: February 16, 2010, 05:56:11 PM »

Looks like one of the annual silenes, maybe S. armeria.
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Todd Boland
St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada
Zone 5b
1800 mm precipitation per year
Middleton
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« Reply #2 on: February 17, 2010, 02:08:46 PM »

Thank you Todd.  Always  curious as to how seed strays.  I have a perennial silene far away from this spot and I don't collect seed from it.  So I assume it must have been in the package of Frasera. 
I won't be offering this annual to the exchanges of course!
Sharon
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Sharon
Zone 5 Georgian Bay, Central Ontario, Canada
Kelaidis
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« Reply #3 on: February 17, 2010, 11:01:31 PM »

I don't think it's Silene armeria, Todd: the color is too pale (armeria is usually magenta) and the flowers even more clustered, and the foliage darker. This has a basal rosette, indicating it could be at least biennial. We shall have to crack open our Silene handbook by Jim Jones: I'll bet it will help!
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For every minion of the peaks there are a dozen steppe children growing in the dry Continental heart of all hemispheres still unknown to horticulture.
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« Reply #4 on: February 20, 2010, 01:26:21 PM »

I didn't think the rosette leaves in the upper right corner were from the Silene.  I'm still not convinced it is.  The picture is a little blurry but I thought the bare stem rising from the lower right side was from the plant.  If so, it looks annual to me.  Looking in Jone's book, I see no Silene that match.  Armeria is closest but I agree the colour is a bit pale.  I cannot even see any clean foiage in the pic to use that as a help since armeria has such distinctly-coloured foliage.
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Todd Boland
St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada
Zone 5b
1800 mm precipitation per year
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