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Home Home » GENERA C » Crassula » Crassula orbicularis, not all new rosettes thriving
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Crassula orbicularis, not all new rosettes thriving

Crassula orbicularis, not all new rosettes thriving
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  • Crassula orbicularis
  • Crassula orbicularis early inflorescence
  • Crassula orbicularis leaves by the coast
  • Crassula orbicularis leaves in the Little Karoo
  • Crassula orbicularis living dangerously
  • Crassula orbicularis seeking the shade
  • Crassula orbicularis spreading its fringed leaves
  • Crassula orbicularis stolon-linked plantlets
  • Crassula orbicularis, not all new rosettes thriving
  • Crassula ovata
  • Crassula ovata cultivar
  • Crassula ovata leaves
  • Crassula pellucida
  • Crassula pellucida flowering
  • Crassula pellucida subsp. brachypetala
  • Crassula pellucida subsp. brachypetala buds and old flowers
  • Crassula pellucida subsp. brachypetala leaves

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Description

No Crassula orbicularis flowers here at the moment, but this plant or plants is or are doing its or their best to produce offspring by stolon. Clearly successful in growing them, although the small, attached “arm’s length” rosettes are still sickly yellow or red and shrivelling, compared to the well-fed, rooted plants that launched them. But give the newcomers time!

The secondary rosettes have the same genetic make-up as their parent plants, unlike seed-derived plants not stuck on stolons that share genetic endowment equally with both parent plants. Seed plants are genetically unique, while vegetatively produced ones are clones.

These crassulas have Haworthia arachnoides for neighbours. The two species are too dramatically different for motherly love to cross the divide. But plants don’t do xenophobia (Smith, et al, 2017; Vlok and Schutte-Vlok, 2015).

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109
Photographer
Thabo Maphisa
Author
Ivan Latti
 
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