Amorphophallus paeoniifolius: Difference between revisions
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|species=paeoniifolius | |||
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{{Inc| | |||
Amorphophallus giganteus, Blanc. "Fl. larger than A. campanulatus (often 2 ft. across) and much more pleasing in color, shading from deep red to cream-color toward the center. The club-shaped spadix is dark maroon, with yellow and red base. After flowering, the foliage-st. appears,—a stout st. of deep green color, mottled with gray. After growing at the rate of several inches a day, it expands into a large palm-like lf., of a rich, dark green color, often measuring 5 ft. across." Blanc, 1892, received "under this name from India." A. campanulatus (?). Probably not the A. giganteus of Blume. | |||
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Amorphophallus campanulatus, Blume. Stanley's Wash-tub. Scape lower (2 ft. or less); spathe nearly or quite 2 ft. broad and 15 in. high, with a horizontal, spreading fluted border (not calla-like), red-purple on the margin and grayish, spotted white lower down, and becoming purple in the center; spadix 10-12 in. high, the purple top enlarged and convoluted: lf. much as in A. Rivieri: tuber weighing 8-10 lbs., shape of a flat cheese. An old garden plant from E. Indies. B.M. 2812 (as Arum campanulatum). F.S. 15:1602-3. G.C. 1872: 1720, 1721; III. 5:755. G.W. 13; p. 9. | Amorphophallus campanulatus, Blume. Stanley's Wash-tub. Scape lower (2 ft. or less); spathe nearly or quite 2 ft. broad and 15 in. high, with a horizontal, spreading fluted border (not calla-like), red-purple on the margin and grayish, spotted white lower down, and becoming purple in the center; spadix 10-12 in. high, the purple top enlarged and convoluted: lf. much as in A. Rivieri: tuber weighing 8-10 lbs., shape of a flat cheese. An old garden plant from E. Indies. B.M. 2812 (as Arum campanulatum). F.S. 15:1602-3. G.C. 1872: 1720, 1721; III. 5:755. G.W. 13; p. 9. | ||
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Revision as of 11:18, 13 January 2010
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Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture |
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Amorphophallus giganteus, Blanc. "Fl. larger than A. campanulatus (often 2 ft. across) and much more pleasing in color, shading from deep red to cream-color toward the center. The club-shaped spadix is dark maroon, with yellow and red base. After flowering, the foliage-st. appears,—a stout st. of deep green color, mottled with gray. After growing at the rate of several inches a day, it expands into a large palm-like lf., of a rich, dark green color, often measuring 5 ft. across." Blanc, 1892, received "under this name from India." A. campanulatus (?). Probably not the A. giganteus of Blume.
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Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture |
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Amorphophallus campanulatus, Blume. Stanley's Wash-tub. Scape lower (2 ft. or less); spathe nearly or quite 2 ft. broad and 15 in. high, with a horizontal, spreading fluted border (not calla-like), red-purple on the margin and grayish, spotted white lower down, and becoming purple in the center; spadix 10-12 in. high, the purple top enlarged and convoluted: lf. much as in A. Rivieri: tuber weighing 8-10 lbs., shape of a flat cheese. An old garden plant from E. Indies. B.M. 2812 (as Arum campanulatum). F.S. 15:1602-3. G.C. 1872: 1720, 1721; III. 5:755. G.W. 13; p. 9.
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