Beeches: Fagus sylvatica seedling

Discussion in 'Fagaceae (beeches, oaks, etc.)' started by Scion Swapper, Jul 4, 2006.

  1. Scion Swapper

    Scion Swapper Active Member

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    Here is a photo of a variegated Fagus sylvatica seedling that was growing in one of our seed beds here at the nursery. I found it last summer (2005) in a bed of about 35,000 seedlings. This is the only variegated seedling we've descovered in the 10 or so years we've been growing Fagus sylvatica from seed.

    The variegation both last year and this year has been like in the photo. Entire leaves will be white or green with some leaves divided down the middle or with irregular splashes of white.

    The photo was taken this spring. The variegation has burned a little bit since the photo was taken, so the tree will likely need a shady location. Anyway, I'll be keeping my eye on this one for a couple of years to see how it does. The tree is about 1 1/2 years old now.

    Brian
     

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  2. Ota

    Ota Member

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    Nice seedling, Brian. How it grows now?

    Here is one of mine ...

    Ota
     

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  3. Karalyn

    Karalyn Active Member

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    Wow! You have got something special! I hope it continues to grow and can be brought into the market.

    I have a plant that is a sport that I'm testing but it is a smaller plant and easier to propagate.

    So I'll be rooting for you! (*.*) ;-)
     
  4. Ota

    Ota Member

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    The tree is a seedling of F. sylvatica 'Rohanii' and is about 7-8 years old. However his branches are still too thin to be used as a graft so for now I am letting the tree to grow. May be next year I will start with first grafting ... some rootstocks are ready ;-)

    Ota
     
  5. Nexus

    Nexus Member

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    I had a couple of oak seedlings a few years ago that were similar, except that all of the leaves were white. Initially, I had dreams of starting my own cultivar, with trees completely covered in white leaves. Of course the seedlings both died soon after that, when the store of energy in their seed leaves ran out, and I realized that there's a good reason why most leaves are green.

    By the way, if you do have a seedling that is sufficiently unique, how do you go about getting it accepted as a named cultivar?
     
  6. Karalyn

    Karalyn Active Member

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    You call up a Plant Patent Attorney or search the internet under that title.
     
  7. ToddTheLorax

    ToddTheLorax Active Member

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    having a plant named as a cultivar is not the same as patenting it. A patent grants the right to sole exploitation of something for a period of time, unless someone pays you for the privilege of using / selling what you patented.

    naming something just involves following rules in the international code of nomenclature for cultivated plants.

    i doubt plant patents turn out to be very profitable - seems very hard to enforce and easy to be ripped off. But thats just a guess I dont know.
     
  8. GreenLarry

    GreenLarry Active Member 10 Years

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    Ota that tree in your pic looks like an Oak to me.
     
  9. Michael F

    Michael F Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator 10 Years

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    Sorry, no, definite Beech! - look at the stipules / bud scales. It's a cut-leaf variant, classifiable as Fagus sylvatica f. laciniata.
     
  10. ToddTheLorax

    ToddTheLorax Active Member

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    I have a japanese maple seedling that exhibited the same pattern of variegation. Some leaves all white. some all green. some cut exactly in half with white and green. When the white leaves were new they had a pinkish tinge. And the bark had some striping on the sides where the variegated leaves were growing. This year the buds that had white leaves never pushed new growth. It just grew from the green shoots. I wonder if it will ever demonstrate the white leaves again. I'm watching it...

    I had a bigtooth maple seedling grow all white leaves that very slowly faded to mint green. They burned off in the sun and the seedling died. oh well.

    variegation is an interesting novelty, but the plants seem a little touchy.
     
  11. GreenLarry

    GreenLarry Active Member 10 Years

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    Ah of course,we have one of those in our South Park! It just shows how beech and oak are related!
     
  12. Ota

    Ota Member

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  13. GreenLarry

    GreenLarry Active Member 10 Years

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    Oh that is strange Ota,almost looks like a fern!
     

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