eOrchids
Well-Known Member
I was wondering why do some Paph hybrid have names such as Prince Edward of York or St. Swithin and others don't have one such as Paph. kolopakingii v. topperi x randsii. Could someone please explain this? Thanks.
likespaphs said:thanks for the clarification. wonder where i got my info....
hmm. perhaps i made it up.
so if several people happen to make the same hybrid, all selling flasks (let's say) to people and someone buys a flask, then is it the hybridizer who's plant blooms first that gets to name it?
what if someone like me bought a flask from each of the hybridizers and gets mixed up as to from whom they got it, i wonder who gets to name it then...
gonewild said:I think you confused registering a hew hybrid with naming a clone of an individual plant of a hybrid....
NYEric said:Anybody know who made the moquettianum x delanatii
eOrchids said:So let me get this straight, if I got topperi x randsii to flower and there's no name register for it. I can name the plant, right?
slippertalker said:For registration purposes moquettianum is identical to glaucophyllum, so the hybrid is Paph Delophyllum which was registered in 1940 by Black & Flory.
Thanx, I notice the picture didn't match the photos of Dellophyllum I saw on the web. Maybe the hybrids can be used to separate species thought to be the same [but w/ diff names].Jason Fischer said:For a quick FYI, the RHS now recognizes moquettianum as a seperate species, therefore any hybrid made with moquettianum can be registered now. We have already done this with moquettianum x liemianum (Paph. Amarantine). This also means moquettianum x delenatii can have a new registration name.