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Streptocarpus ’Constant Nymph’ and Its Mutants It appears that the Arnold Arboretum has introduced to American gardeners what may turn out to be the most exciting group of new house and greenhouse plants for a long time. It all started with a gift of a few plants of Streptocarpus ’Constant Nymph’ to Dr. Richard A. Howard. Director of the Arboretum, from the greenhouses at Dunbarton Oaks some years ago. The potentials of this cultivar as a remarkable house plant became obvious very quickly. It propagates with speed and ease and its magnificent blue flowers are produced in abundance throughout almost the whole year. It fully justifies its name. We cannot take credit for introducing ’Constant Nymph’ in America but apparently we are responsible for introducing its five remarkable new mutants, ’Blue Nymph’, ’Cobalt Nymph’, ’Mini Nymph’, ’Netta Nymph’ and ’Purple Nymph’. To avoid future confusion, it seems wise to get the story in print. Dr. W. J. C. Lawrence, while working on color inheritance in plants at the John Innes Horticultural Institution in England in the 1940’s, crossed a particularly good hybrid streptocarpus called ’Merton Blue’ with Streptocarpus ~ohannis. One of the seedlings of this cross was named ’Constant Nymph’. Under normal house conditions it will bloom continuously from April to November. With supplementary lighting it can be kept in flower all year around. The unfortunate name, Streptocarpus, can be quickly dismissed as being no more than a description of the ripened seed pod. It means "twisted fruit". This genus of predominantly African plants has interested both gardeners and scientists for a long time for different reasons. Several unusual characteristics appear in many of the members of the genus. ’Constant Nymph’ illustrates some of them. There appears to be no true stem or conventional growing point to the plant. The leaves seem to grow from the upper surfaces of the bases of other leaves. The flowers appear to arise from the upper surfaces of the petioles. As a house plant it can suffer considerable abuse and survive. If water is deliberately withheld from one 184 185 Streptocarpus ’Constant Nymph’. Photo: R. Spurr. plants for as long as a month, turgor is restored to the dead-appearing, limp leaves in a matter of hours after watering. Since ’Constant Nymph’ and its mutants do not come true from seed, they must be propagated vegetatively. Leaf cuttings are the most effective method for as many as 100 new plants may be obtained from one leaf Two main methods of preparing the leaves are used. The leaf blade may be cut crosswise into several pieces. The proximal ends are then inserted into a rooting medium. Or the leaf blade may be split down the middle the long way, removing the main vein and placing the two large pieces of the leaf blade with the long cut edge in the rooting medium. A great many plantlets will of these result from either method A temperature of around 70-75 degrees F seems optimal for rooting. Roots should appear in about two weeks. In another two weeks independent leaflets appear which eventually grow into small plants. Progeny should not be separated from the old leaf until each plantlet has roots developed at the base of its own leaves. When all the new plants are eventually removed from the old leaf, these leaf 186 sections may be replaced in the rooting medium and another batch will develop. It is sometimes possible to get even a third batch of plantlets but with reduced results. The basal portion of the leaf from which the flowers arise, should not be left on during rooting. If this is not removed, roots will appear on this area and flowers usually develop without the formation of new plantlets. Not remo"ing this part at the base of the leaf is the main reason some leaves do not propagate well. Fertilizing nutrients should not be included in the rooting medium because excessive activity results in producing an abundance of flowers. The result is a heavily-flowered, single-leaved plant with few plantlets. In March, 1969, the writer was fortunate in being able to spend about a week in the Netherlands. He was additionally fortunate in having a close friend, Dr. Robert Legro, as host during much of this time. During visits to the horticultural experimental station at Wageningen which involved nearly two days, some time was spent with Dr. C. Broertjes at the Institute for Atomic Sciences in Agriculture. He was doing experimental work involving radiation on several kinds of plants. One of the plants was ’Constant Nymph’. Dr. Broertjes explained a remarkable characteristic of this plant as well as some of its relatives which made them particularly valuable as experimental material. When he radiated whole mature leaves, each new plantlet that developed arose from a single mutated leaf cell. The resulting entire plant possessed the mutated trait or traits and could be readily propagated. The troublesome problem of chimaeras common in other plants treated in this manner was eliminated. In his preliminary experiments, Dr. Broertjes produced 1,650 mutants. Five of these eventually received Certificates of Merit in the spring of 1969 and are the named mutants with which we are concerned. In August, 1969, we requested from Dr. Broertjes propagation material of whatever mutants he cared to release. The first shipment consisted of unrooted leaves. Due to a delay enroute almost all arrived in a deplorable state of decay. We received a second shipment on November 3, 1969. These were leaves in excellent condition with well developed plantlets attached. They included the previously mentioned mutants In the greenhouse at the Case Estates all the plantlets had flowered by May 1970. ’Blue Nymph’ has light blue flowers with a small 187 pale greenish-yellow blotch in the throat; ’Cobalt Nymph’ has intensely dark blue flowers with a small greenish-yellow throatblotch. This tetraploid has a compact habit of growth and flowers of heavy substance. It seems to be more difficult to propagate than the others. ’Mini Nymph’ has flowers very much like ’Constant Nymph’ with a yellow throat blotch. It is very freeflowering and makes a fine compact plant. ’Netta Nymph’ has dark blue flowers with distinctive darker reticulate venation on the petals It is also very free-flowering. ’Purple Nymph’ with its rich purple flowers and small yellow throat blotch seems to make the largest plants and be the most vigorous of the five. The response of the general public to these new cultivars can best be described as covetous. On "Friends of The Arnold Arboretum Days" when a mixture of excess Arnold Arboretum plant material is sometimes offered free to Friends, the streptocarpus plants are always the first to be taken. The September/October 1970 issue of The Gloxinian featured a striking color plate of ’Netta Nymph’ on its cover. This issue contained an article, "New Streptocarpus Varieties" by Dr. Carl D. Clayburg. He reviewed Dr. Broertje’s work, described the new mutants in some detail and mentioned that the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University was growing them and planned to release some propagative material soon to commercial growers. The Kartuz Greenhouses in Wilmington, Massachusetts had already received propagative material from the Arboretum before the article appeared. Additional leaves were sent to Wyrtzen Exotic Plants in Floral Park, New York and the L. Easterbrook Greenhouses in Butler, Ohio. On June 9th, 1970 we had been given full freedom by Dr. de Zeeuw, Director of the Institute for Atomic Sciences in Agriculture at Wageningen, to do with these mutants as we wished. Dr. Broertjes stated that "they are not covered by any kind of protection; the only thing we did was to have them registered and commercialized." Recently, when the question arose as to whether or not the Arnold Arboretum had actually been first to introduce these mutants to American gardeners, Dr. Broertjes responded in a letter dated June 22, 1972 saying that, "so far as I know we did not send leaves to other persons or institutions in the United States of America." There is more to come, for developments have not yet ended. A white flowered spontaneous mutant has occurred known as ’Maassen’s White’. From this cultivar by use of irradiation and colchicine a number of mutants and tetraploids have been pro- 188 duced. We have been promised propagative material of ’Maassen’s White’. We will hope for propagative material of two other cultivars that are expected to be released in 1973. One is a "mini-white type" and the other a white which is described as a tetraploid with very large flowers. GEORGE H. PRIDE References Broertjes, Cornelis. Euphytica 18: Broertjes, Cornelis. 1969. Mutation 333-339. Personal Breeding of Streptocarpus. correspondence. Varieties. The Glox- Clayburg, Carl D. 1970. New inian 20(5): 19-20. Streptocarpus Marston, Margaret E. 1964-65 The Morphology of a Streptocarpus From Leaf Cuttings. Scientific and Its Horticulture 17: Hybrid Regeneration 114-120.