tuesday lecture – ornamental plants reading: textbook, chapter 17

52
Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Upload: linda-hines

Post on 31-Mar-2015

217 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants

Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Page 2: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Quiz

Page 3: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Quiz

1.Describe a factor that could result in a plant having a leaf that has a coloration other than solid green.

2.Describe a feature of the UTIA Gardens that you particularly liked.

Page 4: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Naming OrnamentalsDifficulties introduced by the nature of ornamentals:

often hybrids

- many are sterile, propagated vegetatively

- mutants with striking features – propagated vegetatively to retain features

- marketing

International Code of Horticultural Nomenclature – sets of rules governing assignment of cultivar names

Some widely grown plants may have a registry of cultivar names

Page 5: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Naming OrnamentalsDifficulties introduced by the nature of ornamentals:

- often hybrids

- many are sterile, propagated vegetatively

- mutants with striking features – propagated vegetatively to retain features

- marketing

International Code of Horticultural Nomenclature – sets of rules governing assignment of cultivar names

Some widely grown plants may have a registry of cultivar names

Page 6: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Naming OrnamentalsDifficulties introduced by the nature of ornamentals:

- often hybrids

- many are sterile, propagated vegetatively

- mutants with striking features – propagated vegetatively to retain features

- marketing

International Code of Horticultural Nomenclature – sets of rules governing assignment of cultivar names

Some widely grown plants may have a registry of cultivar names

Page 7: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Naming OrnamentalsDifficulties introduced by the nature of ornamentals:

- often hybrids

- many are sterile, propagated vegetatively

- mutants with striking features – propagated vegetatively to retain features

-marketing

International Code of Horticultural Nomenclature – sets of rules governing assignment of cultivar names

Some widely grown plants may have a registry of cultivar names

Page 8: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Naming OrnamentalsDifficulties introduced by the nature of ornamentals:

- often hybrids

- many are sterile, propagated vegetatively

- mutants with striking features – propagated vegetatively to retain features

- marketing

International Code of Horticultural Nomenclature – sets of rules governing assignment of cultivar names

Some widely grown plants may have a registry of cultivar names

Page 9: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Naming OrnamentalsDifficulties introduced by the nature of ornamentals:

- often hybrids

- many are sterile, propagated vegetatively

- mutants with striking features – propagated vegetatively to retain features

- marketing

International Code of Horticultural Nomenclature – sets of rules governing assignment of cultivar names

Some widely grown plants may have a registry of cultivar names

Page 10: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Cultivar Names2. Variation within cultivated plants

- “variety” – widely (and still) used

- cultivar (cultivated variety)

Used to denote an assemblage of cultivated plants that is clearly distinguished by some character(s) and that following reproduction retains its distinguishing character(s)

Cultivar name is written in any language except for Latin

Cultivar name can be combined with a generic, specific, or common name:

Citrullus cv. Crimson Sweet;

watermelon cv. Crimson Sweet;

Citrullus lanatus cv. Crimson Sweet

Page 11: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Types of Ornamentals

1. Nursery Crops – planted outside

- trees/shrubs; turf; ground covers; bedding plants

Page 12: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Types of Ornamentals

1. Nursery Crops – planted outside

- trees/shrubs; turf; ground covers; bedding plants

2. Florist Crops – grown for cut flowers or foliage

- increased worldwide: $12.5 billion (1985) $25 billion (2009)

Page 13: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Types of Ornamentals

1. Nursery Crops – planted outside

- trees/shrubs; turf; ground covers; bedding plants

2. Florist Crops – grown for cut flowers or foliage

- increased worldwide: $12.5 billion (1985) $25 billion (2009)

US – dipped from 4.2 billion (2007) to 3.8 billion (2009)

Page 14: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Types of Ornamentals

1. Nursery Crops – planted outside

- trees/shrubs; turf; ground covers; bedding plants

2. Florist Crops – grown for cut flowers or foliage

- increased worldwide: $12.5 billion (1985) $25 billion (2009)

3. Houseplants – sold for growing indoors

- plants must survive in harsh environment

Page 15: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Asteraceae – The Ornamental Family

- Ageratum

- Aster

- Black-eyed Susan

- Cornflower

- Dahlia

- Daisy

- Marigold

- Chrysanthemum (Dendranthemum)

- Sunflower

- Zinnia

Page 16: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Topped by a Head

Page 17: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Topped by a Head

Page 18: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Variations on a ThemeDandelion – all rays

Page 19: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Variations on a ThemeDandelion – all rays

Pussytoes – all disk

Page 20: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Variations on a ThemeDandelion – all rays Cornflower – All

Disk/outer ones larger Pussytoes – all disk

Page 21: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

“Doubled” Heads

Single (“Old-Fashioned”) Zinnia

Page 22: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

“Doubled” Heads

Single (“Old-Fashioned”) Zinnia Double Zinnia

Page 23: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Another Double

Single Marigold Double Marigold

Marigold – Tagetes - native to Mexico

Page 24: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Daisy – Inspiration for “Big Orange”

Page 25: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Daisy – Inspiration for “Big Orange”

UT Uniform Color – traces origin to center of daisy heads

Page 26: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Daisy – Inspiration for “Big Orange”

Shasta Daisy – tetraploid selection of Luther Burbank

UT Uniform Color – traces origin to center of daisy heads

Page 27: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Polyploidy – Breeding Tool

Daylilies – Hemerocallis fulva

Diploid Tetraploid

Polyploidy: >2 sets of

chromosomes

1. Determinate organs will be larger

2. Stabilizes (and sometimes makes fertile) hybrids

3. Odd polyploids often sterile:

- no messy seeds

- no need to “deadhead”

Page 28: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Flowers - Variations

Showy structure is not part of flower

bract

dogwood

poinsettia

Page 29: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

More Flower Variations

Page 30: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

More Flower Variations“doubled” flowers – stamen primordia petals

Pink Carnation

Page 31: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Araceae – the Houseplant FamilyMany Aroids – tropical epiphytes – habitat similar to house/apartment

Page 32: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Spathiphyllum – the Mall PlantNote: inflorescence is spathe + spadix

Page 33: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Amorphophallus – a Giant Aroid

1.37 m tall

Page 34: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Amorphophallus titanum

Geneticist Huge de Vries, one of the rediscoverers of Mendel’s Laws, provides scale for an inflorescence of the “Voodoo Plant”

Page 35: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Amorphophallus – a Giant Aroid

1.37 m tall

Page 36: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

An Aroid Gallery

Page 37: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

How Dumb Cane Got Its Name

Page 38: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

How Dumb Cane Got Its Name

Calcium oxalate – characteristic crystalline inclusions (raphides) in Araceae extreme irritation of mucous membranes

Can lead to fatal swelling of passages to lungs

Page 39: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Commonly Ingested AroidsFrom List of “Top 20 Ingested Plants” Reported to Poison Control

Centers in U.S.:

2. Philodendron

4. Spathiphyllum

6. Dieffenbachia

10. Epipremnum (Pothos)

Treatment: Symptomatic and Supportive – remove residue from mouth; provide liquids; monitor breathing (major danger is suffocation is swelling is severe)

Page 40: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Invasive Plants – The Dark Side of Ornamentals

Invasive Plants = “Biological Pollution”

“Rule of 10’s”:

Page 41: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Invasive Plants – The Dark Side of Ornamentals

Invasive Plants = “Biological Pollution”

“Rule of 10’s”:

For every 10 plants introduced, 1 will become established

Page 42: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Invasive Plants – The Dark Side of Ornamentals

Invasive Plants = “Biological Pollution”

“Rule of 10’s”:

For every 10 plants introduced, 1 will become established

For every 10 established, 1 will become invasive

1 in 100 introductions becomes invasive

Page 43: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Invasive Plants – The Dark Side of Ornamentals

Invasive Plants = “Biological Pollution”

“Rule of 10’s”:

For every 10 plants introduced, 1 will become established

For every 10 established, 1 will become invasive

1 in 100 introductions becomes invasive

Often a long lag time, introduction problematic invader

“First it sleeps, then it creeps, then it leaps …”

Page 44: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Invasive Plants – The Dark Side of Ornamentals

Invasive Plants = “Biological Pollution”

“Rule of 10’s”:

For every 10 plants introduced, 1 will become established

For every 10 established, 1 will become invasive

1 in 100 introductions becomes invasive

Often a long lag time, introduction problematic invader

How to Predict Invasiveness?

- only clear guide, if invasive in other areas

Page 45: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Dandelion - Invader

Taraxacum officinale (“of the shops”)

Page 46: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Dandelion - Invader

Taraxacum officinale (“of the shops”)

Dandelion (“dents du lion” = lion’s tooth, from leaves)

Page 47: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Dandelion - Invader

Taraxacum officinale (“of the shops”)

Dandelion (“dents du lion” = lion’s tooth, from leaves)

Asteraceae – all ray flowers

Introduced by Pilgrims – used as spring potherb

Page 48: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Dandelion - Invader

Taraxacum officinale (“of the shops”)

Dandelion (“dents du lion” = lion’s tooth, from leaves)

Asteraceae – all ray flowers

Introduced by Pilgrims – used as spring potherb

Flowers – produce abundant nectar sugar source to produce wine

Page 49: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Dandelion - Invader

Taraxacum officinale (“of the shops”)

Dandelion (“dents du lion” = lion’s tooth, from leaves)

Asteraceae – all ray flowers

Introduced by Pilgrims – used as spring potherb

Flowers – produce abundant nectar sugar source to produce wine

Apomictic – seeds produced without fertilization clones of parent

Will mature its seed even if uprooted

Page 50: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Tennessee Invaders

TN-EPPC (Tennessee Exotic Pest Plant Council) – List

Trees: Mimosa (Albizzia); Princess Tree (Paulownia); Tree-of-Heaven (Ailanthus)

Shrubs: Autumn Olive (Eleagnus); Bush Honeysuckles (Lonicera); Japanese Barberry (Berberis); Multiflora Rose (Rosa); Privet (Ligustrum)

Herbs: Purple loosestrife (Lythrum); others

Vines: Euonymus; Japanese honeysuckle (Lonicera); Japanese wisteria; Kudzu (Peuraria); Oriental Bittersweet (Celastrus)

Page 51: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Native Plants – A Great Resource

Answer to Invaders = use native plants

See Box 17.2, p. 429 Wildscaping

Opportunity: provide plants for revegetation, environmental restoration projects

Page 52: Tuesday Lecture – Ornamental Plants Reading: Textbook, Chapter 17

Thursday, Genetically Modified (GM) Plants