Helianthus tuberosus and H. x laetiflorus

Often users take for granted that all perennial sunflowers are to be identified as Helianthus tuberosus. Actually many, if not most, observations depict Helianthus x laetiflorus.
Here some works on the two taxa:
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/14536#page/129/mode/1up
http://www.efloras.org/florataxon.aspx?flora_id=1&taxon_id=114871
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Lajos_Balogh4/publication/296815285_Sunflower_species_Helianthus_spp/links/56dabfbd08aee73df6d2ab23/Sunflower-species-Helianthus-spp.pdf
https://www.degruyter.com/downloadpdf/j/botlit.2014.20.issue-2/botlit-2014-0018/botlit-2014-0018.pdf

Posted on October 6, 2019 08:43 AM by blue_celery blue_celery

Comments

All this are good. But how to distinguish the wild forms of Helianthus tuberosus from H. x laetiflorus? Is it possible? I observed H. tuberosus become "H. x laetiflorus" in a few years in an abandoned garden on poor sandy soils . The size of the heads, the shape of the leaves and even the pubescence are changed.

Posted by phlomis_2019 over 4 years ago

Your comment is really interesting.
Here in Tuscany most plants are compatible with H. x laetiflorus but few still seem to conserve the characters of H. tuberosus thus I thought that the phenomenon you described could not occur. Moreover they are mostly sterile so pollen transfer seems to be unuseful for fruit set and characters mixing seems unlikely.

Posted by blue_celery over 4 years ago

I don't mind. In Central Russia, sunflower thickets are grow near suburban housing, summer cottages, and so on. Over time, the size of the tubers decreases, the leaves become narrower. This is especially fast on poor soils. I do not believe in the conversion of species, of course. But I do not have exact vouchers of H. x laetiflorus.
Every time I see sunflowers, I remember these problems.

Posted by phlomis_2019 over 4 years ago

Also the decrease in size of tubers is always observed in the Italian presumed H. laetiflorus.
Your comment suggests to get more insight into this issue and that the implementation of a research at the European level with the involvement of researchers skilled in plant genetics could be interesting.
Anyway, just in order to highligh that many observed plants corresponf to the "concept" of H. x laetiflorus, I would go on indentifying plants following the aforementioned references.

Posted by blue_celery over 4 years ago

Hi blue, thank you also for this card.
Marco

Posted by naturalista1989 about 4 years ago

Add a Comment

Sign In or Sign Up to add comments