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Mauro Peixoto described finding this plant on Gesneriphiles:
Dr Alain Chautems is preparing the Gesneriaceae family of the "Illustrated Flora of Santa Catarina State" and had some doubts about a few [specimens of] dried material that he was analyzing... One of the doubts was a Sinningia that looked like a small leaved S. lineata that someone had collected years ago at a place called "Testa do Macaco" (Monkey's Forehead). So we went to Florianopolis, Santa Catarina. Dr. Ademir Reis from the UFSC (Federal University of Santa Catarina) hired a local guide to take us there. After half hiking and half climbing up a mountain for 2 hours we finally reached the plant!
Florianopolis is an island off the coast of Santa Catarina state, in southern Brazil. The plant was growing on vertical hillsides (one of the favorite sinningia growing places, it seems, since S. nivalis, S. hatschbachii, and S. calcaria grow in similar situations).
This plant is notable for its hairy leaf undersides. Mauro said the plants he found did not have sticky leaves, but the plant I have does (but not all of the time). But most of all this species is notable for its quilted leaves, more like an episcia than a sinningia.
The hairiness on my plants is on the stem of the top two internodes and the reverse of the top two pairs of leaves. It's not easy to tell whether the hairs on the stems and leaves lower down just drop off or somehow mat against the plant surface. I don't see any signs of fallen hairs, but neither do the lower stems have matted hairs. In S. leucotricha, the hairiness of leaves and stems is diluted by the expansion of the leaves and stems themselves. This does not appear to be the case here, since the upper internodes and leaves have a very hairy appearance even when they have reached full size.
Mauro's pictures show flowers much like those of S. lineata: orange-red tubes, flaring lobes, and some darker red markings in the throat. According to Mauro, the plant blooms year-round in his conditions, in stark contrast to my plant, which has not bloomed at all.
As far as I know, no crosses have been made with this species yet (although that is probably changing even as I write this, if not before). Mauro Peixoto found a plant he believes to be a natural hybrid between this species and S. leopoldii. It has the quilted foliage of the "Florianopolis" parent, but not the hairiness on the leave reverse and on the stem.
According the Mauro, the F1 hybrid has not been distributed, so plants found in the United States under the name Sinningia sp. "Florianopolis" x leopoldii were actually propagated from seed from that hybrid, and are therefore F2 plants, which will not be identical with the F1 parent.
| Plant Description | |
|---|---|
| Attribute | Information |
| Growth | Indeterminate |
| Habit | Sprawling stem(s) |
| Leaves | Pebbled or quilted surface, hairy reverse (stems hairy too). The leaves are sometimes sticky, like those of Sinningia amambayensis |
| Dormancy | No dormancy observed on young plant indoors |
| Flowering | |
| Attribute | Information |
| Inflorescence | terminal cluster |
| Season | |
| Flower | Orange-red, tubular |
| Horticultural Aspects | |
| Attribute | Information |
| From seed | No data yet. |
| Hardiness | No data yet. |
| Recommended? | Probably, but I'll wait until it blooms to be sure. |
| Botany | |
| Attribute | Information |
| Taxonomic group | Probably the Dircaea clade. |
Mauro Peixoto's Brazilian Plants site has a page about S. "Florianopolis", with a picture showing the striking flowers.