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This species must be rare. Mauro's web site doesn't have a picture. Ron's web site doesn't have a picture. And this was only one of three published sinningia species for which the Perret et al. authors could not find suitable plant material (the other two being S. helleri, which is probably extinct, and S. schomburgkiana, which I had never heard of at the time).
Jon Dixon is the only one I know has this plant. This is a flower on his plant in May 2007.
The picture is over-exposed, so the yellow in the flower is washed out, but I'm not good enough to photoshop it back to reality. You're going to have to use your imagination.
This species bears some resemblance to S. sellovii. The flowers hang vertically, and the stamens are exserted (extend beyond the tube). The flowers are about as long as sellovii's, but wider.
The branching pattern is also very like that of S. sellovii. First the main stalk blooms on the extended axis. Then secondary shoots emerge from the main stem, in leaf axils about halfway up its length, and these too bloom as an extended axis.
I can't give you a description of the leaves, because Jon's plant pretty much didn't have any. You can see a couple of small leaves about halfway up the picture, and a couple of bract-like leaves at the top. And that was about it. Jon said it would leaf out after it was through blooming. I'll try to get leaf pictures later.
This picture was sent to me by Miriam Denham, showing a plant she and her late husband Dale received from Bolivia many years ago. The picture below shows the same plant out of flower, with a very hairy stem and hairy leaves.
| Plant Description |
|
| Growth | Indeterminate |
| Habit | Upright stem |
| Leaves | See discussion above |
| Dormancy | |
Flowering |
|
| Inflorescence | extended axis |
| Season | Spring |
| Flower | pale yellow, slipper-shape |
Horticultural aspects |
|
| Hardiness | I have no data. |
| Recommended? | I had it once. It never bloomed. Then it died. |
Botany |
|
| Taxonomic group | Probably in the Corytholoma clade near S. sellovii. |
As Gesnera sulcata by Rusby, in 1895.
As Sinningia sulcata by Wiehler, in 1978.
Etymology: Latin sulcatus [from sulcus, "furrow"].