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This picture showing the flower of Sinningia brasiliensis was taken 22 September 2008 in a greenhouse of the Geneva Botanic Garden in Switzerland. Pretty striking, isn't it? If this plant were easier to grow, it would be very popular.
This is a side view of a flower on the same plant. The spotting, the greenish tinge, the large bell-shaped corolla opening, and the sturdy structure all suggest that this species is pollinated by bats, although I don't know if bats have ever been observed visiting these flowers in the wild.
The first picture shows a flower in the male phase, with the anthers ready to dispense pollen. The second picture shows a flower in the female phase, the the stigma poised to receive pollen from a visitor. Because it was in a greenhouse, the flower was likely to be disappointed, but a passing friendly botanist might do it a favor.
This picture shows a flower on a different plant in the same greenhouse. The flower is the same shape, but about 50% larger, and with no spotting whatsoever, just a greenish shade. It was so dramatic I neglected to ask where it had come from.
Young seedlings of this species are quite distinctive, with the dark leaves having a silvery sheen. As with S. reitzii, the foliage tends to get more ordinary with age.
Sinningia brasiliensis is an object lesson for all botanists who name plants. Don't name a plant after any area larger than Rhode Island!
Sinningia brasiliensis means "the sinningia that grows in Brazil". Well, duh. First, Brazil is a very big place, and S. brasiliensis grows only in a little part of it. But worse, almost every sinningia species is native only to Brazil. "The sinningia that grows in Brazil" is almost totally useless as a name.
As mitigation, we can point out two things. The original name was Lietzia brasiliensis, and since there was only one Lietzia species, "the lietzia that grows in Brazil" wasn't ambiguous, even if really really unhelpful. Also, there is a worse gesneriad name. China is even bigger than Brazil, and there are lots of chiritas native to China, so "the chirita that grows in China" -- Chirita sinensis -- is an incredibly dumb name.
So: remember the Rhode Island Rule!
| Plant Description |
|
| Growth | Indeterminate |
| Habit | Stems upright at first, may sprawl when taller |
| Leaves | Green |
| Dormancy | Stems fully deciduous. |
Flowering |
|
| Inflorescence | Flowers on extended axis |
| Season | Blooms in late summer |
| Flower | Pale pink/yellow |
Horticultural aspects |
|
| Hardiness | Has survived 28 F (-2 C) in my yard. |
| Recommended? | Not until I figure out how to grow it in the open. It is a tall plant, unsuitable for indoor cultivation, but may flourish in a greenhouse. |
Botany |
|
| Taxonomic group | The tall-or-sticky group of the Corytholoma clade. |
See a picture of S. brasiliensis on Ron Myhr's Gesneriad Reference Web.
Publication: Lietzia brasiliensis, by Regel & Schmidt (1880). Wiehler and Chautems transferred this species to Sinningia in the first (and only) issue of Gesneriana, 1995 [see references].
In this article, they noted that several crosses had been made with (then) Lietzia brasiliensis.
Hybrid fertility was measured by HPS (hybrid pollen stainability).
Etymology: brasil + -ensis ("resident of").