| Species | Codes | Codes | |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Ibervillea fusiformis (Lott) Kearns BLM 0391 Transferred from Dieterlea in 1994. A very fast growing caudiciform when given free root run but not vigorous when confined to a pot. Caudices grow to 50cm wide! See Photograph | |||
| Ibervillea hypoleuca BLM 0808 A very large fruited Ibervillea that grows a large caudex. Rare but wide spread from Jalisco to Yucatan to Oaxaca. Plants from seed from Cerro Guiengola, Oaxaca. | 6" | C | $16.50 |
| Ibervillea maxima Lira & Kearns BLM 0661 New species described in 1990. Type is Nayarit, but we found this seed near Lake Chapala in Jalisco. Very large fruit, caudex and vine make this the largest of the Ibervilleas. | 6" | C | $16.50 |
| Ibervillea sonorae (S,Wats) Greene BLM 0040 Nr. Navajoa, Sonora. fruits to 3cm wide. | |||
| Ibervillea sonorae v. peninsularis J.M. Jhtn. Native to Baja California. Slow growing geophyte. | |||
| Ibervillea tenuisecta (A.Gray) Small BLM 0060 Seed from San Luis Potosi, fast growing geophyte, exceedingly popular. Small yellow flowers and red fruit. See Photograph 1 & 2 | 6" | C | $16.50 |
| Ichnolepis tuberosa A below ground tuber forming Asclepiadaceae from Madagascar, recommended. |
4" |
C |
$9.50 |
| Ipomoea albivenia (Lindl.) Sweet Native to Natal, Swziland and Transvaal this outstanding caudiciform forms an above ground caudex to 10cm wide. |
4" |
C |
$12.50 |
| Ipomoea bolusiana Schinz Native to S. Africa and Botswana, forms a large globular tuber and pink flowers. See Caudiciforms P. 92 for a photo. |
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| Ipomoea leptophylla Torr. Seed grown from Sandoval Co., New Mexico. A hardy tuberous Ipomoea from the American plains. With age the tubers grow to 50cm wide and weigh 6kg! |
4" |
C |
$8.50 |
| Ipomoea pubescens Lam. Native from Mexico to Paraguay. Blue flowers with a white throat, napiform caudex up to 10cm side. Pubescent trilobed leaves. A gem for caudex lovers. |
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| Ipomoea sp. BLM 1128 Nr. Chilpancingo, Guerrro. White flowered, vining and grows a tuber to 3" wide. Excellent condition. |
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| Jarilla caudata (Brandegee) Standley Passifloraceae. Native to S. Baja, Jalisco, Guanajuato and Michoacan. The fruit is edible. Localized and rare in the wild and even more rare in cultivation. Develops a large copper colored tuber with deciduous stems and small maple-like leaves. |
4" |
C |
$18.50 |
| Jarilla heterophylla (Cerv. ex La Llave) Rusby Caricaceae. "Jarrilla," "Chivitos." Native from Jalisco to Hidalgo. Forms a globose tuber to 11cm wide with a deciduous stem to 60cm high. Eatable fruit. Probably the first time propagated outside of Mexico. Very rare. |
4" |
C |
$18.50 |
| Jatropha capensis (L.f.) Sond. Native to Cape Province. Forms a pachycaul trunk and tuberous roots. Plants offered are old plants in our free root run greenhouse. |
6" |
B, P |
$19.50 |
| Jatropha cinerea (Ortega) Nuell. Arg. Baja, Sonora and Sinaloa. Pachycaul if cut back. | |||
| Jatropha curcas L Native to Mexico and C. America. Considered to be the "mother from which many Jatrophas evolved. Grows to 4m in habitat. |
4" 6" |
ST ST |
$8.50 $14.50 |
| Jatropha dissecta (Chod. & Hassl.) Pax. Syn. with J. gossypifolia. Type locale is Paraguay, but circumtropical due to planting as an ornamental. Beautiful red leaves on new growth. | 4" | P,B | $8.50 |
| Jatropha sp. An unknown pachycaul species from Sinaloa, Mexico with palmate leaves. |
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