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A very beautiful low growing form that becomes more coppery with increasing light levels. In 2005, Barry Yinger wrote in the Asiatica catalogue: "This variety hs spreading down-curved leaves with unduate margins. The leaf color is deep purple to almost black with a wash a silver and coppery to brownish silver, and dark random lengthwise stripes. It is indestructable indoors in winter if kept completely dry and warm; give it a vacation outdoors in summer in shade." San Marcos Growers say: "Will tolerate low light levels but grows best and flowers if given bright light and even tolerates full coastal sun. Plant in a well-draining soil and water sparingly and not at all as temperatures dip in winter if growing outdoors. It is one of the Sansevieria that we can grow in containers outdoors exposed to winter rains, so long as planted in a well draining mix and can also tolerate going months between watering. Hardy to 30-32° F. This is a great container plant for interior or exterior use that needs little care. Sansevieria kirkii var. pulchra grows naturally in Zanzibar and on Pembra and Misali Islands. The name for the genus was originally Sanseverinia as named by the Italian botanist Vincenzo Petagna in honor of his patron, Pietro Antonio Sanseverino, the Count of Chiaromonte (1724-1771), but the name was altered for unknown reasons by the Swedish naturalist Carl Peter Thunberg, possibly influenced by the name of Raimondo di Sangro (1710–1771), prince of San Severo in Italy. The specific epithet honors the Sir John Kirk (1832-1922) a surgeon and Consul General to Zanzibar who collected plants in East Africa. The varietal name 'pulchra' means "beautiful" "handsome", "fine" or "excellent" in reference to the strongly marked leaves. Long placed in the Agavaceae, the Dracaenaceae and by some in the Ruscaceae families, Sansevieria was most recently placed in the subfamily Nolinoideae within the Asparagaceae family. Molecular phylogenetic studies however have determined that Sansevieria should actually be included in the genus Dracaena and since the name Dracaena kirkii previously existed, if one buys into this merger of Sansevieria and Dracaena, then Sansevieria kirkii could not use its existing epithet and would be called Dracaena pethera var. pulchra. Because of considerable disagreement over this change, the long-standing use of its old name, and so not to cause our own and customer confusion, we continue to list all of these snake plants as Sansevieria. " |
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11th April 2007 |
Huntington Botnic Gardens say online: "This plant, with its rigid, wavy-edged leaves and mottled coloration, gives the impression that it has been hammered out of metal, even more so in ‘Coppertone’ selected for the coppery blush of the leaves when grown in good light. It is also more compact than other forms with leaves to about 30 cm rather than 60 to 100 cm long. The varietal name pulchra, meaning beautiful, seems particularly apt for this form. The specific name kirkii honors Sir John Kirk who accompanied Livingstone’s Zambesi expedition in 1858. He collected the species and sent it to Kew, where Baker described it in 1887. The variety is native to Zanzibar, off the coast of Tanzania." |
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14th September 2007 | 6th October 2007 | 7th October 2008 |