Begonia plant named ‘TNBEGRM’

PP028783 · 2017-12-19

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

A new and distinct form of Begonia plant characterized leaves colored burgundy to silvered burgundy with olive green along veins, dark burgundy red leaf backs, medium pink flowers, a trailing habit, and excellent vigor.

Claims

1. A new and distinct form of Begonia plant as hereby illustrated and described.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

(1) FIG. 1 shows a 9-month old in a growing in a 10 inch hanging basket in a warm greenhouse in March in Canby, Oreg.

(2) FIG. 2 shows a one-year old plant of the new cultivar growing in early summer in bloom in a warm greenhouse in Canby, Oreg.

(3) FIG. 3 shows a close up of a flower and leaves of the same plant.

DETAILED PLANT DESCRIPTION

(4) The following is a detailed description of the new Begonia cultivar based on observations of 9-month-old specimens grown in one gallon containers in a warm greenhouse in June in Canby, Oreg. Canby is Zone 8 on the USDA Hardiness map. Temperatures range from a high of 95° F. in August to 32° F. in January. Normal rainfall in Canby is 42.8 inches per year. The color descriptions are all based on The Royal Horticultural Society Colour Chart, 5.sup.th edition, 2007. Plant: Type.—Tropical perennial. Form.—Trailing. Cold hardiness.—USDA Zone 10. Size.—Trailing to 60 cm and 43 cm wide. Vigor.—Excellent. Roots and rooting.—Roots appear on leaf cuttings in 2 weeks; fine, fibrous, and white in color. Stem: Type.—Decumbent. Size.—Grows to 44 cm long and 6 mm wide. Internodes.—From 1 cm to 2.5 cm long. Surface.—Pubescent. Lateral branches.—Where pinched. Color.—Greyed Brown N199A. Leaf: Type.—Simple. Arrangement.—Alternate. Number per stem.—About 20. Leaf strength.—Excellent, tough, leathery. Blade size.—Grows to 7 cm wide and 12 cm long. Shape.—Ovate. Margins.—Very shallowly 4 to 5 lobed, dentate to denticulate. Apex.—Acuminate. Base.—Oblique and cordate. Venation.—Palmate, topside Green 138B, bottom side Greyed Purple 187A. Surface texture.—Pubescent on both sides. Stipules.—Deciduous, ovate, 10 mm long and 5 mm wide, apex aristate, base sessile and clasping ,entire, back side pubescent, inside glabrous, both sides Greyed Red 181B. Petiole description.—2.5 cm to 6.5 cm long and 2.5 mm wide, succulent, pubescent, Greyed Brown N199A on topside and Greyed Purple 187B on bottom side. Leaf color.—Topside in low light Greyed Purple 187C with the 2 mm on either side of the veins closest to Green N138B, bottom side Greyed Purple 187A; topside in high light there is an overlay of N187B over Greyed Purple 187C with the 2 mm on either side of the veins closest to Green N138B, bottom side Greyed Purple 187A. Inflorescence: Type.—Axillary, bisexual (only tepals, no pistil or stamen), cymose. Number of flowers per cyme.—Usually 4 to 5. Peduncle description.—Grows 39 mm long and 1.5 mm wide, glabrous, fleshy, of good strength , Greyed Orange 176A; with 2 opposite, dehiscent petiolate leaf-bracts below each cyme, deciduous, ovate-lanceolate, 13 mm long and 10 mm wide, apex mucronate, margin ciliate, both sides glabrous and Yellow Green 147C. Pedicel description.—Grow to 15 mm long, 1 mm wide, fleshy, glabrous, of good strength, Red Purple 68D. Bloom period.—Late winter to mid-summer in Canby, Oreg. Flower bud: Size.—11 mm long and 11 mm wide prior to opening. Shape.—Flattened teardrop. Surface texture.—Glabrous. Color.—Red Purple 68A with edges 68C. Flower: Type.—Male and female sterile, no pistil or stamen, bilaterally symmetrical. Flower.—Grows to 15 mm deep and 35 mm wide overall; 4 fleshy tepals, topside Red Purple 68C, bottom side 68C; outer 2 tepals ovate, entire, tip obtuse, base truncate; two inner tepals broadly obovate, margin undulate, tip retuse, base attenuate. Fragrance.—None. Lastingness.—A cyme blooms for about 4 weeks on the plant; flowers are self-cleaning. Fruit and seed: None, sterile. Diseases and pests: The new cultivar is typical to the genus. No known resistances to pests or diseases. No problems have been found in Canby, Oreg.