In my mind, the sunflower may be the most iconic American
plant. It’s a plant of summer, a plant of fall, a plant chewed on the ball
field (and a healthier one than the other plant commonly chewed on the diamond,
Nicotiana tabacum). My earliest
gardening memories are of a sunflower; of planting a seed in a Dixie cup with my preschool class and watching it grow in
my parent’s garden till it towered over my head. It was fitting that one of the first plants
that I worked with at Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden (RSABG) was a sunflower.
Flowers of Helianthus inexpectatus |
The Newhall Ranch Sunflower (Helianthus inexpectatus) wasn’t formally described until 2010, when
David Keil and Mark Elvin published a description in Aliso, the scientific journal of RSABG.
Before the description, there was some confusion about what this plant actually
was. It was found at Newhall Ranch, an interesting and
controversial piece of land just south of the grapevine along the I-5. When they were discovered, there was some confusion about the
taxonomic identity of these plants. Based on pollen size, chromosome counts
that differed from closely related species and other factors, the plants were
described as an entirely new sunflower.
Since the seeds came from such an unusual plant, we used a
very small sample to test their viability. 30 seeds were sown, 17 of which
germinated. This gave us our baseline of viability for the collection, and the
added bonus of 17 tiny plants. In some of our tests, the plants which are
produced inevitably end up being discarded, often in a spectacular display of
fungal attack, but with these unusual seeds we knew that we wanted to grow them
on. The plants were grown in small two inch pots for several weeks and were
tended to with care by our talented nursery staff. Once they were large enough,
we transferred them to raised beds, where we could grow them to maturity.
Seeds of Helianthus inexpectatus |
Seed regeneration, also known as seed bulking, is the
process of taking a small amount of seeds, growing plants from them, and
collecting and storing the seed that those plants produce. The 17 plants that
were produced during germination testing were used for this purpose. After a
long summer of frequent watering and the occasional threat of insect attack,
the plants flowered and began to set seed. We harvested seed over the course of
approximately one month, collecting mature flower heads and storing them in a
dry area in paper bags. Many of the seeds were found to be unfilled and non
viable, but some were healthy and normal. Altogether we were able to harvest more
than 2,500 viable and healthy seeds from the 30 seeds that we started with in
our germination test. The seeds that we produced will be stored at the RSABG
seed bank, and will be available to the botanical researchers and
conservationists.
Susanna Bixby Bryant, the founder of RSABG, envisioned an
organization that would “…replenish the depleted supply of some of the states
rarest plants.” Many years after she wrote those words, it is an honor to be
continuing this work, methodically collecting, storing, growing, and
regenerating our states rarest plants.