According to ChatGPT and a bit of my own research, this is an extremely rare phenomenon since this genus almost never exhibits aberrations like such. Since I'm not a botany person myself, any insights from folks expert in this field will be greatly appreciated.
last image shows other, normal flowers in the same plant.
by Admirable-Leather325
2 Comments
Out of curiosity, did you happen to see the other post this week with the same mutation (different genus)?
Yea it’s not very common in plumeria, but happens in most plants to varying degrees. Had a daffodil that did it on the regular, but eventually lost it