The first pictures are of cuttings I took from the plant in the last picture.I'm just curious if anyone can tell me if this appears to be a genetic mutation or something else and is there a way to determine which it is? by TraphouseNursery botany 1 Comment Elhazar 2 weeks ago Marbled/non-patterned sectorial chimeras are usually caused by a transposon going wild. [The good, the bad and the Bizarria](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0012160616300902#s0020) by M.H:Frank and D.H.Chitwood is an excellent review on plant chimeras that I recommend for everyone who wants to know more about variegated plants.
Elhazar 2 weeks ago Marbled/non-patterned sectorial chimeras are usually caused by a transposon going wild. [The good, the bad and the Bizarria](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0012160616300902#s0020) by M.H:Frank and D.H.Chitwood is an excellent review on plant chimeras that I recommend for everyone who wants to know more about variegated plants.
1 Comment
Marbled/non-patterned sectorial chimeras are usually caused by a transposon going wild.
[The good, the bad and the Bizarria](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0012160616300902#s0020) by M.H:Frank and D.H.Chitwood is an excellent review on plant chimeras that I recommend for everyone who wants to know more about variegated plants.