PLANT REGISTRATION
INFORMATION
The
African Violet Society of America, Inc. (AVSA) is the authorized International
Cultivar Registration Authority (ICRA) for the genus Saintpaulia
(commonly known as the African violet). You may name and register a
plant if it meets certain requirements:
-
You
are the hybridizer of the plant or the discoverer of the sport (mutation)
of a plant, or you have written permission from the hybridizer or
his/her heirs.
-
You
know the names of the parent plants used in the cross, or, in the
case of a sport, the name of the plant from which the sport mutated.
-
You
have reproduced the plant asexually (e.g. leaf cutting or, in the
case of a chimera, sucker propagation) through at least three generations,
and the offspring have reproduced true to the original plant.
-
The
name of the plant complies with the provisions set forth in the
most recent edition of the International Code of Nomenclature
for Cultivated Plants. (See some guidelines below under CULTIVAR
NAMES TO BE AVOIDED.)
Certain
steps are required for the registration process:
-
Send
an e-mail or letter to the Plant Registration and Master Plant List
Chairman, requesting registration application forms, and indicating
the number of forms needed. (Extras will be sent.) The forms are
printed on special archival, acid-free paper; therefore photocopies
are not acceptable.
-
Complete
one form for each plant to be registered. Return the form(s) along
with the proper application fee(s) to the Plant Registration and
Maste Plant List Chairman.
-
Once
the application is received, the Plant Registration and Master Plant
List Committee will process it. If they have any questions, they
will contact you. The committee reserves the right to reject the
application if the plant does not meet the requirements set forth
above.
-
The
name, description, and registration information are published in
the "Registration Report" column in the African Violet Magazine,
at which time the plant is officially registered. Also, the plant
will be listed in the next published edition of the African Violet
Master List of Species and Cultivars (AVML), and it will be
added to the First Class computer program database.
PLEASE
NOTE: In order to be listed in the AVML and First Class, the plant
does not need to be registered. The hybridizer (or discoverer
of a sport) can send the name and description of the plant to the Plant
Registration and Master Plant List Chairman. Registration should be
reserved for plants which are significantly different from any named
cultivar.
RESERVATION
OF NAMES
Reserving
a name may be done when your seedling first blooms. Many times a hybridizer
names a new cultivar, releases it, and may wait two years before deciding
to register the seedling, only to find the name is not available.
Name reservations are good for a two-year period. In order to reserve
a name, send the name and $1.00 to the Plant Registration and Master
Plant List Chairman. It is not necessary to use a registration form
to reserve a name — a letter giving the committee the name is sufficient.
The
name will be checked for availability and to make sure it is in compliance
with the rules of The International Code of Nomenclature for
Cultivated Plants. If the name is accepted, it will be placed in
the reserved file with your name and the date it was received. This
name reservation is good for a two-year period from the date received.
If your reservation is about to expire, and you are not ready to register
your plant, you may request an extension by paying $1.00 for one more
two-year period.
REGISTERING
A CULTIVAR – FEE IS $5.00
You
may subtract the $1.00 paid for the name reservation if you have previously
reserved the name, and the reservation period has not lapsed .
Upon
receiving the application for registration, read through it and fill
in all the areas pertaining to your cultivar. Type or print in black
ink. PLEASE DO NOT USE PENCIL, as these are permanent records.
Do not fill in registration number, date received and date published;
these will be filled in by the Registrar. All names will be checked
by the committee for compliance and availability.
- If you
have made the cross for this new cultivar, you are the hybridizer. Applicants
need written permission from the hybridizer to register any cultivar
for which they have not made the crosses.
- Remember,
in order to register a cultivar you need to take it through three or
more generations. Your new cultivar should reproduce true at least 95%
of the time.
- Cultivars
from seeds for which the parentage is unknown may not be registered.
- Give
a complete blossom and foliage description. Do not give a flowery, exaggerated
description. Keep it short and concise, but complete. Follow the guidelines
of the Legend in the African Violet Master List of Species and Cultivars
(reproduced below).
- Plants
or leaves of your plants must be available to the general public, either
by gift or by sale, if you wish to register this plant.
- Date
and sign the application, and be sure to include your check or money
order, made payable in U.S. funds to AVSA. DO NOT SEND CASH.
The application should be signed with your full name — not initials
and not the name of a business.
- If a
living person's name is being used as a cultivar name, a letter of permission
from that person (or heirs) must accompany the name reservation or registration
application. Written permission is also necessary before using the name
of any famous person, copyright, or trademark (e.g. musical group, cartoon
character, etc.).
- REGISTRATIONS
DO NOT BECOME VALID UNTIL PUBLISHED.
The
publication deadline for this committee is three months before publication
of each AVM (October 1 for January AVM, etc.) Registrations
must be received before our deadline, or they will be held until
the next publication date.
CULTIVAR
NAMES TO BE AVOIDED
-
Names
likely to be confused with already existing named cultivars or those
closely related (e.g., ‘Raspberry Fizz’ is a registered cultivar.
‘Razzberry Fizz’ is unacceptable.)
-
Excessively
long names or phrases — the name is limited to 30 characters (excluding
spaces) overall.
-
A
name that is the Latin or common name of another genus or species
(e.g. 'Carnation').
-
Any
name with any of the following words: violet, variety, form, cross,
hybrid, group, mutant, seedling, sport, strain, improved.
-
Any
punctuation mark other than apostrophe, comma, single exclamation
point, hyphen, or period.
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Plant
Registration and Master Plant List Chairman:
Joe
Bruns
1220 Stratford Lane
Hanover Park, IL 60133-2667
E-mail jbruns@qwip.net
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LEGEND
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Blossom
Description Sequence
- Blossom
type (single, semidouble, double)
- Chimera
- Color
(e.g. pale lavender, hot pink, bright red)
a.
When describing chimera color, either side of the center stripe
is listed as the principal color
b.
When color of top and lower petals differ, the lower petal color
is listed as the principal color
- Two-tone
(values of one hue, but not two different colors)
- Descriptive
adjectives (e.g. large, mottled, variable, sticktite, and,
under certain circumstances, ruffled, frilled, or fluted)
- Shape
(e.g. pansy, star, cup, bell, wasp)
- /
denotes "with" followed by remaining features listed
sequentially, from blossom center toward edge
a.
Center or eye
b.
Top petals
c.
Petal tips
d.
Fantasy
e.
Band (if another color is present at edge)
f. Edge
1) color (Note: white edge is
sometimes called Geneva edge)
2) descriptive adjective (e.g.
ruffled, frilled, fluted)
Foliage
Description Sequence
- Variegation
type:
a.
Variegated (sometimes referred to as "Tommie Lou"
variegation)
b.
Crown variegated
c.
Mosaic variegated
d.
Chimera variegated
- Color
(shade of green listed first, if variegated)
- Shape
(e.g. plain, ovate, spooned, longifolia, heart-shaped, pointed)
- Texture
(e.g. quilted, pebbled)
- Surface
(e.g. glossy, hairy, velvety)
- Edge
(e.g. ruffled, fluted, holly, wavy, scalloped, serrated)
- /
back color or type (e.g. /red back, /bustle back
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Revised
February 2008
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