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Why is this happening to my tree?


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Cornus and Sorbus are so distantly related that grafting or hybridisation is unimaginable. They are both Eudicots but that's where the similarity ends. Compatible grafts or hybrids across genera are rare enough, and between Orders are extremely rare. Simlarly compatible grafting.

 

I suspect a simpler explanation. The photo at the top of page 2 that suggests a twin stemmed tree forking at ground level has diffrerent bark on the two stems. It maybe that there are two separate trees growing so closely together that they appear to be the one tree but they are neverrthless two trees. The remaining pictures show what looks indeed like torminalis leaves growing from Sorbus barked stems and Cornus leaves growing from Cornus barked stems.

 

Two trees, I'd say. If not, this is the scientific discovery of the decade and would send international geneticists back to primary school in search of their sanity. AS if say a bat had been successfully cross-bred with a snake.

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I know the bark looks different on both stems, however there are dogwood leaves growing everywhere off of both stems, the only part where the mystery leaf is, is a few branches about chest height on the stem nearest in the picture.

 

Thanks for the help,

 

-Harry

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Arbtalk

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Hi Harry, I haven't long got home and was hoping to find some detailed info on inosculation in one of my books. But no luck. Apparently it can happen at root level. The stems do look very close together, is it possible that they have fused below the pebbles in the pics? I'm not entirely sure that inosculation would allow the trees to share each others genetics and there fore produce leaves of each other.

 

Sent from my XT1580 using Arbtalk mobile app

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