Exotic plants crosses

TomTato harvests both cherry and white tomatoes, Shasta chrysanthemum with larger petals and longer hatching times due to hybrid or transplant methods.

TomTato harvests both cherry and white tomatoes, Shasta chrysanthemum with larger petals and longer hatching times due to hybrid or transplant methods.

1. Tomato hybrids - potatoes

Picture 1 of Exotic plants crosses

TomTato cultivars are harvested at the same time with 500 cherry tomatoes and many white potatoes. TomTato is like a normal tomato plant. However, when pulling the plants out of the soil, white potatoes can be seen growing from the roots. This is not a genetically modified plant, but is produced by transplantation.

2. Plums dreamed

Picture 2 of Exotic plants crosses

Plumcot is a semi-apricot half-plum fruit, the plant that is bred between Japanese plum and ordinary apricot tree. This fruit has intestines like plums and smells like apricots. Previously, no one thought that they could cross these two plants.

3. White raspberries

Picture 3 of Exotic plants crosses

White raspberries were created by crossing brown sticky rice called Crystal White and Raspberry Lawton. Typically, raspberries are red or black.

4. Chrysanthemum Shasta

Picture 4 of Exotic plants crosses

Shasta chrysanthemums have white flowers, large petals and longer blooms than regular daisies. Flower plants are grown by cross-pollination of daisy daisy with British daisies. The best plants are selected and crossed with Portuguese daisies. The breeding process lasts about 6 years, but the petals are not white enough. Breeding continues with Japanese chrysanthemum flowers. Shasta chrysanthemum was introduced in 1901, after 17 years of research.

5. Thorny cacti

Picture 5 of Exotic plants crosses

Prickly cacti need to be well cared for, watered often and don't like cold. This is a cactus that cannot live in the desert.

Update 17 December 2018
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