Hi Harvey,
Here's a link to another couple of pictures of different style leaves on a single tree.
http://figs4funforum.websitetoolbox.com/post/show_single_post?pid=1274630559&postcount=65
That's an Aubique Petite, and each limb of the tree is consistent in producing leaves with the same number of lobes per leaf, but different limbs have different leaves. I'm with Jon on this type of variation in leaf morphology: it's about as close as you can get (same pot, same culture, same weather, same moment in time, similar growth rate on different limbs, same everything... it's the same single tree! I don't know the cause of it.). This kind of leaf variability seems to be inherently part of the nature of certain varieties. Jon showed Raspberry Latte, others have shown VDB, I'm showing Aubique Petite, and there are probably others that exhibit this "kind" of leaf variability.
I do think there are other "kinds" of leaf variability too. For example the kind with immature branches/trees making one kind of leaf (somewhat consistently), and then a different kind of leaf when the tree matures. And other types too.
I suspect there are lots of different causes for these different kinds of leaf variability. The one that I find most intriguing is the kind where a particular variety exhibits two different leaf styles, consistently by limb. Regarding that kind of variability, I don't think it's a matter of different limbs having genetic mutations... rather it seems to be triggered by something else. (I guess it's possible that there are genetic factors that predispose that tree to have a couple of different leaf patterns, and something else besides a mutation "triggers" or "activates" that for a particular limb). The reason I think it's not that is: I've taken cuttings of this tree, and rooted them. The cutting from the "one-lobed limb" produced a new tree that makes both kinds of leaves. The cutting from the "seven-lobed limb" also produced another tree that makes both kinds of leaves. So I think it's not mutations causing it. Similarly I doubt that it's a chimera (though it could be that, with highly granular packing of the two strains, but with some external variable acting as the trigger/activator). Whatever it is, this sort of behavior is pretty intriguing. And I do think this sort of leaf variability is somehow a different phenomenon from some of the other sorts of leaf variability behaviors we see.
Have fun sorting it out!
Mike central NY state, zone 5a
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How about we keep it about figs? Isn't Rafed free to speak for himself? Personally, I'm hoping someone will comment about whether or not they think there are these different "kinds" of leaf morphology variabilities...