Clovers usually only have 3 leaves. The probability of clover naturally having 4 leaves is 1 in 5000. But it’s also a genetic thing, so they can be bred to have more leaves. The world record for most leaves on a clover was achieved through cross/selective breeding.
Wikipedia puts them at 1/29390 and 4 leafs at 1/5000. An extra leaf is the result of a genetic mutation of the plant. I’m assuming here, but I think it’s the same mutation that happened twice.
Hopefully someone actual plant knowledge will stop by to enlighten us!
Thanks, I looked it up, and regarding the 4 leaf clover it checks out. I just remember as a child I seemed to find mostly 4 leaf, but it was probably just childish imagination, 1 leaf kind of has 2 parts, so I probably in my childish imagination thought I found 4 leaf clovers all over the place.
The curse of having memories from before I was 4 years old.
I’ve seen cloverpatches in the wild with a variety that produces almost exclusively 4 leaved ones. They look a little different than your average clovers but you might have seen those! Either way childhood memories are fickle.
In my childhood we’d hunt 4 leaf clovers for days, only found a handful of them and never seen one with 5 leafs!
When I was in high school our math teacher took us out to the corner of the school property to count cars for a real life statistics lesson. The lawn was covered in clover and she offered extra credit to anyone who found a four-leaf clover. That’s the day she discovered four-leaf clovers aren’t that uncommon.
Are those rare? Some say finding a 4 leaf clover means luck, but AFAIK 4 leaf clover is the most common.
Clovers usually only have 3 leaves. The probability of clover naturally having 4 leaves is 1 in 5000. But it’s also a genetic thing, so they can be bred to have more leaves. The world record for most leaves on a clover was achieved through cross/selective breeding.
What was the record? Don’t leave us hanging
GWR registered one at 63 leafs! Absolutely insane. Here’s the picture on GWR
Biblically-accurate clover.
One-bite salad
From memory it’s something like 53 leaves
Thanks, it seems it was just a childish memory.
Wikipedia puts them at 1/29390 and 4 leafs at 1/5000. An extra leaf is the result of a genetic mutation of the plant. I’m assuming here, but I think it’s the same mutation that happened twice.
Hopefully someone actual plant knowledge will stop by to enlighten us!
Thanks, I looked it up, and regarding the 4 leaf clover it checks out. I just remember as a child I seemed to find mostly 4 leaf, but it was probably just childish imagination, 1 leaf kind of has 2 parts, so I probably in my childish imagination thought I found 4 leaf clovers all over the place.
The curse of having memories from before I was 4 years old.
I’ve seen cloverpatches in the wild with a variety that produces almost exclusively 4 leaved ones. They look a little different than your average clovers but you might have seen those! Either way childhood memories are fickle.
In my childhood we’d hunt 4 leaf clovers for days, only found a handful of them and never seen one with 5 leafs!
Good point, and I never found a 5 leaf either.
The leaves do sometimes split apart in the middle so you have to make sure they’re not 2 leaves and 2 halves.
Yes I think one leaf can look like 2, especially as a child as I was at the time.
When I was in high school our math teacher took us out to the corner of the school property to count cars for a real life statistics lesson. The lawn was covered in clover and she offered extra credit to anyone who found a four-leaf clover. That’s the day she discovered four-leaf clovers aren’t that uncommon.
hyuh