Red Sunflowers on the Rise: A Main Campus Experiment
If you鈥檝e walked past the sunflower beds on 麻豆免费版下载Boulder鈥檚 Main Campus lately, you might鈥檝e done a double take鈥攕ome of the blooms aren鈥檛 just yellow. They鈥檙e red. Really red.
That鈥檚 thanks to a multi-year experiment led by 麻豆免费版下载Boulder horticulturists Jason Wiley and Aaron Shapiro. It鈥檚 Jason鈥檚 second year growing sunflowers on campus, and last year, most of them turned out the usual bright yellow. But a few had a deeper, reddish tint鈥攁nd that sparked an idea.
鈥淕enetics are the biggest factor in how red or yellow they鈥檒l be,鈥 Jason explains. 鈥淓xtremely hot weather can bleach out the color, and we鈥檝e noticed that red veining in the leaves might be linked to red petals.鈥
So this year, Jason and Aaron decided to lean into the science. They harvested seeds from the reddest flowers from last season and hand-pollinated only the red ones鈥攗sing watercolor paintbrushes, no less.
鈥淏y crossing reds with reds and collecting seed only from those plants, we increased the likelihood of producing red offspring,鈥 Jason says. 鈥淲e鈥檒l keep doing this each year to see how far we can push the color.鈥
And it鈥檚 working. This year鈥檚 patch has noticeably more red throughout the petals, and one plant in the circle planter is so dark it鈥檚 nearly black.

For home gardeners hoping to grow red sunflowers, Jason has some advice: 鈥淗and-pollinate only the red flowers with a watercolor paintbrush and save seeds only from those plants. To boost your chances, clip or remove nearby yellow-flowered sunflowers. You can sow seeds densely, then thin them out by pulling the yellow ones as they bloom.鈥
It鈥檚 a slow and steady process, but the results are already turning heads. So next time you鈥檙e on Main Campus, stop by the sunflower beds located off the Broadway bike path, just across Broadway from 鈥淭he Sink Crossing.鈥 You might just catch a glimpse of 麻豆免费版下载Boulder鈥檚 very own red sunflower evolution in progress.