Epidendrum frutex

Epidendrum frutex is a high-altitude species of reed-stemmed Epidendrum orchid native to Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela.[1]

Epidendrum frutex
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Orchidaceae
Subfamily: Epidendroideae
Genus: Epidendrum
Subgenus: Epidendrum subg. Epidendrum
Section: Epidendrum sect. Planifolia
Subsection: Epidendrum subsect. Paniculata
Species:
E. frutex
Binomial name
Epidendrum frutex
Rchb.f. (1855)

Description

E. frutex Rchb.f. (1855) is closely related to E. frigidum Lind. (1855),[2] growing terrestrially in "open sphagnum uplands".[3] The tall sympodial plants grow from 3/4 to 5 m tall. As is typical of the subgenus E. subg. Epidendrum, the stems are covered from the base with distichous, tubular, leaf-bearing sheaths. The narrow leathery leaves of E. frutex can grow more than 2 dm long. The terminal inflorescence is a distichous (not secund) compound panicle bearing numerous small, fleshy yellow to green to brown flowers. The triangular sepals are no longer than 6 mm. The linear petals are slightly shorter than the sepals. The lip is adnate to the column to its apex, heart-shaped where it diverges from the column, broader than it is long, and not divided into lobes. A linear keel runs down the center of the lip.

This large Epidendrum is notable for producing seed capsules that are more than ten times the size of the flowers.[4]

gollark: .goose It is already too late. Events are in motion which cannot be stopped.
gollark: .goose They have come for us. It is already too late.
gollark: .goose please help me this goose is standing outside my house
gollark: .goose Morning moonset, with clouds and geese.
gollark: .goose at 15% battery

References

  1. http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/qsearch.do
  2. H. G. Reichenbach, "ORCHIDES", nr. 358 in C. Müller, Ed. Walpers Annales Botanices Systematicae 6(1861)411-412. Berlin.
  3. Schweinfurth. "Orchids of Peru" Fieldiana: Botany 30(1959)445. Field Museum, Chicago, IL
  4. The Internet Orchid Species Photo Encyclopedia


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.