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Orquídeas Christian Demetrio Associação Orquidófila Piracicabana ORQUIPIRA - 1998 Classificação
Orquídeas Christian Demetrio Associação Orquidófila Piracicabana ORQUIPIRA - 1998 Classificação: • Domínio: Eukariota • Reino: Plantae • Divisão: Magnoliophyta (Angiospermas) • Classe: Liliopsida (Monocotiledoneas) • Ordem: Asparagales • Família: Orchidaceae Família: Orchidaceae • Subfamílias: Apostasioidea Vanilloidea Cypripedioidea Orchidoidea Epidendroidea Distribuição: Gênero tipo – Lineu 1753 Orchis Espécie tipo: Orchis militaris Família Orchidaceae • 850 gêneros • 25.000 espécies • Mais de 100.000 híbridos registrados (RHS) Orchidaceae - Brasil Gêneros: 221 Espécies: 2491 Subespécies: 10 Variedades: 17 Orchidaceae in Flora do Brasil 2020 em construção. Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro. Disponível em: <http://floradobrasil.jbrj.gov.br/reflora/floradobrasil/FB179>. Acesso em: 04 Abr. 2017 Caracterização da Família • Características gerais das monocotiledôneas • Estrutura floral: simetria bilateral Pétalas e sépalas semelhantes Labelo Coluna Polínia Ressupinação • Raízes com velame (epífitas) • Sementes diminutas X micorriza (Mycorrhyzum) Folhas: paralelinérvicas Sobralia spp Raízes fasciculadas Velame Estrutura Floral Sépala dorsal ou superior Pétalas Lóbulos laterais Sépalas laterais ou inferiores Lóbulo medial Estrutura Floral 1 – Sépala Dorsal; 2 – Pétalas; 3 – Sépalas Laterais; 4 – Lóbulo Frontal; 5 – Labelo; 6 – Ovário; 7 – Coluna; 8 – Estigma; 9 – Antena Coluna Políneas Antera Estigma Ressupinação Angraecum scottianum não ressupina Laelia purpurata ressupina Classificação pelo tipo de crescimento Simpodial Classificação pelo -
The Genus Brassavola, (L.) R.Br
The Genus Brassavola, (L.) R.Br. in W.T.Aiton, Hortus Kew. 5: 216 (1813) Type: Brassavola [B.] cucullata [bra-SAH-vo-la kyoo-kyoo-LAH-ta] There are 28 species (OrchidWiz [update Dec 2017]) that are epiphytes and sometimes lithophytes at elevations of from sea level to 3300 ft (1000 m) from Mexico, southern Caribbean islands to northern Argentina in moist or wet montane forests, mangroves, rocky crevices and cliff faces. They are most fragrant at night and many with a citrus smell. The genus is characterized by very small pencil-like pseudobulbs, often forming large clumps; a single, fleshy, apical, sub-terete leaf and the inflorescence produced form the apex of the pseudobulb. The inflorescence carries from a single to a few large flowers. The floral characteristics are elongate narrow similar sepals and petals, the base of the lip usually tightly rolled around at least a portion of the column which carries 12, sometimes eight unequal pollina with prominent opaque caudicles. The flowers usually occur, as a rule, in spring, summer and fall. The flowers are generally yellow to greenish white with a mostly white lip. It is not unusual for dark spots, usually purple, to be in the region where the sepals, petals, and lip join the stem (claw). This spotting is a dominant generic trait in Brassavola nodose. They are easily cultivated under intermediate conditions. Although this is a relatively small genus (28 species), the species show an unusually close relationship with one another in their floral patterns, coloration, and column structure making identification difficult, key to know where the plants were collected. -
Effects of Floral Display and Plant Abundance on Fruit Production of Ryncholaelia Glauca (Orchidaceae)
Rev. Biol. Trop. 51(1): 71-78, 2003 www.ucr.ac.cr www.ots.ac.cr www.ots.duke.edu Effects of floral display and plant abundance on fruit production of Ryncholaelia glauca (Orchidaceae) Alejandro Flores-Palacios and José G. García-Franco* Departamento de Ecología Vegetal, Instituto de Ecología A.C., Km 2.5 Antigua Carretera a Coatepec, Apartado Postal 63, Xalapa, Ver., 91000, México, Fax 52(228)8187809, [email protected]; [email protected] * Corresponding author Received 02-II-2001. Corrected 08-VIII-2001. Accepted 19-IX-2002. Abstract: Flowering plant density can increase number of visits and fruit set in multi-flowering plants, howev- er this aspect has not been studied on few flower species. We studied the effects of individual floral display and plant density on the fruit production of the epiphytic, moth-pollinated orchid, Ryncholaelia glauca, in an oak forest of Chavarrillo, Veracruz, Mexico. Species is non-autogamous, and produced one flower per flowering shoot each flowering season. We hypothesized that orchids with more flowering shoots and those on trees with clumps of conspecific should develop more fruits than isolated ones. R. glauca population flowers synchro- nously, and individual flowers last up to 18 days, with flowers closing rapidly after pollination. Individuals pro- duced few flowers per year, although some plants developed flowers in both seasons and fewer of them devel- oped fruits both years. There was no relationship between flower number per orchid, or per host tree, with the number of fruits developed per plant. Host trees with flowering and fruiting orchids were randomly dispersed and the pattern of distribution of flowering and fruiting plants was not related. -
CITES Orchid Checklist Volumes 1, 2 & 3 Combined
CITES Orchid Checklist Online Version Volumes 1, 2 & 3 Combined (three volumes merged together as pdf files) Available at http://www.rbgkew.org.uk/data/cites.html Important: Please read the Introduction before reading this Part Introduction - OrchidIntro.pdf Part I : All names in current use - OrchidPartI.pdf (this file) Part II: Accepted names in current use - OrchidPartII.pdf Part III: Country Checklist - OrchidPartIII.pdf For the genera: Aerangis, Angraecum, Ascocentrum, Bletilla, Brassavola, Calanthe, Catasetum, Cattleya, Constantia, Cymbidium, Cypripedium, Dendrobium (selected sections only), Disa, Dracula, Encyclia, Laelia, Miltonia, Miltonioides, Miltoniopsis, Paphiopedilum, Paraphalaenopsis, Phalaenopsis, Phragmipedium, Pleione, Renanthera, Renantherella, Rhynchostylis, Rossioglossum, Sophronitella, Sophronitis Vanda and Vandopsis Compiled by: Jacqueline A Roberts, Lee R Allman, Sharon Anuku, Clive R Beale, Johanna C Benseler, Joanne Burdon, Richard W Butter, Kevin R Crook, Paul Mathew, H Noel McGough, Andrew Newman & Daniela C Zappi Assisted by a selected international panel of orchid experts Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew Copyright 2002 The Trustees of The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew CITES Secretariat Printed volumes: Volume 1 first published in 1995 - Volume 1: ISBN 0 947643 87 7 Volume 2 first published in 1997 - Volume 2: ISBN 1 900347 34 2 Volume 3 first published in 2001 - Volume 3: ISBN 1 84246 033 1 General editor of series: Jacqueline A Roberts 2 Part I: ORCHIDACEAE BINOMIALS IN CURRENT USAGE Ordered alphabetically on All -
Epilist 1.0: a Global Checklist of Vascular Epiphytes
Zurich Open Repository and Archive University of Zurich Main Library Strickhofstrasse 39 CH-8057 Zurich www.zora.uzh.ch Year: 2021 EpiList 1.0: a global checklist of vascular epiphytes Zotz, Gerhard ; Weigelt, Patrick ; Kessler, Michael ; Kreft, Holger ; Taylor, Amanda Abstract: Epiphytes make up roughly 10% of all vascular plant species globally and play important functional roles, especially in tropical forests. However, to date, there is no comprehensive list of vas- cular epiphyte species. Here, we present EpiList 1.0, the first global list of vascular epiphytes based on standardized definitions and taxonomy. We include obligate epiphytes, facultative epiphytes, and hemiepiphytes, as the latter share the vulnerable epiphytic stage as juveniles. Based on 978 references, the checklist includes >31,000 species of 79 plant families. Species names were standardized against World Flora Online for seed plants and against the World Ferns database for lycophytes and ferns. In cases of species missing from these databases, we used other databases (mostly World Checklist of Selected Plant Families). For all species, author names and IDs for World Flora Online entries are provided to facilitate the alignment with other plant databases, and to avoid ambiguities. EpiList 1.0 will be a rich source for synthetic studies in ecology, biogeography, and evolutionary biology as it offers, for the first time, a species‐level overview over all currently known vascular epiphytes. At the same time, the list represents work in progress: species descriptions of epiphytic taxa are ongoing and published life form information in floristic inventories and trait and distribution databases is often incomplete and sometimes evenwrong. -
Names Given Below Are Adult Plants Alle Im Folgenden Genannten Pflanzen Sind Erwachsen
M&M Orchideen Orchideen-Pflanzen-erwachsen_M&M-Orchideen_2019-01 all names given below are adult plants alle im Folgenden genannten Pflanzen sind erwachsen Genus species or parent parents, synonym, colour Preis / Prices Adaglossum Summit 20,00 € Aliceara Marvin Grand 19,00 € Angraecum erectum 20,00 € Angraecum magdalenae 30,00 € Angraecum Veitchii 50,00 € Anneliesia candida Miltonia 25,00 € Ansellia africana 30,00 € Ansellia africana alba 'Garden Park HCC/AOS 50,00 € Arpophyllum giganteum 25,00 € Ascocentrum ampullaceum bloc 25,00 € Ascocentrum miniatum red 22,00 € Barkeria halbingeri 20,00 € Barkeria lindleyana vanneriana 20,00 € Barkeria obovata chinensis 20,00 € Barkeria skinneri 20,00 € Barkeria spectabilis 20,00 € Barkeria Marsh Monarch lindleyana x spectabilis 20,00 € Barkeria Martinas Erste lindleyana x scandens 20,00 € Barkeria lindleyana x Epi. stamfordianum 20,00 € Beallara Peggy Ruth Carpenter 19,00 € Beallara Tahoma Glacier 19,00 € Beallara Tropic Splendor 19,00 € Bifrenaria harrisoniana 25,00 € Bifrenaria tetragona 25,00 € Bletilla striata 20,00 € Bletilla striata coerulea 25,00 € Brassada Mivada 20,00 € Brassada Orange Delight 20,00 € Brassavola flagellaris 25,00 € Brassavola glauca Rhyncholaelia 27,00 € Brassavola nodosa ab/from 21,00 € Brassavola perrinii 21,00 € Brassavola tuberculata 25,00 € Seite 1 von 18 M&M Orchideen Orchideen-Pflanzen-erwachsen_M&M-Orchideen_2019-01 Brassia brachiata 25,00 € Brassia caudata 25,00 € Brassia verrucosa 25,00 € Brassia wagneri 27,00 € Brassia Arana Verde Rex x giroundiana 30,00 € Brassia Datacosa verrucosa x caudata 27,00 € Brassia Edvah Loo 'Vera Cruz' 30,00 € Brassia Rex verrucosa x giroudiana 27,00 € Brassia Rex x arcuigera 27,00 € Brassia Ezernal Wind 20,00 € Brassocattleya Binosa C.bicolor x B. -
October 2007 Platinum Coast Orchid Society
October 2007 Platinum Coast Orchid Society S. Gossett-Moore, Editor [email protected] Phone: 321-784-4006 Society Web Site: www.PlatinumCoastOrchidSociety.O rg The Rhyzome Rhi-zome: n., a creeping stem lying, usually horizontally, at or Board Members 2007 under the surface of the soil... Jim Adamson, Presi- dent, Tel.: (321) 632-2847 Jim’s Bench Alan Gettleman, Jim Adamson Vice-President, Tel.: (321) 454-3239 Dear Members, Ginny Landreth, Big news! Listen up!! At the Cocoa Beach meeting I an- Secretary, Tel.: (321) nounced that we would have a plant sale in November. Well, this 631-6316 has all changed. After contacting my sources for plants I learned Craig Helpling, Treasurer, Tel.: that November is really a bad month for obtaining plants because (321) 779-0123 there is lots of activity and plants are not as readily available as Jack Taylor, Board they are in October; thus, a change in plans. Member, Tel., (321) The plant sale will be at this meeting. If you 453-4856 are looking for quality plants at cost, be Toni Bell, Board there. Also, every time we have a sale there Member, Tel.: (321) 751-3900 are a number of members who come without a box or carrier to take their purchases home Sherrill Gossett- Moore, Board Mem- with them. Please write yourself a note and ber, Tel.: (321) 784- come prepared. 4006 Look forward to seeing you there. Jim Glenda Titler, Board Member, Tel.: 321- 637-0948 Bob Libbey, Past- President Advisor, Thank You From Ginny Thank you so much for the beautiful orchid! Miltassias are one of my favorites. -
NOS October Newsletter
Nambour Orchid News! October 2014! Greetings! Greetings! Judges Choice of the Month! Articles for the newsletter are very welcome. Please Dendrobium chlorostylum Ganep! f o r w a r d t o t h e e d i t o r b y p o s t o r e m a i l (Grown by W. & J. Harris) [email protected] by the 15th of each !month.! Meetings! Business meeting is held on the 4th Saturday of each month at 12.45pm prior to the cultural meeting. All !members are welcome to attend the business meeting.! Cultural meeting is held on the 4th Saturday of the month at the Nambour Uniting Church Hall, Coronation Ave., Nambour at 2pm. All members and visitors are welcome.! Plants are to be tabled by 1.30pm for judging! Species appreciation get together is held monthly from February to November at member’s homes. ! Contact the Secretary for details. All STOCQ members This is a miniature to small sized epiphyte from welcome. Bring your flowering species plants, a chair, southern China and north Vietnam. It is warm to a cup and a plate to share for afternoon tea.! cool growing and carries many blooms on both leafy and leafless stems. The flowers bear a ! close similarity to those of D. nobile but are much Cultural meetings & guest speakers! smaller. Two or three flowers appear at the nodes We have a plant sales table at each meeting for of the stem and are about 40mm across.! members to sell any surplus plants. If you have any Our plant grows in a bark mix with added coarse that you would like to sell, bring them along, tagged perlite and about 10% charcoal. -
Orchid Name Abbreviations List
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF STANDARD ABBREVIATIONS FOR NATURAL AND HYBRID GENERIC NAMES Acw. = Aberconwayara All. = Aganella Angcst. = Angulocaste Abr. = Aberrantia Agn. = Aganisia Ank. = Anikaara Acp. = Acampe Agt. = Aganopeste Akr. = Ankersmitara Apd. = Acampodorum Agsp. = Agasepalum Anct. = Anoectochilus Acy. = Acampostylis Agubata = Agubata Atd. = Anoectodes A. = Aceras Aitk. = Aitkenara Ano. = Anoectogoodyera Ah. = Acerasherminium Al. = Alamania Anota = Anota Actg. = Aceratoglossum Agwa. = Alangreatwoodara Ayp. = Ansecymphyllum Acba. = Acinbreea Atc. = Alantuckerara Asg. = Anselangis Acn. = Acineta Aat. = Alaticaulia Aslla. = Ansellia Ain. = Acinopetala Atg. = Alatiglossum Asdm. = Ansidium Aip. = Aciopea Alc. = Alcockara Arpt. = Anteriocamptis Akm. = Ackermania Alxra. = Alexanderara Ahc. = Anterioherorchis Aks. = Ackersteinia Alcra. = Aliceara Atml. = Anteriomeulenia Aco. = Acoridium Alna. = Allenara Antr. = Anteriorchis Apa. = Acrolophia Aln. = Allioniara Atsp. = Anterioserapias Aro. = Acronia Alph. = Alphonsoara Anth. = Anthechostylis Acro. = Acropera Alv. = Alvisia Antg. = Antheglottis Ada = Ada Amal. = Amalia Anr. = Antheranthe Adh. = Adachilum Amals. = Amalias Alla. = Antilla Adg. = Adacidiglossum Amb. = Amblostoma Apr. = Apoda-prorepentia Adcm. = Adacidium Amn. = Amenopsis Aea. = Appletonara Adgm. = Adaglossum Am. = Amesangis Arcp. = Aracampe Adn. = Adamantinia Ams. = Amesara Ara. = Arachnadenia Adm. = Adamara Ame. = Amesiella Arach. = Arachnis Adps. = Adapasia Aml. = Amesilabium Act. = Arachnocentron Adl. = Adelopetalum Ami. = Amitostigma -
Alphabetical One-Table List of Genera and Intergeneric Combinations
ALPHABETICAL ONE-TABLE LIST OF GENERA AND INTERGENERIC COMBINATIONS (with parentage, where applicable, and standard abbreviations) This list contains the names and intergeneric combinations of all genera, including hybrid genera, which occur in current use in orchid hybrid registration as at 31st. December 2007, regardless of whether they appear in the main list of this volume. The arrangement of the entries is in One-Table format, and for intergeneric combinations is as follows: Under the name of each natural genus is entered (inset) each combination in which it occurs together with the name (following the = sign) of the intergeneric name which represents that combination. Each such combination appears once under the name of the natural genus concerned, the entries being in the alphabetical sequence of the remaining “constituent” genera which, in any entry, are themselves alphabetically arranged. Thus in the course of the whole list each bigeneric combination occurs twice, each trigeneric combination occurs three times, and so on. For example, in addition to the entry of BRASSOLAELIOCATTLEYA in bold type in its own alphabetical position, the combination for Brassolaeliocattleya appears three times, inset: Once under BRASSAVOLA as × Cattleya × Laelia = Brassolaeliocattleya Once under CATTLEYA as × Brassavola × Laelia = Brassolaeliocattleya Once under LAELIA as × Brassavola × Cattleya = Brassolaeliocattleya ACAMPE (Acp.) = Natural genus × Arachnis ................... =Aracampe × Armodorum .................. =Acampodorum × Rhynchostylis -
The Systematic Distribution of Vascular Epiphytes: an Update
Selbyana 9: 2-22 THE SYSTEMATIC DISTRIBUTION OF VASCULAR EPIPHYTES: AN UPDATE w. JOHN KREss Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, 811 South Palm Avenue, Sarasota, Florida 33577 ABSTRACT. The list of vascular plant families and genera containing epiphytic species published by Madison (1977) is updated here. Ten percent (23,456 species) of all vascular plant species are epiphytes. Seven percent (876) of the genera, 19 percent (84) of the families, 45 percent (44) of the orders and 75 percent (6) of the classes contain epiphytes. Twenty-three families contain over 50 epiphytic species each. The Orchidaceae is the largest family of epiphytes, containing 440 epiphytic genera and 13,951 epiphytic species. Forty-three genera of vascular plants each contain over 100 epiphytic species. In 1977 Madison published a list of the vas those plants that normally spend their entire life cular plant families and genera that contain epi cycle perched on another plant and receive all phytic species. Madison compiled this list from mineral nutrients from non-terrestrial sources. literature reports, consultation with taxonomic Hemi~epiphytes normally spend only part oftheir specialists, and a survey of herbarium material. life cycle perched on another plant and thus some He reported that 65 families contain 850 genera mineral nutrients are received from terrestrial and 28,200 species of epiphytes. His total ac sources. Hemi-epiphytes either begin their life counted for about ten percent of all species of cycle as epiphytes and eventually send roots and vascular plants. shoots to the ground (primary hemi-epiphytes), Madison's list was the most comprehensive or begin as terrestrially established seedlings that compilation of vascular epiphytes since the works secondarily become epiphytic by severing all of Schimper (1888) and Richards (1952) upon connections with the ground (secondary hemi which it was partly based. -
August 2019 Newsletter
AUGUST 2019 NEWSLETTER UPCOMING NOS EVENTS Our August monthly meeting is Thursday, Next Monthly Meeting Thursday, September 5, 2019 August 1, 2019 Speaker: Phillip Hamilton at the Moorings Presbyterian ‘Broughtonia and their Hybrids’ Church, Baker Gym Plants for Sale Flower Registration 6:30 pm Flower Judging 7:10 pm Meeting 7:30 pm Program 7:45 pm ‘Phalaenopsis: Bellina and Gigantea NOS BOD and Show Committee Meeting Types’ Thursday, September 26, 2019 6:30 pm Jim and Melana Davison All members are welcome! Jim-N-I Orchids Conference room of AvAirPros Plants for Sale! Toni Stabile Building 5551 Ridgewood Drive, Suite 300 Flower Awards Naples FL 34108 Raffle --- Refreshments Contact: Dick Pippen [email protected] President: Richard Pippen [email protected] Submit articles for the Newsletter by the 15th of each month to: [email protected] Newsletter Editors: Kris Morton, Marilyn Moser, Veronica Catrombon The Naples Orchid Society is a non-profit organization, devoted to the promotion of, interest in, and the appreciation of orchids and the preservation of our native orchids. It is also our aim to disseminate information pertaining to their culture and hybridization. www.NaplesOrchid Society.org NOS Newsletter for August 2019 Page 2 of 20 A MESSAGE FROM OUR PRESIDENT Dick Pippen [email protected] Greetings Orchid Lovers—Color flow, balance and correct number of orchids are important considerations in creating an Orchid Display, whereas picket fences, white faux houses, and labels that are too big are definite no-nos in creating an effective display. All this according to Lou Lodyga, our July speaker who really knows what he is taking about.