Maxillaria camaridii Rchb. f.

 

publié dans Hamburger Garten- und Blumenzeitung 19: 547. 1863.

 

nom remplacé: Camaridium ochroleucum Lindl. 
Botanical Register; consisting of coloured . . . 10: t. 844. 1824.

 

homonyme antérieur : Maxillaria ochroleuca Lodd. ex Lindl. 
The Genera and Species of Orchidaceous Plants, 143. 1832.

 

synonymes : Camaridium affine Schltr.
Repertorium Specierum Novarum Regni Vegetabilis, Beihefte 17: 72. 1922.

Camaridium amazonicum Schltr.
Beihefte zum Botanischen Centralblatt 42: 135. 1925.

Camaridium cryptopodanthum Barb. Rodr.
Contributions du Jardin Botanique de Rio de Janeiro 4: 101. 1907.

Cymbidium ochroleucum (Lindl.) Lindl.
The Genera and Species of Orchidaceous Plants 168. 1833.

Maxillaria lutescens Scheidw.
Allgemeine Gartenzeitung 7: 145. 1839.

Ornithidium album Hook.
Botanical Magazine 71: t. 4141. 184

Ornithidium fragrans Rolfe
Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information Kew 147. 1894.

 

Bibliographie sur l'espèce

Ames, O. & D. S. Correll, 1953, Orchids of Guatemala, Fieldiana, Botany, 26(2): 399-727  

Atwood, J. T. & D. E. Mora de Retana, 1999, Family #39 Orchidaceae: Tribe Maxillarieae: subtribes Maxillariinae and Oncidiinae, Fieldiana: Botany, New Series, 40: i-vi, 1-182.

Brako, L. & J. L. Zarucchi, 1993, Catalogue of the Flowering Plants and Gymnosperms of Peru, Monographs in Systematic Botany from the Missouri Botanical Garden, 45: i-xl, 1-1286.

Dodson, C. H., 2002, Lepanthopsis - Oliveriana, Native Ecuadorian Orchids, 3: 433--651 

Jørgensen, P. M. & S. León-Yánez (eds.), 1999, Catalogue of the vascular plants of Ecuador, Monographs in Systematic Botany from the Missouri Botanical Garden, 75: i-viii, 1-1182.

Molina R., A., 1975, Enumeración de las plantas de Honduras, Ceiba, 19(1): 1-118.

Renner, S. S., H. Balslev & L. B. Holm-Nielsen, 1990, Flowering plants of Amazonian Ecuador---A checklist, AAU Reports, 24: 1-241.

Schweinfurth, C., 1960, Orchidaceae, Orchids of Peru dans Fieldiana, Botany, 30(3): 533-786.

Steyermark, J. et al., 1995, Flora of the Venezuelan Guayana Project.

"Maxillaria Camaridii Rchb. f.", dans The Orchid Journal, September 1952, pp. 321-322.  

 

Données de collecte pour la Colombie

Colombia Antioquia: 10 - 20 m, 29 Junio 1983, J. Brand & E. Ascanio 402 (JAUM, MO).
Colombia Antioquia: 10 - 20 m, 28 Nov. 1983, J. Brand & M. Gonzalez 647 (JAUM, MO).

 

source :

illustrateur :

 

  The Botanical Register, volume 10, t. 844 (1824)

  
John Lindley

 


Photo :

 

      Gracieuseté de 

      Guillermo Angulo
      Bogotá, Colombia 

      Gracias - Grazie - Merci ! 

 

Notes et observations

En réponse à une question de Cynthia Hill sur le forum Orchid List Digest

" Why would a plant go to all the trouble to produce heavy-substance, fragrant blooms once a year, that are only open for business to pollinators for half a day ? What kind of pollination conditions would allow the plant to successfully reproduce with such a short window of opportunity? What would the benefit be?"

Earl Dunn,  répondait :

" Dendrobium cruentum does the same, as does Maxillaria camaridii and possibly a few others.others. D. cruentum almost always self-pollinates, though the Max. does not.".

31 août 1998 


"Max camaridii is a particular strange plant in its habit. Half of it looks like a giant Ang. distichum because of the distichous leaf habit, the other 1/2 of the plant looks like your typical oncidium complete with pseudobulbs and long leaves.  The flowers are pretty and smell like freshly cut grass."

Mary Bui-Pham (Fremont, CA), 1er octobre 1999 - message sur le forum Orchid Guide Digest


"Pude ver en vivo la Maxillaria blanca que Guillermo Angulo había fotografiado ... se trata de la Maxillaria camaridii, una de las más bellas de este género. Lo interesante de esta especie es que se ha encontrado a alturas desde el nivel del mar hasta más de 3000 m. Un rango que dudo se encuentre en otras especies."

Pedro Ortiz Valdivieso, 6 mai 2004 - courriel.


"Regarding the info on M. camaridii, this would make sense as a colleague of mine who only grows 'cool' species used to have it thriving."

Alan Gregg, Swansea Botanical Complex, 8 mai 2004 - courriel.

 



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