ODONTOGLOSSUM KRAMERI. KRAMER'S ODONTOGLOSSUM. O. pseudobulbis suborbicularibus valde compressis ancipitibus 1-phyllis, foliis oblongo-lanceolatis, scapis ascendentibus vel sub-pendulis foliis brevioribus pauci-(2-5) floris, sepalis petalisque oblongis acutis subÆqualibus, labelli ungue 2-calloso lamin subquadrat 2-lob pallide-roseo-violace plag basi utrinque semilunari alb aureo et purpureo maculatÂ. Odontoglossum Krameri, Reichenbach fil. in Gard. Chron. 1868, p. 98. Floral Mag. t. 406 (sub O. Krameri). Hooker in Bot. Mag. t. 5778. Habitat in Costa-Rica. DESCRIPTION. Pseudobulbs nearly round, flattened, 2-edged, 1-leaved; Leaves oblong-lanceolate, leas than a foot long, by about an inch wide, longer than the Scapes which bear from 2 to 5 flowers. Peduncles with the ovary one to one and a half inches long. Flowers one to one and a half inches in diameter. Sepals and Petals subequal oblong-acute, pale violet-red in the centre with broad white margins. Lip one-third of an inch wide, neck short, broad, deeply hollowed in front with two erect calli; limb subquadrate, two-lobed at the apex, angles rounded, the basal lateral lobes small, reflexed, pale violet-red with two confluent semilunar white patches at the base, on each of which is a concentric red-brown band, and a few spots of the same colour on a golden yellow ground. Column short, thick, without wings or appendages. (Hooker, l. c.) This though not a striking is a very distinct plant. It is a native of Costa-Rica, where it seems to be plentiful enough though it long eluded detection. It was first exhibited in 1868 by Mr. Veitch at one of the shows at S. Kensington, but appeared almost simultaneously in the collection of Mr. Day, by whose direction a careful drawing was prepared. Like other Costa-Rica plants, though not requiring a high temperature, it is scarcely content with the small amount of heat that is now allotted to the great majority of cool Orchids. Its proper place would be in the Mexican House. It is a free bloomer. Plate 25 Odontoglossum cordatum.
Odontoglossum cordatum. |