Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Calanthe sylvatica

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Calanthe sylvatica
Calanthe sylvatica
Scientific Classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Liliopsida
Order: Asparagales
Family:Orchidaceae
Subfamily: Epidendroideae
Tribe: Arethuseae
SubTribe: Bletiinae
Genus: Calanthe
Species: Cal. sylvatica
Alliance:
Binomial name
Calanthe sylvatica
(Thouars) Lindl. 1833

Calanthe sylvatica is a species of orchid from the genusCalanthe.

DescriptionEdit

Plant blooms from fall to winter with many 5 cm wide flowers

DistributionEdit

Plant is found growing in Angola, Burundi, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Guinea, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, Sao Tome e Principe, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zaire, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Comoros Islands, Madagascar and the Mascarenes, through India, and most of SE Asia, Java, Sumatra, Borneo, Vietnam and SE China at elevations of 400 to 2700 meters

CultureEdit

Plants grows in cool to warm temperatures with shade. When potting Calanthe plants, the pseudobulbs must be half buried into the potting media. Plants can be potted in 40% soil, 40% dry bark and 20% perlite or another humus rich soil mixture. Plants should be watered regularly.

NamingEdit

Common Names: The Forest-Dwelling Calanthe
Common Name The Forest-Dwelling Calanthe - In China Chang Ju Xia Ji Lan
Flower Size 1 to 2" [2.5 to 5 cm]
Found in Angola, Burundi, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Guinea, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, Sao Tome e Principe, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Zaire, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Comoros Islands, Madagascar and the Mascarenes, India, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Java, Sumatra, Borneo, Vietnam and southeastern China at elevations of 400 to 2700 meters in broadleafed, evergreen, humid primary forests in soils dampened by mists and splash along steep watercourses in humus and deep shade, as a medium sized, cool to hot growing terrestrial with small, 2 to 4 noded, ovoid pseudobulbs enveloped by basal leaf sheaths and carrying several, broad, elliptic-lanceolate, plicate, longitudinally ribbed, dark green, sulcate, softly pubescent, acuminate, gradually narrowing below into the petiolate base leaves that are narrowed below into a petiole that blooms in the spring and summer on an erect, successively opening, 20 to 28" [50 to 70 cm] long, racemose, slightly pubescent, few to many flowered inflorescence.
C mascua is often considered conspecific with this species with this one taking precedence but I have left them separate pending more reseach.
Calanthe candida is also listed as a synonym of C sylvatica but I feel that there are sufficient differences to warrant its exclusion from this species.
Synonyms Alismorkis centrosis (Thouars) Steud. 1840; Alismorkis natalensis (Rchb.f.) Kuntze 1891; Alismorkis plantaginea (Thouars) Kuntze 1891; Alismorkis purpurea (Lindl.) Kuntze 1891; Alismorkis textori (Miq.) Kuntze 1891; Bletia sylvatica (Thouars) Bojer 1837; Calanthe candida Bosser 1989; Calanthe corymbosa Lindl. 1862; Calanthe delphinioides Kraenzl. 1893; Calanthe emarginata [Bl] Lindl. 1833; Calanthe furcata f. textori (Miq.) M.Hiroe 1971; Calanthe humbertii H.Perrier 1955; Calanthe longicalcarata Hayata ex Yamam. 1930; Calanthe masuca Thwaites 1884; Calanthe natalensis (Rchb. f.) Rchb. f. 1856; Calanthe neglecta Schltr. 1915; Calanthe purpurea Lindl. 1833; Calanthe sanderiana Rolfe 1892; Calanthe schliebenii Mansf. 1933; Calanthe seikooensis Yamam. 1931; Calanthe stolzii Schltr. 1915; Calanthe sylvatica var. geerinckiana Stévart 2000; Calanthe sylvatica var. natalensis Rchb.f. 1846 ; Calanthe sylvatica var. pallidipetala Schltr 1924; Calanthe sanderiana Rolfe 1892; Calanthe sylvestris Lindl. ex Steud. 1840; Calanthe textori Miq. 1866; Calanthe volkensii Rolfe 1897; Centrosia aubertii A.Rich. 1828; Centrosis corymbosa Thouars 1822; *Centrosis sylvatica Thouars 1852;
References W3 TropicosKew Monocot list IPNI ; Historie Particulier des Plantes Orchidees Recueilles Sur Trois Iles Australes d'Afrique Thouars 1822 as Centrosis sylvatica drawing fide; Bonplandia Rchb.f 1856 as C natalensis; Bonplandia Rchb.f 1856; Bonplandia Rchb.f 1857 as C emarginata; The Orchids of Sikkim-Himalaya Part 1 King & Pantling 1898 as C mascua drawing fide; Die Orchideen Von Java J.J.Sm. 1905 as C emarginata; Die Orchideen Schlechter 1915 as C mascua; Die Orchideen Schlechter 1915 as C natalensis photo ok; Atlas des Orchidees Cultivees Constantin 1920 as C mascua drawing good; Atlas des Orchidees Cultivees Constantin 1920 as C natalensis drawing fide; Encyclopedia of Cultivated Orchids Hawkes 1965 as C natalensis; Encyclopedia of Cultivated Orchids Hawkes 1965 as C silvatica; AOS Bulletin Vol 32 No 10 1963 photo as C volkensii; An Introduction to the South African Orchids Schelpe 1966 as C natalensis; Orchids of East Africa Piers 1968 as C corymbosa; Orchids of East Africa Piers 1968 as C volkensii photo good; Orchids of Southern Ryukyu Islands Garay & Sweet 1974 as C textori drawing fide; The Orchids of South Central Africa Williamson 1977 as C corymbosa drawing/photo fide; The Orchids of South Central Africa Williamson 1977 as C natalensis drawing/photo fide; Orchid Digest Vol 45 No 4 1981 photo ok as C emarginata; Manual of Cultivated Orchids Bechtel; Cribb & Laurent 1982; Wild Orchids of Southern Africa Stewart, Linder, Schelpe & Hall 1982 photo fide; Die Orchideen 3 Auflage Bd 1 Sonderabdruck aus Schlechter Brieger, Maatsch and Senghas # 43-46 Thuniinae etc 1984 as C masuca photo ok; Die Orchideen 3 Auflage Bd 1 Sonderabdruck aus Schlechter Brieger, Maatsch and Senghas # 43-46 Thuniinae etc 1984 photo ok; Flora of Tropical East Africa Orchidaceae Part 2 Cribb 1984; Orchids of Java Comber 1990 photo fide; Orchids of Penninsular Malaysia and Singapore Seidenfaden & Woods 1992 drawing/photo fide; Orchids of Borneo Vol 1 Chan, Shim, Lamb & Wood 1994 drawing/photo fide; A Checklist of the Orchids of Borneo Wood & Cribb 1994 drawing fide; Manual of Orchids Stewart 1995; Flora Zambesiaca Vol 11 Part 1 Pope 1995; Orchids Of Kenya Stewart 1996 photo fide; Wild Orchids of China Tsi, Chen Mori 1997; African Orchids in the Wild and Cultivation La Croix 1997; Native Orchids of China in Colour Singchi, Zhanhuo and Yibo 1999 photo fide; A to Z of SE Asian Orchids O'Byrne 2001 photo fide; A field Guide to the Wild Orchids of Thailand Vaddhanaphuti 2001 as C mascua photo ok; Beautiful Orchids of Nepal Rajbhandari & Bhattarai 2001 as C mascua; Botanica's Orchids Laurel Glen 2002; Orchids of Sumatra Comber 2002 photo not; Orchids of Bhutan Pearce & Cribb 2002; Lindleyana Vol 17 No 1 2002; Flora Malesiana Orchids of the Philippines Vol I Agoo, Shuiteman and de Vogel 2003 as C masuca; AOS Bulletin Vol 73 No 3 2004; Wild Orchids in Myanamar Vol 2 Tanaka 2004 as C mascua; A field Guide to the Wild Orchids of Thailand Vaddhanaphuti 2005 as C mascua photo ok; Flora's Orchids Nash & La Croix 2005; Orchids of India A Glimpse Misra 2007 photo ok; Orchids of India A Glimpse Misra 2007 as C purpurea; Field Guide to the Orchids of Northern South Africa and Swaziland McMurty, Grobler, Grobler & Burns 2008; A Field Guide to the Orchids of China Singchi, Zhongjian, Yibo, Xiaohua and Zhanhuo 2009 photo ok; Flora of China Vol 25 Zhengyi, Raven & Deyuan 2009; Flora of China Vol 25 Illustrations Zhengyi, Raven & Deyuan 2010 drawing ok; The Atlas of Wild Orchids in Hainan Island, China Shenyan and Junmei 2010 photo fide; The Wild Orchids in Yunnan Xu Xiang Ye & Liu 2010 photos ok; Wild Orchids of Penninsular Malaysia Ong, O'Byrne, Yong & Saw 2011 photo fide

CITIES CATEGORY : Appendix II 
References :
1. Ref 1


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