Maxillaria cucullata

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Maxillaria cucullata
Edwards' botanical register, or, Ornamental flower-garden and shrubbery .. (1829-1847) (20551718314).jpg
1840 illustration [1]
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Orchidaceae
Subfamily: Epidendroideae
Genus: Maxillaria
Species:
M. cucullata
Binomial name
Maxillaria cucullata
Synonyms

Maxillaria cucullata, the cowl-carrying maxillaria, is a species of orchid ranging from Mexico, Belize southward into Panama. [2]

Related Research Articles

<i>Maxillaria</i> Genus of orchids

Maxillaria, abbreviated as Max in the horticultural trade, is a large genus of orchids. This is a diverse genus, with very different morphological forms. Their characteristics can vary widely. They are commonly called spider orchids, flame orchids or tiger orchids. Their scientific name is derived from the Latin word maxilla, meaning jawbone, reflecting on the column and the base of the lip of some species, that may evoke a protruding jaw.

Trigonidium, abbreviated as Trgdm in horticultural trade, was a formerly accepted genus of orchids comprising roughly twenty species found from Mexico to Brazil. As of 2023, it was considered a synonym of Maxillaria.

<i>Maxillaria densa</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria densa, the crowded maxillaria, is a species of orchid ranging from Mexico south to Nicaragua.

<i>Maxillaria desvauxiana</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria desvauxiana is a species of orchid native to tropical South America. It is known from Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Guyana, Peru, Suriname and Venezuela.

<i>Maxillaria humilis</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria humilis is a species of orchid native to eastern and southern Brazil.

<i>Maxillaria lindleyana</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria lindleyana, or Lindley's maxillaria, is a species of orchid occurring from Brazil to Peru.

<i>Maxillaria sophronitis</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria sophronitis, the sophronitis-like maxillaria, is a species of orchid found in Venezuela and northeastern Colombia.

<i>Maxillaria rufescens</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria rufescens, the light fox-red maxillaria, is a species of orchid native to Trinidad and the Amazon Basin in Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Venezuela, The Guianas and Brazil. The plant grows at elevations of 200 to 2000 meters, and grows up to 114 inches.

<i>Maxillaria tenuifolia</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria tenuifolia, the delicate-leafed maxillaria or coconut pie orchid, is a species of orchid ranging from Mexico to Nicaragua and possibly Costa Rica. These plants are easy to grow if kept moist and given good air movement in a high-light windowsill of any orientation but North.

<i>Maxillaria triloris</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria triloris, the three-straped maxillaria, is a species of orchid ranging from northwestern Venezuela to Ecuador.

<i>Maxillaria uncata</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria uncata, the hook-shaped maxillaria, is a species of orchid ranging from southern Mexico to southern Brazil.

<i>Maxillaria variabilis</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria variabilis, the variable maxillaria, is a species of orchid ranging from Mexico to Panama, and probably Guyana.

Maxillaria donaldeedodii, synonym Ornithidium donaldeedodii, is a species of orchid native to Haiti. It was "discovered" in April 2010 when DNA analysis showed that a wrongly labeled orchid at the University of California Botanical Garden in Berkeley, California, was actually a distinct new species. The "new" orchid, which had been mislabeled as Maxillaria croceorubens since the 1990s, was named after orchidologist Donald D. Dod (1912–2008), who collected the specimen in the 1980s in Haiti. The new orchid was officially described in Lankesteriana, an international journal on orchidology, by authors James Ackerman of the University of Puerto Rico and W. Mark Whitten of the Florida Museum of Natural History, as Ornithidium donaldeedodii. It was transferred to Maxillaria in 2011.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maxillariinae</span> Subtribe of orchids

Maxillariinae is an orchid subtribe in the tribe Cymbidieae. It was formerly treated as the tribe Maxillarieae, and divided into a number of subtribes.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gymnopusin</span> Chemical compound

Gymnopusin is a phenanthrenediol produced by the orchid Bulbophyllum gymnopus. It is also found in Bulbophyllum reptans and Maxillaria densa.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nudol</span> Chemical compound

Nudol is a phenanthrenoid of the orchids Eulophia nuda, Eria carinata, Eria stricta and Maxillaria densa.

<i>Maxillaria crassifolia</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria crassifolia, synonyms including Heterotaxis sessilis, is an epiphytic orchid widespread across the West Indies, Central America, southern Mexico, Florida and northern South America. Hidden orchid is a common name.

<i>Maxillaria parviflora</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria parviflora, the purple tiger orchid, is a species of epiphytic orchid native to Florida, the West Indies and through Latin America from Mexico to Bolivia.

<i>Maxillaria montezumae</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria montezumae, the Montezuma maxillaria, is a species of orchid native to Colombia. It is named after the Montezuma area in the Tatamá National Natural Park in the departments of Chocó and Risaralda. It is a pseudobulbous epiphyte and grows on roadside banks in páramo at elevations of 1,600 to 2,500 m.

<i>Maxillaria aureoglobula</i> Species of orchid

Maxillaria aureoglobula, the golden globe maxillaria, is a species of epiphytic orchid native to Costa Rica, Colombia, Venezuela, and Brazil. Originally this species was included in the species Maxillaria rufescens but in 2002 it was described a distinct species by Eric Christenson. The type specimen was collected in Columbia although the precise location is unknown.

References

  1. Miss Drake (1803-1857) del. , G. Barclay sc. - Edwards's Botanical Register, volume 26 (NS 3) plate 12 (http://www.botanicus.org/page/241402)
  2. Pridgeon, Alec M. (1992). The Illustrated encyclopedia of orchids. Timber Press. p. 172. ISBN   978-0-88192-267-7.