Tillandsia 'Tiki Torch'

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Tillandsia "Tiki Torch"
Hybrid parentage Tillandsia hybrid
schiedeana × rodrigueziana
Cultivar "Tiki Torch"

"Tiki Torch" is a hybrid cultivar of the genus Tillandsia in the Bromeliad family.

Cultivars

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<i>Tillandsia aeranthos</i> Species of flowering plant

Tillandsia aeranthos is a species of plant in the genus Tillandsia. This species is native to southern Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Argentina.

Tillandsia ixioides is a species in the genus Tillandsia. It is native to South America. Two subspecies are recognized:

  1. Tillandsia ixioides subsp. ixioides - Bolivia, Uruguay, Paraguay, northern Argentina
  2. Tillandsia ixioides subsp. viridiflora(Rauh) Gouda - Bolivia
<i>Tillandsia harrisii</i> Species of plant

Tillandsia harrisii is a species in the genus Tillandsia. The species is endemic to Guatemala.

<i>Tillandsia brachycaulos</i> Species of flowering plant

Tillandsia brachycaulos is a species in the genus Tillandsia. It is native to Mexico, Central America, and Venezuela.

<i>Tillandsia tectorum</i> Species of plant

Tillandsia tectorum is a species in the genus Tillandsia. It is native to Peru and Ecuador.

<i>Tillandsia concolor</i>

Tillandsia concolor is a species in the genus Tillandsia. This species is endemic to Mexico.

Tillandsia deppeana is a species in the genus Tillandsia. This species is endemic to Mexico.

<i>Tillandsia fasciculata</i> Species of flowering plant

Tillandsia fasciculata, commonly known as the giant airplant or cardinal airplant, is a species of bromeliad that is native to Central America, Mexico, the West Indies, northern South America, and the southeastern United States. Within the United States, this airplant is at risk of extirpation from the Mexican bromeliad weevil, Metamasius callizona.

'Humbug' is a hybrid cultivar of the genus Tillandsia in the Bromeliad family.

<i>Tillandsia rodrigueziana</i> Species of epiphyte

Tillandsia rodrigueziana is a species in the genus Tillandsia. This species is native to Mexico, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Guatemala, and Honduras.

<i>Tillandsia schiedeana</i> Species of epiphyte

Tillandsia schiedeana is a species in the genus Tillandsia. It was named for the collector Schiede. As an epiphyte it is found "growing in open tropical forests, and saxicolous, growing on cacti and burseras on steep dry slopes in semiarid regions in Mexico, Central America, West Indies, Venezuela, and Colombia at elevations of 750 to 5,500 feet."

<i>Tillandsia seleriana</i> Species in the genus Tillandsia

Tillandsia seleriana is a species in the genus Tillandsia. This species is native to southern Mexico and Central America.

'Lucille' is a hybrid cultivar of the genus Tillandsia in the Bromeliad family.

<i>Tillandsia</i> Victoria

'Victoria' is a hybrid cultivar of the genus Tillandsia in the Bromeliad family.

'Oeseriana' is a hybrid cultivar of the genus Tillandsia in the Bromeliad family.

<i>Tillandsia albertiana</i> Species of flowering plant

Tillandsia albertiana is a species of plant in the genus Tillandsia. It is endemic to the Salta Province of northern Argentina.

<i>Tillandsia latifolia</i> Species of plant

Tillandsia latifolia is a species in the genus Tillandsia. This species is native to Ecuador and Peru. Four varieties are recognized:

  1. Tillandsia latifolia var. divaricata(Benth.) Mez - Peru, Ecuador
  2. Tillandsia latifolia var. latifolia - Peru, Ecuador
  3. Tillandsia latifolia var. leucophyllaRauh - Peru
  4. Tillandsia latifolia var. majorMez - Peru
<i>Tillandsia lindenii</i> Species of plant

Tillandsia lindenii is a species in the genus Tillandsia. It is endemic to Peru.

<i>Tillandsia kammii</i> Species of plant

Tillandsia kammii is a species in the genus Tillandsia that is native to Honduras, but has also been collected in El Salvador. It was first discovered in Honduras in 1977 in the regions of Olancho, Lempira and Copan. Its common name is Kamm's tillandsia.

<i>Tillandsia ultima</i> Species of plant

Tillandsia ultima is a species in the genus Tillandsia that is native to Colombia and Ecuador. It was first discovered in Colombia in 1946 in the region of Magdalena.

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