Bletia purpurea

Pine-pink
sharp-petaled bletia
1833 illustration
Curtis's Botanical Magazine
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Orchidaceae
Subfamily: Epidendroideae
Tribe: Arethuseae
Subtribe: Bletiinae
Alliance: Calanthe
Genus: Bletia
Species: B. purpurea
Binomial name
Bletia purpurea
(Lam.) DC.
Synonyms[1][2]
  • Bletia acutipetala Hook.
  • Bletia alta (L.) Hitchc.
  • Bletia expansa Ten.
  • Bletia florida R. Br.
  • Bletia havanensis Lindl.
  • Bletia pallida Lodd.
  • Bletia pottsii S. Watson
  • Bletia pulchella auct.
  • Bletia purpurea var. alba Ariza-Julia & J.Jiménez Alm.
  • Bletia purpurea var. pittieri Schltr.
  • Bletia tuberosa (L.) Ames
  • Bletia verecunda (Salisb.) R. Br.
  • Cymbidium altum Willd.
  • Cymbidium floridum Salisb.
  • Cymbidium trifidum (Michx.) Sw.
  • Cymbidium verecundum (Salisb.) Sw.
  • Epidendrum altum (Willd.) Poir.
  • Gyas verecunda (Salisb.) Salisb.
  • Helleborine americana Steud.
  • Limodorum floridum Salisb.
  • Limodorum purpureum Lam.
  • Limodorum trifidum Michx.
  • Limodorum tuberosum Jacq.
  • Limodorum tuberosum L.
  • Limodorum verecundum Salisb.
  • Serapias purpurea (Lam.) Poir.
  • Thiebautia nervosa Colla

Bletia purpurea, common name Pine-pink or sharp-petaled bletia, is a species of orchid widespread across much of Latin America and the West Indies, and also found in Florida.[3] They are terrestrial in swamps or sometimes found growing on logs or stumps above the high tide mark.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

Bletia purpurea can reach a length of 180 cm (5 feet). It has ovoid (egg-shaped) pseudobulbs up to 4 cm (1.6 inches) in diameter. Leaves are linear or narrowly elliptic, up to 100 cm (40 inches) long. Flowers are pink, purple, or occasionally white, in racemes or panicles sometimes with as many as 80 flowers. Sepals are smaller than those of B. patula, usually less than 30 mm long.[11][12][13][14][15][16]

References

  1. Tropicos
  2. The Plant List
  3. Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
  4. Flora of North America v 26 p 602.
  5. Dodson, C.H. & P.M. Dodson. 1980. Orchids of Ecuador. Icones Plantarum Tropicarum 1: 1–100.
  6. CONABIO. 2009. Catálogo taxonómico de especies de México. 1. In Capital Nat. México. CONABIO, Mexico D.F..
  7. Ames, O. & D. S. Correll. 1953. Orchids of Guatemala. Fieldiana, Bot. 26(2): 399–727.
  8. Carnevali F., G., J. L. Tapia-Muñoz, R. Jiménez-Machorro, L. Sánchez-Saldaña, L. Ibarra-González, I. M. Ramírez & M. P. Gómez. 2001. Notes on the flora of the Yucatan Peninsula II: a synopsis of the orchid flora of the Mexican Yucatan Peninsula and a tentative checklist of the Orchidaceae of the Yucatan Peninsula biotic province. Harvard Papers in Botany 5(2): 383–466.
  9. Funk, V. A., P. E. Berry, S. Alexander, T. H. Hollowell & C. L. Kelloff. 2007. Checklist of the Plants of the Guiana Shield (Venezuela: Amazonas, Bolivar, Delta Amacuro; Guyana, Surinam, French Guiana). Contributions from the United States National Herbarium 55: 1–584.
  10. Amazilia, pine-pink
  11. Candolle, Augustin Pyramus de. Mémoires de la Société de Physique et d'Histoire Naturelle de Genève 9(1): 97–98. 1841.
  12. Lamarck, Jean Baptiste Antoine Pierre de Monnet de. Encyclopédie Méthodique, Botanique 3(2): 515. 1791.
  13. Dodson, C. H. and P. M. Dodson. 1980. Bletia purpurea. Icones Plantarum Tropicarum 1: plate 7.
  14. McLeish, I., N. R. Pearce & B. R. Adams. 1995. Native Orchids of Belize. 1–278.
  15. Godfrey, R. K. & J. W. Wooten. 1979. Aquatic and Wetland Plants of Southeastern United States Monocotyledons 1–712. The University of Georgia Press, Athens.
  16. Wunderlin, R. P. 1998. Guide to the Vascular Plants of Florida i–x, 1–806. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.
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