Showing posts with label patula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label patula. Show all posts
Sunday, April 7, 2019
Bletia patula Graham 1836 a flower without any trace of pigmentation
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Bletia patula Graham 1836, a vigorous plant with cerulean flowers
This plant is a variant of the normally pink flowered species. It was found in a vacant lot that was going to be cleaned along with plants of the typical form. It has proven to be a floriferous and vigorous grower. This species is not difficult to grow as long as you replicate the way they grow in the wild. They grow in places where, when it rains, the water percolates quickly and the ground doesn't stay soping wet.
Friday, September 27, 2013
Bletia patula var alba Hawkes 1950, a rare sighting
Fully mature flower |
Newly opened flower |
I had heard of Bletia
patula alba for many years but had never seen one “in the flesh”. Yesterday in the Mayaguez Orchid festival I
finally was able to see one. A plant of
this type was awarded by the AOS many years ago, but so far as I know that
plant was lost. I found a very pale form
of this species in the wild some years ago, but in all my field trips I have
never seen an alba in the wild. In some
areas of Arecibo I have seen fields where there were thousands of plants but
all of them were uniformly colored. I
would hope that this clone will be selfed and the seed sown or some divisions
are distributed among hobbyists so that it is not lost again.
Friday, August 9, 2013
A hideous little pest of Bletia patula and other local orchids
The damage to the florar parts of Bletia patula flower betrays
the handywork of a curculionid bettle that attacks the flowers of orchids.
Checking the flower shows that the bettle is hidden behind
the lip of the flower, sometimes you find two bettles together.
If the bettle feels the flower is being handled, it tries to hide deeper between
the lip and the petals. If it is further annoyed it comes out of hiding and tries to flee.
If the bettle comes out of hiding, its usual strategy is to run to
the end of a floral part and from there fall to the ground.
This particular flower bettle damages the flowers of many kinds of orchids in my garden. Its local abundance varies seasonaly. At certain times of the year I can find from one to five chewing in my flowers. I think this might have to do with the peak of flower production by local plants, but this is just a guess. Rather than use insecticide on them, I exploit their fleeing response by putting a cup with alcohol or dishwashing liquid under the flower and shaking the flower gently. The usual result is that the bettle takes a dive into the liquid and then goes to the great orchid flower in the sky. Thankfully for most of the year they are not present on the garden,
These bettles are surprisingly hard for such a small insect. It is not easy to crush them. But if you are moved to squash them, they do produce a satisfying crunchy noise when crushed. I have seen damaging flowers of Bulbophyllum, Cattleya, Dendrobium, Oncidium, Peristeria, Sphatoglottis and Bletia among others.
Friday, October 31, 2008
Bletia patula a pale color form
they were growing a few feet from the pale colored flower.
Every so often I grab my backpack and hike into the island forests looking for orchids. I was lucky enough to secure the company of a friend who is just giving up smoking and was quite desperate for anything that would keep his mind off smoking and him away from other smokers. After a few hours of hiking we came upon a huge area where, for some reason, the all vegetation was killed some years ago by the government. Plants have been slow to colonize this patch but you could see here and there small Bletia patula plants growing inter sped with a host of pioneer plant species, mostly grasses. Unfortunately there was only a single B. patula plant in bloom that I could see in the whole area. When I was photographing the plant my friend calling at me from some distance away telling about a plant that might be an orchid. Looking at the plant from a distance I assumed that probably it was the white form of Spathoglottis plicata, which can be found by the thousands in some valleys in the central mountains. But I decided to take a look just in case. When I got near the plant i realized that it could be a Spathoglottis, it had the wrong shape and the inflorescence was too short. Initially I was quite excited at the prospect of having found an alba form of Bletia patula, however the buds were light pink even if the flower was almost white. I have seen groups many thousands of plants of B. patula in many places in the northwestern part of the island and I have never seen a white form. I might be wrong but as far as I know only one alba form of this species has ever been found. This plant is not an alba, but what it could be called, a near alba, semi alba? I am posting a photo here in the hope that someone who knows more about this species might offer some enlightening comment on this plant. By the way I didn't collect this plant, I can't say I wasn't mighty tempted but decided that it will remain in place until I can ascertain if the government plans to eradicate the plants in the area again. In case that the government has plans to keep killing the vegetation in this spot(I think it is done with herbicides) I will move the plant to a secure place inside a state forest where I can keep visiting it. It is possible that I would have missed this plant completely if my friend had not looked at it closely mainly because I would not have associated the light color flowers nodding in the distance with B. patula flowers.
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