Maxillaria coniformis Bennett & Christenson, 2009

Bennett Jr, David E. & Christenson, Eric A., 2009, Nine new species and one new name in Maxillaria (Orchidaceae), Phytotaxa 1, pp. 21-36 : 23

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.1.1.3

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B7E153-FFD7-FF80-74BC-6367FE22F804

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Maxillaria coniformis Bennett & Christenson
status

sp. nov.

Maxillaria coniformis Bennett & Christenson View in CoL , sp. nov. ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 )

Species haec Maxillaria trilobulata Bennett & Christenson (1995a: 197 , f. 10) similis sed magnifloribus, medilobo bullato, clinandrio fimbriato differt.

Type:— PERU: Amazonas: Bongara, Venceremos Nuevo , 1700 m, 12 June 2005, D. Bennett & A . Bennett 9159 (holotype: HAO) .

Caespitose epiphytes. Pseudobulbs ovoid, 6× 3.2 cm, subtended by a foliaceous bract subequal to the leaves. Leaves one, petiolate, oblong-elliptic, subacute, 24× 4.5 cm. Inflorescences erect scapes 20–26 cm long, mostly concealed by tubular, acute, bracts, the floral bracts ovate, acute, concave, subequal to the ovaries. Flowers spidery, basal 1/3 dark purple, middle 1/3 cream colored, apical 1/3 purple, the labellum dark purple, the disc covered with cream colored farinaceous trichomes. Sepals linear-lanceolate, long-acuminate terminating in slender tails, the dorsal sepal 8× 0.8 cm, the lateral sepals falcate, 8× 1 cm. Petals subsimilar to the sepals, falcate, 6.2× 0.6 cm. Labellum 3-lobed, 1.8× 1.4 cm, the lateral lobes erect-incurved, the lower halves transversely elliptic, the apices obovate, broadly rounded, with undulate margins, the midlobe ellipticovate, obtuse-rounded, densely bullate, the callus oblong-oblanceolate, obtuse-rounded, half the length of the labellum, flanked by a pair of slightly shorter calli half the width of the central callus. Column nearly straight, stout, 0.7× 0.4 cm, the foot slightly shorter than the column, the clinandrium heavily fringed; the anther globose with a dorsal keel; the viscidium saddle-shaped; the pollinia 4 in two pairs, oblanceolate, obtuserounded, 1× 1.2 mm. Flowering June and July following the rainy season.

Habitat:—Wet montane forest.

Distribution:— Peru.

Etymology:—Named for the remarkable awl-like, conic flower buds.

Observations:—Distinguished by the weak growth habit (based on experience in cultivation), the strongly conical buds, the 3-lobulate callus, the heavily fringed clinandrium, and the 3-lobed labellum with a densely bullate midlobe.

A

Harvard University - Arnold Arboretum

HAO

Universidad Privada Antenor Orrego

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