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Swamp Orchid

Phaius tankervilleae (Banks) Blume

Phaius tankervilleae ( Asturian )

provided by wikipedia AST

Phaius tankarvilleae, tamién conocida como "Orquídea de Banzáu", ye una especie d'orquídea que s'atopa na India, Nueva Guinea, China, Indonesia, Malasia y Australia. N'Australia distribuyir al sur de Brunswick Heads, New South Wales[1][2] y al norte en Queensland tropical. Alcuéntrase tratada en peligru d'estinción.[3][4][5][6]

 src=
Illustración de Curtis Botanical Magacín, 1924
 src=
Inflorescencia de Phaius tancarvilleae
 src=
Flores de Phaius tancarvilleae
 src=
Flores de Phaius tancarvilleae
 src=
Flores de Phaius tancarvilleae

Descripción

Ye una orquídea de gran tamañu, de vezos terrestres con pseudobulbos de forma ovoide o cónica, verdes envueltos basalmente por delles envoltures de les fueyes que son elípticu-llanceolaes, acuminaes, plegaes,, peciolaes y delgaes. Floria na primavera nuna inflorescencia racemosa de 120 cm de llargu, arguta, basal. Dempués del floriamientu y la cayida de les flores mrchitas, puede cortase y asitiar nel sable y parcialmente cubierta, poner na solombra, nuna húmeda zona, bien regada y en 2 a 3 meses, les plántulas empiecen a crecer a partir de les vieyos bráctees florales. Dempués de 6 meses pueden tresplantase a un tiestu. Esta especie convirtióse nuna especie invasora en dellos países como Xamaica y Hawai. En Papúa Nueva Guinea les flores afumaos cómense como un anticonceutivu.[7]

Distribución y hábitat

Alcuéntrase en Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Xizang y Yunnan n'China, en Ḥong Kong, Taiwán, les Islles del Pacíficu, Malasia ya Indonesia n'elevaciones d'hasta 1.300 metros nos montes montanos baxos y nos pacionales nes depresiones húmedes con suelu negru.

Taxonomía

Phaius tankarvilleae describióse por (Banks) Blume y espublizóse en Museum Botanicum 2: 177. 1856.[8]

Etimoloxía

Phaius: nome xenéricu que provién de la llatinización de la pallabra griega: φαιός (phaiós) que significa "escuru", "marrón"; en referencia a'l color de les flores.

tankarvilleae: epítetu dau n'honor de la Condesa Tankerville.[9]

Sinonimia
  • Bletia tancarvilleae (L'Hér.) R. Br.
  • Bletia tankervilleae (Banks) R.Br.
  • Calanthe bachmaensis Gagnep.
  • Calanthe speciosa Vieill.
  • Dendrobium veratrifolium Roxb.
  • Limodorum incarvillei Pers.
  • Limodorum incarvillei Blume
  • Limodorum spectabile Salisb.
  • Limodorum tancarvilleae L'Hér.
  • Limodorum tankervilleae Banks
  • Pachyne spectabilis (Salisb.) Salisb.
  • Phaius blumei Lindl.
  • Phaius blumei var. assamica Rchb.f.
  • Phaius blumei var. pulchra King & Pantl.
  • Phaius carronii F.Muell.
  • Phaius giganteus Hemsl.
  • Phaius grandiflorus Rchb.f.
  • Phaius grandifolius Lour.
  • Phaius grandifolius Lindl. ex Wall.
  • Phaius grandifolius var. superbus Van Houtte
  • Phaius incarvillei (Pers.) Kuntze
  • Phaius leucophaeus F.Muell.
  • Phaius oweniae Sander
  • Phaius roeblingii O'Brien
  • Phaius sinensis Rolfe
  • Phaius tancarvilleae (L'Hér.) Blume
  • Phaius tancarvilleae var. superbus (Van Houtte) S.Y. Hu
  • Phaius tankervilleae var. mariesii Rchb.f.
  • Phaius tankervilleae var. pulchra (King & Pantl.) Karth.
  • Phaius tankervilleae var. superbus (Van Houtte) S.Y.Hu
  • Phaius veratrifolius (Roxb.) Lindl.
  • Tankervillia cantoniensis Link[7][10][11]

Ver tamién

Referencies

  1. «Phaius tancarvilleae». Australian Native Plants Society.
  2. information sign next to Phaius tancarvilleae at the North Coast Rexonal Botanic Garden, Australia
  3. «Phaius tancarvilleae». Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts.
  4. «James D. Ackerman, María del Castillo». The orchids of Puertu Ricu and the Virgin Islands.
  5. Gifts from the Gardens of China, By Jane Kilpatrick, ISBN 0-7112-2630-X, accessed 10 June 2008
  6. http://www.philipmould.com/catalogue.php?sid=2544&p=
  7. 7,0 7,1 «Phaius tankervilleae» (inglés). Internet Orchid Species Photo Encyclopedia. Consultáu'l 8 de febreru de 2014.
  8. «Phaius tankervilleae». Tropicos.org. Missouri Botanical Garden. Consultáu'l 8 de febreru de 2014.
  9. http://www.killerplants.com/plant-of-the-week/20030421.asp
  10. Phaius tankervilleae en PlantList
  11. «Phaius tankervilleae». World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. Consultáu'l 13 de setiembre de 2013.

Bibliografía

  1. Bonplandia Rchb.f 1855 as Phajus grandifolius;
  2. Otia Botanica Hamburgensia Rchb.f 1878 as Phajus blumei;
  3. Otia Botanica Hamburgensia Rchb.f 1881 as Phajus mannii;
  4. Orchids of Burma Grant 1895/1995 as P wallichii;
  5. Die Orchideen Von Java J.J.Sm. 1905 as P incarvillei;
  6. Die Orchideen Von Java Figuren Atles J.J.Smith 1908 as P incarvillei drawing fide;
  7. Symbolae Antillanae Vol VI Orchidaceae Urban 1909;
  8. Flora of Xamaica Fawcett & Rendle 1910 as Phaius tancarville drawing ok;
  9. Die Orchideen Schlechter 1915;
  10. Die Orchideen Schlechter 1915 as P incarvillei photo fide;
  11. AOS Bulletin Vol 26 Non 2 1957;
  12. Flora of Malaya vol. 1 Holttum 1957 drawing fide;

Enllaces esternos

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Phaius tankervilleae: Brief Summary ( Asturian )

provided by wikipedia AST
Phaius tankervilleae

Phaius tankarvilleae, tamién conocida como "Orquídea de Banzáu", ye una especie d'orquídea que s'atopa na India, Nueva Guinea, China, Indonesia, Malasia y Australia. N'Australia distribuyir al sur de Brunswick Heads, New South Wales y al norte en Queensland tropical. Alcuéntrase tratada en peligru d'estinción.

 src= Illustración de Curtis Botanical Magacín, 1924  src= Inflorescencia de Phaius tancarvilleae  src= Flores de Phaius tancarvilleae  src= Flores de Phaius tancarvilleae  src= Flores de Phaius tancarvilleae
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Phaius tankervilleae

provided by wikipedia EN

Phaius tankervilleae, commonly known as the greater swamp-orchid, swamp lily, swamp orchid,[2] nun's-hood orchid,[3] nun's orchid, veiled orchid, Lady Tankerville's swamp orchid[4] or 鹤顶兰 (he ding lan),[5] is a species of orchid native to areas from Asia to islands in the Pacific Ocean. It has large, pleated leaves and tall flowering stems bearing up to twenty five white, brown, mauve and yellow flowers. It was named for Lady Tankerville who was the first person to make the orchid flower successfully in England.[6] It was the first tropical orchid to flower in England.

Description

Phaius tankervilleae is an evergreen, terrestrial herb that has cone shaped or more or less spherical pseudobulbs mostly 60–80 mm (2–3 in) long and 30–60 mm (1–2 in) wide. Between two and eight pleated linear to lance-shaped leaves 300–1,000 mm (10–40 in) long and 80–200 mm (3–8 in) wide develop from the pseudobulb. Between ten and twenty five resupinate flowers 70–125 mm (3–5 in) wide are borne on a flowering stem 500–2,000 mm (20–80 in) tall. The flowers are whitish on the outside and reddish brown inside. The sepals and petals are oblong to lance-shaped, 40–65 mm (2–3 in) long and 10–15 mm (0.4–0.6 in) wide. The labellum is pink or reddish with a white tip and white stripes inside, 35–60 mm (1–2 in) long and 20–50 mm (0.8–2 in) wide with three lobes. The middle lobe is more or less tube-shaped and the side lobes have wavy or crinkled edges. There is a whitish yellow spur 5–10 mm (0.2–0.4 in) long near the base of the labellum and a narrow raised callus in its centre. Flowering occurs from September to November in Australia and from March to June in Asia.[4][5][7]

Taxonomy and naming

In 1778, John Fothergill sent specimens of this orchid back from China to England and in 1788, after one had flowered, Joseph Banks formally described the species, giving it the name Limodorum tankervilleae. In 1859, Carl Ludwig Blume changed the name to Phaius tankervilleae. The specific epithet (tankervilleae) honours Lady Emma Tankerville, as the orchid had flowered in her greenhouse at Walton-on-Thames near London.[8][9][10] It was the first tropical orchid to flower in England.[11]

Other spellings of the specific epithet are sometimes used. When Charles Louis L'Héritier de Brutelle published his book Sertum Anglicum and cited Joseph Banks' name for this species, he Latinised it to Limodorum tancarvilleae.[12] As a result, some authorities, including the Australian Plant Census, list the species as Phaius tancervilleae.[5][13][14] The spellings P. tankervilliae[15] and P. tankarvilliae have also been used.[16]

In 2017, Judi Stone and Phillip James Cribb published a monograph entitled Lady Tankerville's Legacy - A Historical and Monographic Review of Phaius and Gastrorchis, in which they described six varieties of Phaius tankervilleae:

Distribution and habitat

Phaius tankervilleae grows in swampy forest or grassland.[4] It is found in the Indian Subcontinent, New Guinea, China, Japan, Southeast Asia, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Australia and certain islands of the Pacific. It is also naturalised in Hawaii, Panama, the West Indies and Florida.[17]

In Australia it is found as P. tankervilleae var. australis as far south as Yamba, New South Wales.[18] and further north in tropical Queensland. While rare in parts of its native habitat, it is present in other parts of the world as a naturalised species, including Hawaii[19] and Florida.[20]

Conservation status

Phaius tankervilleae var. australis, as Phaius australis, is listed as endangered with possible extinction within the country. It is threatened by trampling by stock, and by illegal collecting, weeds and drainage of its habitat.[21]

Use in horticulture

Identification of the genus Phaius is a particularly challenging and difficult task. Many plants are incorrectly labeled in nurseries or misidentified by professionals and authors. An easily grown plant in cultivation. It prefers semi shade. Propagation is achieved from seed or by the cutting of the base clump of the plant. The large flowers occur in spring.[18] Also, flower stem node propagation brings success. Where after flowering, the scape is either laid whole or in sections on a medium such as Sphagnum moss or stood in a container of water. Plantlets emerge from the nodes, and when large enough are removed and potted up.

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b "Phaius tankervilleae". World Checklist of Selected Plant Families (WCSP). Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
  2. ^ "Phaius tankervilleae". Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN). Agricultural Research Service (ARS), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). Retrieved 20 December 2014.
  3. ^ USDA, NRCS (n.d.). "Phaius tankervilleae". The PLANTS Database (plants.usda.gov). Greensboro, North Carolina: National Plant Data Team. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  4. ^ a b c "Phaius tankervilleae". Noosa Orchid Society. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
  5. ^ a b c "Phaius tencarvilleae". Flora of China. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
  6. ^ Leatherdale, Duncan (2023-03-19). "Lady Tankerville: The botanist and secret scientist". BBC News. Retrieved 2023-03-20.
  7. ^ "Phaius tankervilleae". Bhutan Biodiversity Portal. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
  8. ^ Ackerman, James D.; Castillo, María del (1992). James D. Ackerman, María del Castillo. The orchids of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. ISBN 9780847723423.
  9. ^ Gifts from the Gardens of China, By Jane Kilpatrick, ISBN 0-7112-2630-X, accessed 10 June 2008
  10. ^ "Portrait of Emma, Countess of Tankerville (1752-1836) with her daughters Caroline and Anna, Daniel Gardner (C.1750-1805)". Archived from the original on 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2010-06-21.
  11. ^ "Lady Tankerville s Legacy: A Historical and Monographic Review of Phaius and Gastrorchis by Judi Stone & Phillip Cribb: New Hardcover (2017) | The Penang Bookshelf". www.abebooks.co.uk. Retrieved 2020-05-24.
  12. ^ Héritier de Brutelle, Charles Louis (1788). Sertum Anglisum. Paris. p. 28. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
  13. ^ "Caladenia abbreviata". APNI. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
  14. ^ Mabberley, David J. (2011). "A note on some adulatory botanical plates distributed by Sir Joseph Banks". Kew Bulletin. 66 (3): 465–477. doi:10.1007/s12225-011-9291-y. S2CID 21236279.
  15. ^ "Nun orchid care tips:Phaius tankervilliae". Organic Gardening Advice. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
  16. ^ Brydie, Jim. "Phaius tankervilleae(?)". Species Orchid Society of Western Australia (Inc.). Retrieved 30 October 2018.
  17. ^ Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families, Phaius tankervilleae (Banks) Blume
  18. ^ a b "Phaius tancarvilleae". Australian Native Plants Society. Archived from the original on 2008-06-22.
  19. ^ USFWS. Cyanea remyi Five-year Review. August 2010. pg 4.
  20. ^ Liu, H. and R. Pemberton. (2010). Pollination of an invasive orchid, Cyrtopodium polyphyllum (Orchidaceae), by and invasive oil-collecting bee, Centris nitida, in southern Florida. Botany 88 290-95.
  21. ^ "Approved conservation advice o Phaius australia (common swamp orchid)" (PDF). Australian Government Department of the Environment. Retrieved 30 October 2018.

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wikipedia EN

Phaius tankervilleae: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Phaius tankervilleae, commonly known as the greater swamp-orchid, swamp lily, swamp orchid, nun's-hood orchid, nun's orchid, veiled orchid, Lady Tankerville's swamp orchid or 鹤顶兰 (he ding lan), is a species of orchid native to areas from Asia to islands in the Pacific Ocean. It has large, pleated leaves and tall flowering stems bearing up to twenty five white, brown, mauve and yellow flowers. It was named for Lady Tankerville who was the first person to make the orchid flower successfully in England. It was the first tropical orchid to flower in England.

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Phaius tankervilleae ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by wikipedia ES

Phaius tankarvilleae, también conocida como "Orquídea de Pantano", es una especie de orquídea que se encuentra en la India, Nueva Guinea, China, Indonesia, Malasia y Australia. En Australia se distribuye al sur de Brunswick Heads, Nueva Gales del Sur[1][2]​ y al norte en Queensland tropical. Se encuentra en peligro de extinción.[3][4][5][6]

 src=
Illustración de Curtis Botanical Magazine, 1924
 src=
Inflorescencia de Phaius tancarvilleae
 src=
Flores de Phaius tancarvilleae
 src=
Flores de Phaius tancarvilleae
 src=
Flores de Phaius tancarvilleae

Descripción

Es una orquídea de gran tamaño, de hábitos terrestres con pseudobulbos de forma ovoide o cónica, verdes envueltos basalmente por varias envolturas de las hojas que son elíptico-lanceoladas, acuminadas, plegadas,, pecioladas y delgadas. Florece en la primavera en una inflorescencia racemosa de 120 cm de largo, erguida, basal. Después de la floración y la caída de las flores mrchitas, se puede cortar y colocar en la arena y parcialmente cubierta, poner en la sombra, en una húmeda zona, bien regada y en 2 a 3 meses, las plántulas comienzan a crecer a partir de las viejos brácteas florales. Después de 6 meses se pueden trasplantar a una maceta. Esta especie se ha convertido en una especie invasora en algunos países como Jamaica y Hawái. En Papúa Nueva Guinea las flores ahumados se comen como un anticonceptivo.[7]

Distribución y hábitat

Se encuentra en Fujian, Provincia de Cantón, Guangxi, Hainan, Xizang y Yunnan de China, en Hong Kong, Taiwán, las Islas del Pacífico, Malasia e Indonesia en elevaciones de hasta 1.300 metros en los bosques montanos bajos y en los pastizales en las depresiones húmedas con suelo negro.

Taxonomía

Phaius tankarvilleae fue descrita por (Banks) Blume y publicado en Museum Botanicum 2: 177. 1856.[8]

Etimología

Phaius: nombre genérico que proviene de la latinización de la palabra griega: φαιός (phaiós) que significa "oscuro", "marrón"; en referencia al color de las flores.

tankarvilleae: epíteto otorgado en honor de la Condesa Tankerville.[9]

Sinonimia
  • Bletia tancarvilleae (L'Hér.) R. Br.
  • Bletia tankervilleae (Banks) R.Br.
  • Calanthe bachmaensis Gagnep.
  • Calanthe speciosa Vieill.
  • Dendrobium veratrifolium Roxb.
  • Limodorum incarvillei Pers.
  • Limodorum incarvillei Blume
  • Limodorum spectabile Salisb.
  • Limodorum tancarvilleae L'Hér.
  • Limodorum tankervilleae Banks
  • Pachyne spectabilis (Salisb.) Salisb.
  • Phaius blumei Lindl.
  • Phaius blumei var. assamica Rchb.f.
  • Phaius blumei var. pulchra King & Pantl.
  • Phaius carronii F.Muell.
  • Phaius giganteus Hemsl.
  • Phaius grandiflorus Rchb.f.
  • Phaius grandifolius Lour.
  • Phaius grandifolius Lindl. ex Wall.
  • Phaius grandifolius var. superbus Van Houtte
  • Phaius incarvillei (Pers.) Kuntze
  • Phaius leucophaeus F.Muell.
  • Phaius oweniae Sander
  • Phaius roeblingii O'Brien
  • Phaius sinensis Rolfe
  • Phaius tancarvilleae (L'Hér.) Blume
  • Phaius tancarvilleae var. superbus (Van Houtte) S.Y. Hu
  • Phaius tankervilleae var. mariesii Rchb.f.
  • Phaius tankervilleae var. pulchra (King & Pantl.) Karth.
  • Phaius tankervilleae var. superbus (Van Houtte) S.Y.Hu
  • Phaius veratrifolius (Roxb.) Lindl.
  • Tankervillia cantoniensis Link[7][10][11]

Referencias

  1. «Phaius tancarvilleae». Australian Native Plants Society. Archivado desde el original el 22 de junio de 2008.
  2. information sign next to Phaius tancarvilleae at the North Coast Regional Botanic Garden, Australia
  3. «Phaius tancarvilleae». Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts.
  4. «James D. Ackerman, María del Castillo». The orchids of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
  5. Gifts from the Gardens of China, de Jane Kilpatrick, ISBN 0-7112-2630-X, accessed 10 June 2008
  6. «Copia archivada». Archivado desde el original el 15 de julio de 2011. Consultado el 21 de junio de 2010.
  7. a b Jay Pfahl. «Phaius tankervilleae». Internet Orchid Species Photo Encyclopedia (en inglés). Consultado el 8 de febrero de 2014.
  8. «Phaius tankervilleae». Tropicos.org. Jardín Botánico de Misuri. Consultado el 8 de febrero de 2014.
  9. https://web.archive.org/web/20080704111611/http://www.killerplants.com/plant-of-the-week/20030421.asp
  10. Phaius tankervilleae en PlantList
  11. «Phaius tankervilleae». World Checklist of Selected Plant Families. Consultado el 13 de septiembre de 2013.

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Phaius tankervilleae: Brief Summary ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by wikipedia ES

Phaius tankarvilleae, también conocida como "Orquídea de Pantano", es una especie de orquídea que se encuentra en la India, Nueva Guinea, China, Indonesia, Malasia y Australia. En Australia se distribuye al sur de Brunswick Heads, Nueva Gales del Sur​​ y al norte en Queensland tropical. Se encuentra en peligro de extinción.​​​​

 src= Illustración de Curtis Botanical Magazine, 1924  src= Inflorescencia de Phaius tancarvilleae  src= Flores de Phaius tancarvilleae  src= Flores de Phaius tancarvilleae  src= Flores de Phaius tancarvilleae
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Phaius tankervilleae ( French )

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Phaius tankervilleae est une espèce d'orchidées terrestres que l'on trouve en Inde, Nouvelle-Guinée, Chine, Indonésie, Malaisie et Australie. En Australie, on la trouve entre Brunswick Heads en Nouvelle-Galles du Sud au sud jusqu'aux régions tropicales du Queensland au nord. Elle est classée comme menacée d'extinction.

En 1778, John Fothergill la ramène de Chine en Angleterre. Plus tard, Joseph Banks nomme la plante en l'honneur de Lady Emma Tankerville lorsque l'orchidée fleurit dans sa serre de Walton-on-Thames, près de Londres. L'épithète spécifique fait référence au nom marital d'Emma, comtesse Tankerville, forme anglicisée de Tancarville, une ville de Normandie, en France.

Ses grandes feuilles plissées sont émises directement à partir du pseudobulbe. Ses inflorescences se dressent à la verticale et peuvent atteindre une hauteur de 2 m. Elles portent jusqu'à 16 fleurs chacune. Les fleurs ont trois sépales et deux pétales, de couleur brune à l'intérieur et blanc à l'extérieur, et un labelle en forme de tube ouvert mauve et jaune.

Cette orchidée vit dans les forêts marécageuses ou les prairies. Elle est menacée par le piétinement par le bétail, le prélèvement illégal par les collectionneurs, l'arrachage comme mauvaise herbe et le drainage de son habitat.

Culture

C'est une plante facile à cultiver. Elle préfère la mi-ombre. La propagation est réalisée à partir de graines ou, plus simplement, en coupant la hampe défleurie à la base de la plante et en l'installant au chaud sur un lit de sable à peine humide, recouverte par film plastique, en situation ombragée : de nouvelles plantules apparaîtront à partir des nœuds au bout d'un à deux mois et pourront être transférées en pots individuels au bout de six mois[2].

Ce Phaius fleurit généralement au printemps.

Synonymes

  • Phaius tancarvilleae[3]

Références

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Phaius tankervilleae: Brief Summary ( French )

provided by wikipedia FR

Phaius tankervilleae est une espèce d'orchidées terrestres que l'on trouve en Inde, Nouvelle-Guinée, Chine, Indonésie, Malaisie et Australie. En Australie, on la trouve entre Brunswick Heads en Nouvelle-Galles du Sud au sud jusqu'aux régions tropicales du Queensland au nord. Elle est classée comme menacée d'extinction.

En 1778, John Fothergill la ramène de Chine en Angleterre. Plus tard, Joseph Banks nomme la plante en l'honneur de Lady Emma Tankerville lorsque l'orchidée fleurit dans sa serre de Walton-on-Thames, près de Londres. L'épithète spécifique fait référence au nom marital d'Emma, comtesse Tankerville, forme anglicisée de Tancarville, une ville de Normandie, en France.

Ses grandes feuilles plissées sont émises directement à partir du pseudobulbe. Ses inflorescences se dressent à la verticale et peuvent atteindre une hauteur de 2 m. Elles portent jusqu'à 16 fleurs chacune. Les fleurs ont trois sépales et deux pétales, de couleur brune à l'intérieur et blanc à l'extérieur, et un labelle en forme de tube ouvert mauve et jaune.

Cette orchidée vit dans les forêts marécageuses ou les prairies. Elle est menacée par le piétinement par le bétail, le prélèvement illégal par les collectionneurs, l'arrachage comme mauvaise herbe et le drainage de son habitat.

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Phaius tancarvilleae ( Vietnamese )

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Phaius tancarvilleae là một loài lan được tìm thấy ở Ấn Độ, New Guinea, Trung Quốc, Indonesia, MalaysiaÚc.

Hình ảnh

Chú thích

Tham khảo

Liên kết ngoài

 src= Wikimedia Commons có thêm hình ảnh và phương tiện truyền tải về Phaius tancarvilleae  src= Wikispecies có thông tin sinh học về Phaius tancarvilleae


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Phaius tancarvilleae: Brief Summary ( Vietnamese )

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Phaius tancarvilleae là một loài lan được tìm thấy ở Ấn Độ, New Guinea, Trung Quốc, Indonesia, MalaysiaÚc.

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紅鶴頂蘭 ( Chinese )

provided by wikipedia 中文维基百科
二名法 Phaius tankervilleae
Banks ex L’Her. Bl., 1852

紅鶴頂蘭又名鶴頂蘭学名Phaius tankervilleae)为蘭科鶴頂蘭屬下的一个种。

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紅鶴頂蘭: Brief Summary ( Chinese )

provided by wikipedia 中文维基百科

紅鶴頂蘭又名鶴頂蘭(学名:Phaius tankervilleae)为蘭科鶴頂蘭屬下的一个种。

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copyright
维基百科作者和编辑