Dracula orchid

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Dracula orchids
Dracula vampira
Dracula vampira
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Liliopsida
Order: Asparagales
Family: Orchidaceae
Subfamily: Epidendroideae
Tribe: Epidendreae
Subtribe: Pleurothallidinae
Genus: Dracula
Luer, 1978
Species

See text.

The orchid genus Dracula, abbreviated as Drac in horticultural trade, consists of 118 species. The strange name Dracula, literally means "little dragon", referring to the strange aspect of the two long spurs of the sepals [1]. They were once included in the genus Masdevallia, but became a separate genus in 1978. This genus has some of the more bizarre and well-known species of the subtribe Pleurothallidinae.

Contents

[edit] Description

These epiphytic and terrestrial species are distributed in Central America and the northwest Andes, almost half in Ecuador alone. They prefer shadow and an even, rather cold, temperature.

These caespitose orchids grow in tufts from a short rhizome, with a dense pack of stems. They lack pseudobulbs. On each stems grows one large, thin, plicate leaf with a sharply defined midrib. These glabrous, light to dark green leaves may be spongy, taking over the function of the missing pseudobulb. They are tipped with a mucro (a short tip).

The flower stalks grow either horizontally from the base of the plant or descend, often for great distances. A few species grow upright flower stalks. The long-tailed terminal flowers are basically triangular. The flowers are borne singly or successively. Three species (sodiroi, decussata/neisseniae, and papillosa) may have up to three simultaneously open flowers on a single stalk. In general, though, if there is more than one flower bud on the raceme, they open up with long intervals. These flowers have a weird aspect, due to the long tails on each sepal. The petals are small and somewhat thickened. The lip is often quite large for a Pleurothallid and may resemble a mushroom or fungus. The fleshy basal part of the lip (hypochile) is cleft. The terminal part (epichile) is rounded and concave. The margins of the perianth are often fringed. There is a well-developed column with two pollinia.

Frog's Skin (Dracula chestertonii)
Frog's Skin (Dracula chestertonii)

[edit] Species

The species of Dracula have tentatively been divided in three subgenera, sections and subsections. The different series in the subsection Dracula are merely an attempt to classify these orchids.

  • Subgenus Dracula : This subgenus contains all the species of the genus except two exceptional species (D. sodiroi and D. xenos)
    • Section Andreettaea : Monotypic: Dracula andreettae
    • Section Chestertonia : two species: Dracula chestertonii, D. cutis-bufonis
    • Section Cochliopsida : Monotypic: Dracula cochliops
    • Section Dodsonia : Four species: Dracula dodsonii, D. insolita, D. iricolor, D. portillae
    • Section Dracula : largest section
      • Subsection : e.g. Dracula bella, D. vespertilio
      • Subsection Dracula :
        • Series Dracula : e.g. Dracula chimaera, D. tubeana, D. vampira
        • Series Grandiflorae-Parvilabiatae : e.g. Dracula gigas, D. platycrater
        • Series Parviflorae : e.g. Dracula houtteana, D. lotax
  • Subgenus Sodiroa : Monotypic: Dracula sodiroi
  • Subgenus Xenosia : Monotypic : Dracula xenos

  • Dracula adrianae (Colombia).
  • Dracula alcithoe (SW. Colombia to NE. Ecuador).
  • Dracula amaliae (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula andreettae (W. Colombia to NE. Ecuador).
  • Dracula anthracina (NW. Colombia).
  • Dracula antonii (Colombia).
  • Dracula aphrodes (W. Colombia.
  • Dracula astuta (Costa Rica).
  • Dracula barrowii (Peru).
  • Dracula bella (WC. Colombia).
  • Dracula bellerophon (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula benedictii (WC. Colombia.
  • Dracula berthae (Colombia) .
  • Dracula brangeri (C. Colombia).
  • Dracula carcinopsis (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula carlueri (Costa Rica.
  • Dracula chestertonii : 'Frog's Skin']] (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula chimaera (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula chiroptera (SW. Colombia to NE. Ecuador).
  • Dracula christineana (Ecuador).
  • Dracula circe (Colombia).
  • Dracula citrina (Colombia).
  • Dracula cochliops (SW. Colombia).
Dracula cordobae
Dracula cordobae
  • Dracula cordobae (SW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula cutis-bufonis : 'Toadskin Orchid']] (NW. Colombia).
  • Dracula dalessandroi (SE. Ecuador).
  • Dracula dalstroemii (NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula decussata (Colombia).
  • Dracula deltoidea (SE. Ecuador).
  • Dracula deniseana (Peru.
  • Dracula diabola (Colombia).
  • Dracula diana (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula dodsonii (Colombia to NC. Ecuador)
  • Dracula erythrochaete (Costa Rica to W. Panama).
  • Dracula exasperata ( SW. Colombia.
  • Dracula fafnir (SE. Ecuador).
  • Dracula felix (SW. Colombia to NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula fuligifera (C. Ecuador).
  • Dracula gastrophora (Ecuador).
  • Dracula gigas (W. Colombia to NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula gorgona (W. Colombia)
  • Dracula gorgonella (Colombia)
  • Dracula hawleyi (NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula hirsuta (SE. Ecuador).
  • Dracula hirtzii (SW. Colombia to NW. Ecuador).
Dracula houtteana
Dracula houtteana
  • Dracula houtteana (Colombia).
  • Dracula inaequalis (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula incognita (Colombia).
  • Dracula inexperata (Costa Rica).
  • Dracula insolita (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula janetiae (C. Peru)
  • Dracula kareniae (Ecuador).
  • Dracula lafleurii (NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula lehmanniana (SW. Colombia).
  • Dracula lemurella (Colombia).
  • Dracula leonum (Peru).
  • Dracula levii (SW. Colombia to NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula ligiae (Colombia).
  • Dracula lindstroemii (NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula lotax (Ecuador).
  • Dracula mantissa (SW. Colombia to NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula marsupialis (NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula mendozae Luer & V.N.M.Rao (Ecuador)
  • Dracula minax (Colombia).
  • Dracula mopsus (Ecuador.
  • Dracula morleyi (NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula navarrorum (Ecuador).
  • Dracula nigritella (Ecuador).
  • Dracula nosferatu (Colombia).
  • Dracula nycterina (Colombia).
  • Dracula octavioi (SW. Colombia.
  • Dracula olmosii (Panama).
  • Dracula ophioceps (SW. Colombia).
  • Dracula orientalis (NE. Colombia).
  • Dracula ortiziana (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula papillosa (NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula pholeodytes (NE. Colombia).
  • Dracula pileus (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula platycrater (Colombia.
  • Dracula polyphemus (NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula portillae (SE. Ecuador).
  • Dracula posadarum (Colombia).
  • Dracula presbys (Colombia).
  • Dracula psittacina (Colombia).
  • Dracula psyche (NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula pubescens (Ecuador).
  • Dracula pusilla (SE. Mexico to C. America)
  • Dracula radiella (NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula radiosa (E. Colombia to NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula rezekiana (Ecuador).
  • Dracula ripleyana (Costa Rica).
  • Dracula robledorum (Colombia)
  • Dracula roezlii (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula saulii (Peru).
  • Dracula schudelii (Ecuador).
  • Dracula sergioi (Colombia).
  • Dracula severa (NW. Colombia).
  • Dracula sibundoyensis (SW. Colombia to NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula sijmii (Ecuador).
  • Dracula simia (SE. Ecuador).
Dracula sodiroi
Dracula sodiroi
  • Dracula sodiroi (Ecuador).
    • Dracula sodiroi subsp. erythrocodon (Ecuador). Hemicr.
    • Dracula sodiroi subsp. sodiroi (Ecuador). Hemicr.
  • Dracula syndactyla (SW. Colombia).
  • Dracula terborchii (Ecuador).
  • Dracula trichroma (W. Colombia to NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula trinympharum (NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula tsubotae (Colombia).
  • Dracula tubeana (Ecuador).
  • Dracula ubangina (Ecuador).
  • Dracula vampira (Ecuador).
  • Dracula veliziana (Colombia).
  • Dracula velutina (NW. Colombia).
  • Dracula venefica (W. Colombia.
  • Dracula venosa (W. Colombia to NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula verticulosa (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula vespertilio (Nicaragua to NW. Ecuador).
  • Dracula villegasii (Colombia).
  • Dracula vinacea (NE. Colombia).
  • Dracula vlad-tepes (NE. Colombia).
  • Dracula wallisii (W. Colombia).
  • Dracula woolwardiae (Ecuador).
  • Dracula xenos (Colombia).

[edit] Hybrids

  • Dracula × anicula (D. cutis-bufonis × D. wallisii) (Colombia).
  • Dracula × radiosyndactyla (D. radiosa × D. syndactyla) (SW. Colombia).

[edit] Footnote

[edit] References

  • Luer, Carlyle A. 1978: Dracula, a New Genus in the Pleurothallidinae. Selbyana 2: 190-198.
  • Luer, Carlyle A. 1993: Icones Pleurothallidinarum X - Systematics of Dracula. Monographs in Systematic Botany from the Missouri Botanical Garden Vol. 46.
  • Arkive : Dracula vampira

[edit] External links

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