Bletila
purpurea (Lamarck) A. de Candolle
1841 Variant(s):
An alba form is known. Bletia purpurea
var alba Ariza & Jimenez Synonyms:
Basionym: Limodorum
purpureum Lambert
- Bletia acutipetala
Hooker
Bletia alta Hitchcock - Bletia
havanensis A. Richard
- Bletia
pottsii S. Watson
Bletia pulchella R.H. Torr. Bletia tuberosa
Ames Bletia verecunda R. Brown Cymbidium altum Willd. Cymbidium
trifidum Swartz Cymbidium verecundum Swartz Gyas verecunda
Salisb. 1812 Helleborine
americana Steud.
- Limodorum
tuberosum Lindley
- Limodorum
trifidum Michx.
Limodorum
verecundum Salisbury Regnellia purpurea Barb. Rodr. 1877 - Thiebautia
nervosa Colla 1824
Common
name(s): Purple Bletia; Pine Pink Pronunciation:
BLEH-tee-ah pur-pyur-AH-tah
Derivation:The species name refers to
the purple color. Plant: Terrestrial or
semi-epiphytic, 100-150cm, plicate linear-lanceolate leaves from an flattened
ovoid pseudobulb (3.5cm), joined in long chains. Pseudobulbs are subterranean
and the palm-like leaves are all that show above ground. Flowers:
See illustrations. Inflorescence: loose, occasionally branched raceme with
3-80 pink flowers, deeply lobed lip, 5-7 yellow keels on midlobe, edges crisped.
Fragrant: No. Bloomtimes:
Late winter to summer. Habitat: Terrestrial
in pine forests, mixed deciduous forests, and prairies. Occasionally found at
the bases of trees in swampy areas.
Distribution:
southeastern Florida
- Mexico
- Guatemala
- El
Salvador
- Honduras
- Belize
- Costa
Rica
- Panama
- Jamaica
- Cuba
- Surinam
- Venezuela
- Columbia
- Ecuador
- Brazil
(Amazonas)
Culture: Bright light (grow with Cattleya)
and plenty of air movement; give ample water in growing season; hot to cool temperatures.
A terrestrial that is tolerant of soil conditions and grows well in the garden
or in a pot. Other Notes: The USDA classifies
this plant as THREATENED. See their listing at http://plants.usda.gov/cgi_bin/plant_profile.cgi?symbol=BLPU
| Plants
look like small palms and the spikes are upright. The flower color is quite variable
between pink and dark purple... the flowers shown here were bicolored. This plant
was photographed outside Havana, Cuba.
Photos
by Joseph Dougherty.
| | Botanical
prints from from Curtis' Botanical Magazine

 
|
References:
- The
Native Orchids of Florida; Carlyle A. Luer; The New York Botanical Garden;
pg. 226, 227
- Native
Orchids of N. America North of Mexico; Donovan Stewart Correll; Stanford University
Press 1950, 1978; pg. 339
- Field
Guide to Orchids of North America; John G. Williams & Andrew E. Williams;
Universe Books 1983; pg. 116, 117
- Native
Orchids of Belize; I. McLeish, N. R. Pearce & B.R. Adams; A. A. Balkema Publishers
1995; pg. 144
- Orchidaceae
Brasilienses; G.F.J. Pabst & F. Dungs; Brücke-verlag 1977; Vol. II, pg. 209
- The
Orchids of El Salvador; Fritz Hamer; Marie Selby Botanical Gardens 1981 vol.
II; pg. 56
- Encyclopedia
of Cultivated Orchids; Alex D. Hawkes; Faber & Faber 1965; pg. 67
- Orchids
of Guatemala and Belize; Ames & Correll; Dover repint 1985; pg. 486
- Venezuelan
Orchids Illustrated ; G.C.K. Dunsterville and Leslie Garay; Andre Deutsch;
Vol. II, pg. 40
- Illustrated
Encyclopedia of Orchids; Alex Pridgeon; Timber Press 1992; pg. 38
- Native
Ecuadorian Orchids ; Calaway H. Dodson & Rodrigo Escobar; Colina; Vol. I,
pg. 64,65
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