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'''''Epidendrum radicans''''' is a species of [[orchid]] native to [[Central America]] and northern [[South America]]. Common names include '''ground-rooting epidendrum''', '''fire-star orchid''', '''crucifix orchid''',<ref>[https://www.cabidigitallibrary.org/doi/full/10.1079/cabicompendium.119811 Epidendrum radicans (crucifix orchid)] by S Dube from [[CAB International|CABI Digital Library]]. 20 January 2017. Retrieved 22 October 2024.</ref> '''rainbow orchid''', and '''reed-stem epidendrum'''.<ref name=kew>[http://www.kew.org/plants-fungi/Epidendrum-radicans.htm ''Epidendrum radicans''.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130308050527/http://www.kew.org/plants-fungi/Epidendrum-radicans.htm |date=8 March 2013 }} Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.</ref>
'''''Epidendrum radicans''''' is a species of [[orchid]] native to [[Central America]] and northern [[South America]]. Common names include '''ground-rooting epidendrum''', '''fire-star orchid''', '''crucifix orchid''',<ref>{{cite web |first=S. |last=Dube |title=''Epidendrum radicans'' (crucifix orchid) |date=20 January 2017 |publisher=[[CAB International|CABI Digital Library]] |url=https://www.cabidigitallibrary.org/doi/full/10.1079/cabicompendium.119811 |doi=10.1079/cabicompendium.119811}}</ref> '''rainbow orchid''', and '''reed-stem epidendrum'''.<ref name=kew>[http://www.kew.org/plants-fungi/Epidendrum-radicans.htm ''Epidendrum radicans''.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130308050527/http://www.kew.org/plants-fungi/Epidendrum-radicans.htm |date=8 March 2013 }} Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.</ref>


The diagnostic characteristic of ''E. radicans'' is its tendency to sprout roots all along the length of the stem; other crucifix orchids only produce roots near the base.<ref>Dressler, R. L.: "Will the Real ''Epidendrum ibaguense'' please stand up?" ''American Orchid Society Bulletin'', '''58'''(1989) pages 796–800.</ref> It is a common roadside weed at middle elevations in Central America. Its common name '[[crucifix]] orchid' refers to the tiny cross-shaped labellum in the centre of the flower.<ref>[https://www.gardensonline.com.au/gardenshed/plantfinder/show_906.aspx Epidendrum radicans] by GardensOnline.Retrieved 22 October 2024.</ref>
The diagnostic characteristic of ''E. radicans'' is its tendency to sprout roots all along the length of the stem; other crucifix orchids only produce roots near the base.<ref>{{cite journal |first=R.L. |last=Dressler |title=Will the Real ''Epidendrum ibaguense'' please stand up? |journal=American Orchid Society Bulletin |volume=58 |pages=796–800 |date=1989 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Robert-Dressler-2/publication/256692538_Will_the_real_Epidendrum_ibaguense_please_stand_up/}}</ref> It is a frequent roadside weed at middle elevations in Central America. Its common name '[[crucifix]] orchid' refers to the tiny cross-shaped [[Labellum (botany)|labellum]] in the centre of the flower.<ref>{{cite web |title=''Epidendrum radicans'' |date= |publisher=GardensOnline |url=https://www.gardensonline.com.au/gardenshed/plantfinder/show_906.aspx}}</ref>


== Description ==
== Description ==
[[File:Epidendrum radicans 8zz.jpg|thumb|left|Habitus]]
[[File:Epidendrum radicans 8zz.jpg|thumb|left|Habitus]]
It is a herbaceous plant with a terrestrial habit (it grows on the ground, not on trees), generally on rocks, being very variable, with long and fleshy [[aerial root]]s that come out of the stems. It reaches a size of up to 1.5 m long. It has a cylindrical, [[Reed (plant)|reed]]-like, straight stem, 19 to 125 cm long and 3.5 to 8 mm in diameter, the main ones lying on the surface, somewhat branched, the branches more or less erect, climbing or also lying down. The leaves are alternate, the blades ovate-elliptic, shortly mucronate at the apex (tip of leaf), 2 to 9 cm long and 1.2 to 2.5 cm long, thick, with a leathery consistency, with the base embracing the stem, sometimes somewhat purple.<ref name=plant>[https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Epidendrum~radicans+x+secundum+hybrid+complex Epidendrum radicans x secundum hybrid complex] by [[National Herbarium of New South Wales|PlantNET]]. Retrieved 22 October 2024.</ref>
It is a herbaceous plant with a terrestrial habit (it grows on the ground, not on trees), generally on rocks, being very variable, with long and fleshy [[aerial root]]s that come out of the stems. It reaches a size of up to 1.5 m long. It has a cylindrical, [[Reed (plant)|reed]]-like, straight stem, 19 to 125 cm long and 3.5 to 8 mm in diameter, the main ones lying on the surface, somewhat branched, the branches more or less erect, climbing or also lying down. The leaves are alternate, the blades ovate-elliptic, shortly mucronate at the apex (tip of leaf), 2 to 9 cm long and 1.2 to 2.5 cm long, thick, with a leathery consistency, with the base embracing the stem, sometimes somewhat purple.<ref name=plant>{{cite web |title=''Epidendrum radicans'' x secundum hybrid complex |publisher=[[National Herbarium of New South Wales|PlantNET]] |url=https://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Epidendrum~radicans+x+secundum+hybrid+complex}}</ref>


Like other members of subgenus ''[[Epidendrum subg. Amphiglottium|Amphiglottium]]'', it is a [[sympodial]] orchid which grows stems which do not swell into [[pseudobulb]]s and are covered with imbricating [[Leaf sheath|sheath]]s, produces a terminal inflorescence covered at its base by close imbricating sheaths, and produces a [[Labellum (botany)|lip]] [[adnation|adnate]] to the [[Column (botany)|column]] to its apex. The lip of ''E.&nbsp;radicans'' is trilobate, as with the other members of section ''[[Epidendrum sect. Schistochila|Schistochila]]'', with the lacerate lobes which are typical of the subsections ''[[Epidendrum subsect. Carinata|Carinata]]'' and ''[[Epidendrum subsect. Tuberculata|Tuberculata]]''. ''E.&nbsp;radicans'' differs from the other lacerate ''Schistochila'' by producing roots from most of the stem.
Like other members of subgenus ''[[Epidendrum subg. Amphiglottium|Amphiglottium]]'', it is a [[sympodial]] orchid which grows stems which do not swell into [[pseudobulb]]s and are covered with imbricating [[Leaf sheath|sheath]]s, produces a terminal inflorescence covered at its base by close imbricating sheaths, and produces a [[Labellum (botany)|lip]] [[adnation|adnate]] to the [[Column (botany)|column]] to its apex. The lip of ''E.&nbsp;radicans'' is trilobate, as with the other members of section ''[[Epidendrum sect. Schistochila|Schistochila]]'', with the lacerate lobes which are typical of the subsections ''[[Epidendrum subsect. Carinata|Carinata]]'' and ''[[Epidendrum subsect. Tuberculata|Tuberculata]]''. ''E.&nbsp;radicans'' differs from the other lacerate ''Schistochila'' by producing roots from most of the stem.
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The flowers, which appear throughout the year, are produced in the form of long-lived [[racemes]] up to 60 cm long, sometimes branched, on long [[Peduncle (botany)|peduncle]]s. At the base of each flower there is a small, triangular bract, which dries up over time. The flowers are large and showy, red-orange in colour and with the tips of some of the [[petal]]s somewhat yellowish. The three [[sepal]]s and two of the three petals are very similar, the other petal (called [[Labellum (botany)|labellum]]) is very modified, with its basal part narrow and joined to the column (which is a tube formed by the [[stamen]]s joined to the [[style (botany)|botany]]); at the apex the petal widens abruptly and forms 3 lobes with the margin torn; the column (which as already indicated, are the stamens) somewhat curved and dilated towards the apex. [[Pedicel (botany)|Pedicel]] and [[Ovary (botany)|ovary]] are 2–4 cm long. Its fruits are ellipsoid, ribbed capsules, 4.2 to 4.4 cm long and 15 to 21 mm in diameter.<ref name=plant/>
The flowers, which appear throughout the year, are produced in the form of long-lived [[racemes]] up to 60 cm long, sometimes branched, on long [[Peduncle (botany)|peduncle]]s. At the base of each flower there is a small, triangular bract, which dries up over time. The flowers are large and showy, red-orange in colour and with the tips of some of the [[petal]]s somewhat yellowish. The three [[sepal]]s and two of the three petals are very similar, the other petal (called [[Labellum (botany)|labellum]]) is very modified, with its basal part narrow and joined to the column (which is a tube formed by the [[stamen]]s joined to the [[style (botany)|botany]]); at the apex the petal widens abruptly and forms 3 lobes with the margin torn; the column (which as already indicated, are the stamens) somewhat curved and dilated towards the apex. [[Pedicel (botany)|Pedicel]] and [[Ovary (botany)|ovary]] are 2–4 cm long. Its fruits are ellipsoid, ribbed capsules, 4.2 to 4.4 cm long and 15 to 21 mm in diameter.<ref name=plant/>


Additionally, ''E.&nbsp;radicans'' flowers are [[resupination#Orchidaceae|resupinate]], unlike the members of the ''Epidendrum secundum'' complex, ''E.&nbsp;fulgens'', and many other crucifix orchids. ''E.&nbsp;radicans'' also differs from ''E.&nbsp;secundum'' by bearing no nectar in the flower. ''E. radicans'' seeds are quite small, at 320 seeds per milligram.<ref>Arditti, J. & A. K. A. Ghani "Tansley Review No. 110. Numerical and Physical Properties of Orchid Seeds and Their Biological Implications" ''New Phytologist'' '''145'''(3) p. 389 (2000)</ref><ref>Cherevchenck, T. M., & G. P. Kushnir, ''Orheide v kulture'' (Orchids in cultivation). Kiev, Ukraine: Naukova Dumka</ref>
Additionally, ''E.&nbsp;radicans'' flowers are [[resupination#Orchidaceae|resupinate]], unlike the members of the ''Epidendrum secundum'' complex, ''E.&nbsp;fulgens'', and many other crucifix orchids. ''E.&nbsp;radicans'' also differs from ''E.&nbsp;secundum'' by bearing no nectar in the flower. ''E. radicans'' seeds are quite small, at 320 seeds per milligram.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Arditti |first=J. |first2=A.K.A. |last2=Ghani |title=Tansley Review No. 110. Numerical and Physical Properties of Orchid Seeds and Their Biological Implications |journal=New Phytologist |volume=145 |issue=3 |pages=389 |date=2000 |doi=10.1046/j.1469-8137.2000.00587.x |pmid=33862900 |jstor=2588806 |url=https://nph.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1046/j.1469-8137.2000.00587.x}}</ref><ref>Cherevchenck, T. M., & G. P. Kushnir, ''Orheide v kulture'' (Orchids in cultivation). Kiev, Ukraine: Naukova Dumka</ref>

The chromosome number of an individual collected in [[Ecuador]] has been determined as 2n&nbsp;=&nbsp;60. Other reported chromosome numbers for ''E.&nbsp;radicans'' include 2n&nbsp;=&nbsp;40, 2n&nbsp;=&nbsp;57, 2n&nbsp;=&nbsp;62, and 2n&nbsp;=&nbsp;64<ref>Fábio Pinheiro, Samantha Koehler, Andréa Macêdo Corrêa, Maria Luiza Faria Salatino, Antonio Salatino & Fábio de Barros. "Phylogenetic relationships and infrageneric classification of ''Epidendrum'' subgenus ''Amphiglottium'' (Laeliinae, Orchidaceae)", ''Plant Systematics and Evolution'' published online 25 September 2009. Springer Wien. https://doi.org/10.1007%2Fs00606-009-0224-2</ref>


== Ecology ==
== Ecology ==
[[File:The Ground Rooting Epidendrum (5592636488).jpg|thumb|Stems and foliage]]
[[File:The Ground Rooting Epidendrum (5592636488).jpg|thumb|Stems and foliage]]
[[File:Epidendrum radicans Pav. ex Lindl. (5592632060).jpg|thumb|Cross-shaped labellum (flower)]]
It is distributed throughout [[Mexico]], [[Costa Rica]], [[El Salvador]], [[Guatemala]], [[Honduras]], [[Nicaragua]], [[Panama]], [[Venezuela]] and [[Colombia]] where it is common on rocks in full sun, in the [[cloud forest]] of the mountains at altitudes of 900-2500 metres above sea level, oak forest, semi-evergreen forest, [[riparian]] vegetation and evergreen scrub.
It is distributed throughout [[Mexico]], [[Costa Rica]], [[El Salvador]], [[Guatemala]], [[Honduras]], [[Nicaragua]], [[Panama]], [[Venezuela]] and [[Colombia]] where it is common on rocks in full sun, in the [[cloud forest]] of the mountains at altitudes of 900-2500 metres above sea level, oak forest, semi-evergreen forest, [[riparian]] vegetation and evergreen scrub.


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==Cultivation==
==Cultivation==
[[File:Crucifix orchid.jpg|thumb|Cross-shaped labellum (flower)]]
The plant is easily [[Plant propagation|propagated]] from tip cuttings and pups produced on the stems. It thrives in temperatures between 10° to 27°C (50°–80°F) and in USDA [[hardiness zone]] 10–12, under full sun or partial shade in [[loam]]y, sandy, well-drained soil. In summers, two hours of direct sunlight may scorch and dehydrate the plant, though the soil must not remain soggy or hold water. It can tolerate low nutrient areas and it does not require extensive maintenance. It can be potted in large containers and in [[garden bed]]s. Infrequent [[repotting]] will restrict its growth and potential blooms. Support may be necessary for a compact, upright growth, though the stems still grow and bloom even if they droop or ramble. A slow-release [[fertilizer]] may be necessary for vitality, in addition to [[mulch]] (to reduce competition from weeds and to maintain moisture).<ref name=UK>[https://www.ukhouseplants.com/plants/epidendrums Epidendrums - Crucifix Orchids] by ukhouseplants. Retrieved 22 October 2024.</ref><ref>[https://www.tcpalm.com/story/life/columnists/carol-cloud-bailey/2021/04/21/easy-propagate-easily-maintained-and-offer-prolific-blooms/7292168002/ Florida gardening: Reed Stem Orchids for the landscape] by Carol Cloud Bailey from [[Treasure Coast Newspapers]]. April 21, 2021. Retrieved October 22 2024.</ref>
The plant is easily [[Plant propagation|propagated]] from tip [[cuttings (plant)|cuttings]] and pups ([[keiki]]s) produced on the stems. It thrives in temperatures between 10° to 27°C (50°–80°F) and in USDA [[hardiness zone]] 10–12, under full sun or partial shade in [[loam]]y, sandy, well-drained soil. In summers, two hours of direct sunlight may scorch and dehydrate the plant, though the soil must not remain soggy or hold water. It can tolerate low nutrient areas and it does not require extensive maintenance. It can be potted in [[garden bed]]s and should be potted in large containers (infrequent [[repotting]] will restrict its growth and potential blooms). Support may be necessary for a compact, upright growth, though the stems still grow and bloom even if they droop or ramble. A slow-release [[fertilizer]] may be necessary for vitality, in addition to [[mulch]] (to reduce competition from weeds and to maintain moisture).<ref name=UK>{{cite web |title=Epidendrums — Crucifix Orchids |publisher=UK Houseplants |url=https://www.ukhouseplants.com/plants/epidendrums}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |first=Carol Cloud |last=Bailey |title=Florida gardening: Reed Stem Orchids for the landscape |newspaper=[[Treasure Coast Newspapers]] |date=April 21, 2021 |url=https://www.tcpalm.com/story/life/columnists/carol-cloud-bailey/2021/04/21/easy-propagate-easily-maintained-and-offer-prolific-blooms/7292168002/}}</ref>


Pests include [[mealybugs]], [[spider mites]], [[Scale insect|scale]], [[thrips]], [[whitefly]] and root [[mealybugs]]. Diseases in cultivation include [[root rot]], [[leaf spot disease]], [[rust]], [[mosaic virus]], [[black rot]], [[Botrytis (fungus)|botrytis]] petal blight, [[powdery mildew]] and [[southern blight]]. Though generally, the plant is rarely bothered by pests or diseases, as it can adapt to a wide range of conditions compared to other orchid species.<ref name=UK/>
Pests include [[mealybugs]], [[spider mites]], [[Scale insect|scale]], [[thrips]], [[whitefly]] and root [[mealybugs]]. Diseases in cultivation include [[root rot]], [[leaf spot disease]], [[rust]], [[mosaic virus]], [[black rot]], [[Botrytis (fungus)|botrytis]] petal blight, [[powdery mildew]] and [[southern blight]]. Though generally, the plant is rarely bothered by pests or diseases, as it can adapt to a wide range of conditions compared to other orchid species.<ref name=UK/>
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A [[biochemical]] examination (Pinheiro & al., 2009) of the lacerate ''Schistochila'' subsections encompassing [[Plastid#Plastids in plants|plastid]] nucleotide sequence data from the ''trn''L—''trn''F regions, Amplified Fragment Length Polyorphism ([[Amplified fragment length polymorphism|AFLP]]) data, and somatic chromosome number for 30 individuals in three of the thirteen recognized species of ''E''.&nbsp;subsect.&nbsp;''Tuberculata'' and twenty individuals in eleven of the twelve recognized species of ''E''.&nbsp;subsect.&nbsp;''Carinata'', including ''E.&nbsp;radicans'', has suggested that perhaps [[Epidendrum subsect. Carinata|''E.''&nbsp;subsect. ''Carinata'']] should be replaced with three subsections: an "Atlantic" subsection, an "Andean" subsection, and a monotypic subsection for ''E.&nbsp;radicans''.
A [[biochemical]] examination (Pinheiro & al., 2009) of the lacerate ''Schistochila'' subsections encompassing [[Plastid#Plastids in plants|plastid]] nucleotide sequence data from the ''trn''L—''trn''F regions, Amplified Fragment Length Polyorphism ([[Amplified fragment length polymorphism|AFLP]]) data, and somatic chromosome number for 30 individuals in three of the thirteen recognized species of ''E''.&nbsp;subsect.&nbsp;''Tuberculata'' and twenty individuals in eleven of the twelve recognized species of ''E''.&nbsp;subsect.&nbsp;''Carinata'', including ''E.&nbsp;radicans'', has suggested that perhaps [[Epidendrum subsect. Carinata|''E.''&nbsp;subsect. ''Carinata'']] should be replaced with three subsections: an "Atlantic" subsection, an "Andean" subsection, and a monotypic subsection for ''E.&nbsp;radicans''.

The chromosome number of an individual collected in [[Ecuador]] has been determined as 2n&nbsp;=&nbsp;60. Other reported chromosome numbers for ''E.&nbsp;radicans'' include 2n&nbsp;=&nbsp;40, 2n&nbsp;=&nbsp;57, 2n&nbsp;=&nbsp;62, and 2n&nbsp;=&nbsp;64<ref>{{cite journal |last=Pinheiro |first=F. |last2=Koehler |first2=S. |last3=Corrêa |first3=A.M. |last4=Salatino |first4=M.L.F. |last5=Salatino |first5=A. |last6=de Barros |first6=F. |title=Phylogenetic relationships and infrageneric classification of ''Epidendrum'' subgenus ''Amphiglottium'' (Laeliinae, Orchidaceae) |journal=Plant Systematics and Evolution |volume=283 |pages=165–177 |date=2009 |doi=10.1007/s00606-009-0224-2 }}</ref>


== Notes ==
== Notes ==
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{{Commons category|Epidendrum radicans}}
{{Commons category|Epidendrum radicans}}
{{Wikispecies|Epidendrum radicans}}
{{Wikispecies|Epidendrum radicans}}
{{refbegin}}
* Pansarin, E. R., and Amaral, M. C. E.: "Reproductive biology and pollination mechanisms of ''Epidendrum secundum'' (Orchidaceae). Floral variation: a consequence of natural hybridization?" ''Plant Biology'' '''10''' (2008) 211–219
*{{cite journal |last=Pansarin |first=E.R. |last2=Amaral |first2=M.C.E. |title=Reproductive biology and pollination mechanisms of ''Epidendrum secundum'' (Orchidaceae). Floral variation: a consequence of natural hybridization? |journal=Plant Biology |volume=10 |issue= |pages=211–9 |date=2008 |doi=10.1111/j.1438-8677.2007.00025.x |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1438-8677.2007.00025.x |pmid=18304195}}
*Paulette Bierzychudek: "''Asclepias'', ''Lantana'', and ''Epidendrum'': A Floral Mimicry Complex?" ''Biotropica'', '''13''', 2, Supplement: Reproductive Botany (Jun., 1981), pp.&nbsp;54–58, published by The Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation
*{{cite journal |first=Paulette |last=Bierzychudek |title=''Asclepias'', ''Lantana'', and ''Epidendrum'': A Floral Mimicry Complex? |journal=Biotropica |volume=13 |issue=2, Supplement: Reproductive Botany |pages=54–58 |date=June 1981 |doi= |jstor=2388070}}
{{refend}}


{{Taxonbar|from=Q5382801}}
{{Taxonbar|from=Q5382801}}

Latest revision as of 04:24, 26 November 2024

Epidendrum radicans
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Asparagales
Family: Orchidaceae
Subfamily: Epidendroideae
Genus: Epidendrum
Subgenus: Epidendrum subg. Amphiglottium
Section: Epidendrum sect. Schistochila
Subsection: Epidendrum subsect. Carinata
Species:
E. radicans
Binomial name
Epidendrum radicans

Epidendrum radicans is a species of orchid native to Central America and northern South America. Common names include ground-rooting epidendrum, fire-star orchid, crucifix orchid,[1] rainbow orchid, and reed-stem epidendrum.[2]

The diagnostic characteristic of E. radicans is its tendency to sprout roots all along the length of the stem; other crucifix orchids only produce roots near the base.[3] It is a frequent roadside weed at middle elevations in Central America. Its common name 'crucifix orchid' refers to the tiny cross-shaped labellum in the centre of the flower.[4]

Description

[edit]
Habitus

It is a herbaceous plant with a terrestrial habit (it grows on the ground, not on trees), generally on rocks, being very variable, with long and fleshy aerial roots that come out of the stems. It reaches a size of up to 1.5 m long. It has a cylindrical, reed-like, straight stem, 19 to 125 cm long and 3.5 to 8 mm in diameter, the main ones lying on the surface, somewhat branched, the branches more or less erect, climbing or also lying down. The leaves are alternate, the blades ovate-elliptic, shortly mucronate at the apex (tip of leaf), 2 to 9 cm long and 1.2 to 2.5 cm long, thick, with a leathery consistency, with the base embracing the stem, sometimes somewhat purple.[5]

Like other members of subgenus Amphiglottium, it is a sympodial orchid which grows stems which do not swell into pseudobulbs and are covered with imbricating sheaths, produces a terminal inflorescence covered at its base by close imbricating sheaths, and produces a lip adnate to the column to its apex. The lip of E. radicans is trilobate, as with the other members of section Schistochila, with the lacerate lobes which are typical of the subsections Carinata and Tuberculata. E. radicans differs from the other lacerate Schistochila by producing roots from most of the stem.

Inflorescences

[edit]
Flowers

The flowers, which appear throughout the year, are produced in the form of long-lived racemes up to 60 cm long, sometimes branched, on long peduncles. At the base of each flower there is a small, triangular bract, which dries up over time. The flowers are large and showy, red-orange in colour and with the tips of some of the petals somewhat yellowish. The three sepals and two of the three petals are very similar, the other petal (called labellum) is very modified, with its basal part narrow and joined to the column (which is a tube formed by the stamens joined to the botany); at the apex the petal widens abruptly and forms 3 lobes with the margin torn; the column (which as already indicated, are the stamens) somewhat curved and dilated towards the apex. Pedicel and ovary are 2–4 cm long. Its fruits are ellipsoid, ribbed capsules, 4.2 to 4.4 cm long and 15 to 21 mm in diameter.[5]

Additionally, E. radicans flowers are resupinate, unlike the members of the Epidendrum secundum complex, E. fulgens, and many other crucifix orchids. E. radicans also differs from E. secundum by bearing no nectar in the flower. E. radicans seeds are quite small, at 320 seeds per milligram.[6][7]

Ecology

[edit]
Stems and foliage

It is distributed throughout Mexico, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Venezuela and Colombia where it is common on rocks in full sun, in the cloud forest of the mountains at altitudes of 900-2500 metres above sea level, oak forest, semi-evergreen forest, riparian vegetation and evergreen scrub.

E. radicans is part of a complex of several orange-flowered, weedy species (including Asclepias spp.) that are unrelated but ecologically similar. Species within this group share pollinators as well as habitat, and are believed to exhibit what is known as convergent evolution, where unrelated species "converge" upon similar physical characteristics as a result of similar evolutionary pressures. Paulette Bierzychudek studied pollinator behavior in the apparent complex consisting of E. radicans, Asclepias curassavica, and Lantana camara, but could not find clear evidence that floral mimicry was affecting pollination rates for any of the three species.

Cultivation

[edit]
Cross-shaped labellum (flower)

The plant is easily propagated from tip cuttings and pups (keikis) produced on the stems. It thrives in temperatures between 10° to 27°C (50°–80°F) and in USDA hardiness zone 10–12, under full sun or partial shade in loamy, sandy, well-drained soil. In summers, two hours of direct sunlight may scorch and dehydrate the plant, though the soil must not remain soggy or hold water. It can tolerate low nutrient areas and it does not require extensive maintenance. It can be potted in garden beds and should be potted in large containers (infrequent repotting will restrict its growth and potential blooms). Support may be necessary for a compact, upright growth, though the stems still grow and bloom even if they droop or ramble. A slow-release fertilizer may be necessary for vitality, in addition to mulch (to reduce competition from weeds and to maintain moisture).[8][9]

Pests include mealybugs, spider mites, scale, thrips, whitefly and root mealybugs. Diseases in cultivation include root rot, leaf spot disease, rust, mosaic virus, black rot, botrytis petal blight, powdery mildew and southern blight. Though generally, the plant is rarely bothered by pests or diseases, as it can adapt to a wide range of conditions compared to other orchid species.[8]

Taxonomic placement

[edit]

It is a crucifix orchid, often confused with many other members of the section Schistochila, including E. calanthe, E. cinnabarinum, E. denticulatum, E. erectum, E. fulgens, E. ibaguense, E. imatophyllum, E. incisum, E. schomburgkii, E. secundum, and E. xanthinum, among others.

A biochemical examination (Pinheiro & al., 2009) of the lacerate Schistochila subsections encompassing plastid nucleotide sequence data from the trnL—trnF regions, Amplified Fragment Length Polyorphism (AFLP) data, and somatic chromosome number for 30 individuals in three of the thirteen recognized species of E. subsect. Tuberculata and twenty individuals in eleven of the twelve recognized species of E. subsect. Carinata, including E. radicans, has suggested that perhaps E. subsect. Carinata should be replaced with three subsections: an "Atlantic" subsection, an "Andean" subsection, and a monotypic subsection for E. radicans.

The chromosome number of an individual collected in Ecuador has been determined as 2n = 60. Other reported chromosome numbers for E. radicans include 2n = 40, 2n = 57, 2n = 62, and 2n = 64[10]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Dube, S. (20 January 2017). "Epidendrum radicans (crucifix orchid)". CABI Digital Library. doi:10.1079/cabicompendium.119811.
  2. ^ Epidendrum radicans. Archived 8 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
  3. ^ Dressler, R.L. (1989). "Will the Real Epidendrum ibaguense please stand up?". American Orchid Society Bulletin. 58: 796–800.
  4. ^ "Epidendrum radicans". GardensOnline.
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References

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