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Aganisia cyanea

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Aganisia cyanea
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
(unranked):
(unranked):
Order:
Family:
Subfamily:
Tribe:
Subtribe:
Zygopetalinae
Alliance:
Zygopetalum
Genus:
Species:
A. cyanea
Binomial name
Aganisia cyanea
(Lindl.) Rchb.f. (1876)
Synonyms
  • Acacallis cyanea Lindl. (1853) (Basionym)
  • Warrea cinerea Benth. (1881)
  • Aganisia tricolor N.E. Br. (1885)
  • Kochiophyton negrense Schltr. ex Cogn. (1906)
  • Kochiophyton caeruleum Hoehne (1910)
  • Acacallis hoehnei Schltr. (1918)

Aganisia cyanea is a species of orchid from Columbia, Venezuela, and Brazil.

The plants are found in very wet, lowland rain forests in Columbia, Brazil, and Northern South America growing on lower sections of the trunks of large trees. The plants can be submerged under water during monsoons for several weeks due to flooding in habitat with no apparent harm.

The plants grow from a creeping rhizome with inter-spaced pseudobulbs with one apical, usually pleated leaf. These plants bloom from the base of the pseudobulbs, and produce a raceme of up to 10 flowers.

The flowers of these plants have a metallic, almost surreal appearance and appear to be made of bluish metal and are very striking, and some specific plants of this species produce flowers that are 'true blue', very rare among orchids. The flowers take on a more bluish caste when not exposed to direct sunlight.

Cultivation

In cultivation, they are best accommodated on tree fern or cork bark slabs mounted bare root and given high humidity and abundant water and feeding year round, and moderate shade. They prefer moderate to warm temperatures.

The species is much sought after in cultivation because of its blue metallic flowers, but plants from habitat in the past usually only survive a period of a few years in cultivation, and plants removed from habitat has proven very difficult to maintain in cultivation.

Recent seed grown plants have proven much hardier in cultivation. These plants are protected under CITES II and local and regional laws and should not be removed or disturbed in habitat. The plants are available commercially from flasked seedlings of varieties that are more amendable to cultivation and these plants are easily obtainable. [1][2]


References

  1. ^ The Orchids, Natural History and Classification, Robert L. Dressler. ISBN 0674875265
  2. ^ Illustrated Encyclopedia of Orchids ISBN 0881922676