Prev Taxon: Genus Dendrobium section Fugacia
Current Genus: Genus Dendrobium Section Grastidium
Next Taxon: Genus Dendrobium section Herpetophytum
Dendrobium igneum J.J.Sm., Bull. Dép. Agric. Indes Néerl. 19 (1908) 17; Nova Guinea 8, 1 (1909) 73, t. 25, fig. 79.
Type: Versteeg 1260 (syn BO; iso L); 1572 (syn BO).
Synonyms:
Rhizome short (roots thick). Stems crowded, erect to patent, compressed, elliptic in cross-section, 30-40 cm long, densely many-leaved, internodes 0.5-0.7 cm long. Leaf sheaths tubular, twice as long as the internodes, compressed. Leaves widely patent, ovate-oblong, 1.6-3.2 by 0.75-1.3 cm, base half-twisted, apex obtuse, unequally bilobed, the lobes rounded; with 5-7 main nerves. Inflorescences arising laterally from the stem, perforating two leaf-sheaths, very short, 2-flowered, spathe laterally compressed, 0.3-0.4 cm long, rounded. Pedicel 1.6-1.75 cm long; ovary 0.3-0.35 cm long, 6-ribbed. Flowers c. 3 cm across. Dorsal sepal oblong, 1.35-1.5 cm by 6.7-7 mm, 7-nerved, apex obtuse. Lateral sepals obliquely oblong-triangular, 1.4-1.7 cm by 10 mm, apex obtuse, apiculate to subacute; concave; mentum broad, c. 0.7 cm long, obtuse, dorsally compressed. Petals obovate, claw-like narrowed to the base, 1.45-1.7 cm by 7.4-9 mm, at the base 3-nerved, apex broadly obtuse. Lip 3-lobed near the middle, 1.35-1.5 by 0.77-0.8 cm, with a longitudinal basal keel extending to the base of the midlobe, near the apex with a subulate backwards-pointing tooth, midlobe inside transversely rugose; lateral lobes erect, triangular, more or less falcate-incurved, erose to finely laciniate, apex acute; midlobe much larger, at right angles to the base of the lip, broadly cuneate, 0.65-0.7 by 0.7-0.76 cm, apex lightly rounded, weakly erose. Column broad, 0.45 cm long, clinandrium 3-lobulate, dentate, the lateral lobules narrow, the median filiform; stigma large, transverse, trapeziform; rostellum absent (always?); column-foot at an acute angle to the ovary, 0.66-0.7 cm long, broadly linear, incurved, at the apex with two low swellings. Anther cucullate, constricted below the apex, in front broad.
(after Smith, 1909).
Tepals in front orange, at the back whitish.
Epiphyte in lowland forest, hill forest on limestone, and in Pandanus and Metroxylon swamps.
New Guinea (endemic).
Warm growing epiphyte, keep in shade.
February, June, August.
The neat habit with dense, regular foliage, and the relatively large, glistening orange flowers which are white at the back make Dendrobium igneum J.J.Sm. one of the prettier members of sect. Grastidium.
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