Maxillaria

Ruiz & Pavon

Fl. Peruv. Prodr., 116, plate 25. 1794.

Etymology: Latin maxilla, jawbone apparently an allusion to the open-mouth appearance of the flower when viewed laterally
Synonyms: Camaridium Lindley Ornithidium Salisbury Pseudomaxillaria Hoehne Sepalosaccus Schlechter
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 26. Treatment on page 644. Mentioned on page 495.

Herbs, epiphytic, rarely terrestrial, cespitose to climbing. Stems reduced [elongate], usually terminated with pseudobulb. Leaves 1–many; blade conduplicate, linear, lanceolate, or elliptic, margins entire. Inflorescences solitary flowers borne laterally within bract or leaf axil of rhizome of mature, immature, or apparently abortive shoots; floral bracts triangular, usually acute. Flowers: sepals and petals nearly same; dorsal sepal erect, concave; lateral sepals adnate to column foot; lip 3-lobed or simple; column not winged, semiterete, with foot at base; pollinia 4, waxy; stigmatic cavity round; rostellum not prominent. Fruits capsules, ellipsoid to obovoid.

Distribution

Tropical regions, Western Hemisphere.

Discussion

Species ca. 650 (2 in the flora).

Key

1 Plants conspicuously rhizomatous; pseudobulbs conspicuous; sepals less than 1 cm. Maxillaria parviflora
1 Plants cespitose; pseudobulbs absent or hidden from view; sepals more than 1 cm. Maxillaria crassifolia
... more about "Maxillaria"
John T. Atwood +
Ruiz & Pavon +
Tropical regions +  and Western Hemisphere. +
Latin maxilla, jawbone +  and apparently an allusion to the open-mouth appearance of the flower when viewed laterally +
Fl. Peruv. Prodr., +
atwood1993a +, brieger1977a +  and hammer1981a +
Camaridium +, Ornithidium +, Pseudomaxillaria +  and Sepalosaccus +
Maxillaria +
Orchidaceae (tribe Maxillarieae) subtribe Maxillariinae +