Stanhopea


Stanhopea is a genus of the orchid family from Central and South America. The abbreviation used in horticultural trade is Stan. The genus is named for Philip Henry Stanhope, 4th Earl Stanhope, who was the president of the Medico-Botanical Society of London in 1829–1837. It comprises 55 species and 5 natural hybrids. The orchids in the genus are mostly epiphytic, but occasionally terrestrial. They can be found in damp forests from Mexico to Trinidad to northwestern Argentina. Their ovate pseudobulbs carry from the top one long, plicate, elliptic leaf.
Stanhopea is noted for its complex and usually fragrant flowers that are generally spectacular and short-lived. Their pendant inflorescences are noted for flowering out of the bottom of the containers in which they grow, lending themselves to culture in baskets that have enough open space for the inflorescence to push through. They are sometimes called upside-down orchids.
The majority of species are robust plants that grow readily in cultivation. For relatives of Stanhopea see Stanhopeinae and the closely related sister subtribe Coeliopsidinae.

Description

Most Stanhopea flowers flash prominent, elegant horns on the epichile. The exception are the species; S. annulata, S. avicula, S. cirrhata, S. ecornuta and S. pulla. A second group have short or truncated horns, they include the species; S. candida, S. grandiflora, S. reichenbachiana, S. tricornis and the natural hybrid S. x herrenhusana. The structure of the labellum of this group is in general, not as complex as other members of the genus.
With most Stanhopea flowers lasting three days or less, the flowers must attract pollinators very quickly. These chemical attractants are generated in the hypochile, attracting the male euglossine bees to the flower. These male euglossine bees are known to be important pollinators of Stanhopea flowers, collecting fragrances at these flowers over their lifetime and storing them in their hind tibia. Bees in the Euglossini tribe, including Eulaema meriana, are known to pollinate these flowers supposedly because the orchids can deceptively mimic the form of a female and her sex pheromone. When the bee touches down on the flower, a great effort is made to collect chemical scent - he eventually slides on the waxy surface of the hypochile, gliding down on the slippery lip to exit the flower. The long column is touched in the process, resulting in the bee taking up pollinia at the very tip of the column. When the bee slides down another flower, the pollinia are deposited on the sticky surface of the stigma.

Species

  • Stanhopea aliceae Pérez-García, Chiron & Szlach.
  • Stanhopea anfracta Rolfe
  • Stanhopea annulata Mansf.
  • Stanhopea avicula Dressler
  • Stanhopea bueraremensis Campacci & Marçal
  • Stanhopea candida Barb.Rodr.
  • Stanhopea cephalopodaa Archila, Pérez-García, Chiron & Szlach.
  • Stanhopea chironii Archila, Pérez-García & Szlach.
  • Stanhopea cirrhata Lindl.
  • Stanhopea confusa G.Gerlach & Beeche
  • Stanhopea connata Klotzsch
  • Stanhopea costaricensis Rchb.f.
  • Stanhopea deltoidea Lem.
  • Stanhopea dodsoniana Salazar & Soto Arenas
  • Stanhopea ecornuta Lem.
  • Stanhopea embreei Dodson
  • Stanhopea florida Rchb.f.
  • Stanhopea fonsecae Archila, Pérez-García, Chiron & Szlach.
  • Stanhopea frymirei Dodson
  • Stanhopea gibbosa Rchb.f.
  • Stanhopea grandiflora Lindl.
  • Stanhopea graveolens Lindl.
  • Stanhopea greeri Jenny
  • Stanhopea guttulata Lindl.
  • Stanhopea haseloffiana Rchb.f.
  • Stanhopea hernandezii Schltr.
  • Stanhopea insignis J.Frost ex Hook.
  • Stanhopea intermedia Klinge
  • Stanhopea javieri Archila, Pérez-García, Chiron & Szlach.
  • Stanhopea jenischiana F.Kramer ex Rchb.f.
  • Stanhopea lietzei Schltr.
  • Stanhopea macrocornata Archila, Pérez-García, Chiron & Szlach.
  • Stanhopea maculosa Knowles & Westc.
  • Stanhopea madouxiana Cogn.
  • Stanhopea maduroi Dodson & Dressler
  • Stanhopea manriqueii Jenny & Nauray
  • Stanhopea marizana Jenny
  • Stanhopea martiana Bateman ex Lindl.
  • Stanhopea marylenae Archila, Chiron & Pérez-García
  • Stanhopea moliana Rolfe
  • Stanhopea napoensis Dodson
  • Stanhopea naurayi Jenny
  • Stanhopea nicaraguensis G.Gerlach
  • Stanhopea nigripes Rolfe
  • Stanhopea novogaliciana S.Rosillo
  • Stanhopea oculata Lindl.
  • Stanhopea oscarrodrigoi Archila, Pérez-García, Chiron & Szlach.
  • Stanhopea ospinae Dodson
  • Stanhopea panamensis N.H.Williams & W.M.Whitten
  • Stanhopea peruviana Rolfe
  • Stanhopea platyceras Rchb.f.
  • Stanhopea posadae Jenny et Braem
  • Stanhopea pozoi Dodson & D.E.Benn.
  • Stanhopea pseudoradiosa Jenny & R.Gonzalez
  • Stanhopea pulla Rchb.f.
  • Stanhopea radiosa Lem.
  • Stanhopea reichenbachiana Roezl ex Rchb.f.
  • Stanhopea rubroatrata Archila, Pérez-García, Chiron & Szlach.
  • Stanhopea rubromaculata Archila, Pérez-García, Chiron & Szlach.
  • Stanhopea ruckeri Lindl.
  • Stanhopea saccata Bateman
  • Stanhopea saintexuperyi Archila, Pérez-García, Chiron & Szlach.
  • Stanhopea schilleriana Rchb.f.
  • Stanhopea shuttleworthii Rchb.f.
  • Stanhopea stevensonii A.Mejia & R.Escobar ex Jenny
  • Stanhopea szlachetkoana Archila, Pérez-García & Chiron
  • Stanhopea tigrina Bateman ex Lindl.
  • Stanhopea tolimensis G.Gerlach
  • Stanhopea tricornis Lindl.
  • Stanhopea victoriana Archila, Pérez-García, Chiron & Szlach.
  • Stanhopea wardii Lodd. ex Lindl.
  • Stanhopea warszewicziana Klotzsch
  • Stanhopea whittenii Soto Arenas, Salazar & G.Gerlach
  • Stanhopea xanthoviridea Archila, Pérez-García, Chiron & Szlach.
  • Stanhopea xytriophora Rchb.f.

    Natural hybrids

  • Stanhopea × fowlieana Jenny
  • Stanhopea × herrenhusana Jenny
  • Stanhopea × horichiana Jenny
  • Stanhopea × lewisae Ames & Correll
  • Stanhopea × quadricornis Lindl.
  • Stanhopea × thienii Dodson

    Intergeneric hybrids

  • × Aciopea. Aciopea Guillermo Gaviria was registered Nov-Dec 2004 by Guillermo Gaviria-Correa.
  • Aciopea is abbreviated Aip.
  • × Cirrhopea
  • × Coryhopea
  • × Stangora
  • × ''Stanhocycnis''

    Species

Natural hybrids