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Lophiaris oestlundiana is an orchid species identified by (L.O.Williams) Braem in 1993. Culture information and photos for this orchid are commonly detailed under the currently accepted name of Trichocentrum oestlundianum.
ORIGIN: Found in Jalisco, Michoacan and Nayarit Mexico on and near the Pacific coast in mangrove swamps, wooded roadsides and barren lava flows as a small sized, hot to warm growing, mule-eared epiphyte or occasional lithophyte on rocks at elevations of sea-level to 1300 meters.
DESCRIPTION: Found in Jalisco, Michoacan and Nayarit Mexico on and near the Pacific coast in mangrove swamps, wooded roadsides and barren lava flows as a small sized, hot to warm growing, mule-eared epiphyte or occasional lithophyte on rocks at elevations of sea-level to 1300 meters with small ovoid pseudobulbs partially enveloped below by triangular, leafless sheaths carrying a single, apical, oblong-lanceolate, purplish leaf that is keeled below that blooms in the late spring and summer on an axillary, erect, 18" long, racemose, successively opening inflorescence arising from the base of a newly matured pseudobulb with only a few, waxy, long lived flowers open at a time. This racemose inflorescence can expand over time and new flowers can appear over the blooming period on the old spike.
FLOWER SIZE: 0.8 inches [2 cm]
-- information provided by Jay Pfahl, author of the
Internet Orchid Species Encyclopedia (IOSPE).
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