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Phalaenopsis proboscidioides is an orchid species identified by C.S.P.Parish ex Rchb.f. in 1868. Culture information and photos for this orchid are commonly detailed under the currently accepted name of Phalaenopsis lowii.
ORIGIN: A hot to to warm growing, miniature epiphyte or sometimes lithophyte with deciduous leaves from Myanmar, Thailand and Borneo found in conjunction with limestone rocks at elevations around sea-level to 800 meters near rivers.
DESCRIPTION: A hot to to warm growing, miniature epiphyte or sometimes lithophyte with deciduous leaves from Myanmar, Thailand and Borneo found in conjunction with limestone rocks at elevations around sea-level to 800 meters near rivers with an erect or ascending stem enveloped by imbricating leaf bases carrying elliptic, obovate or oblong-elliptic, fleshy, acute or obtuse leaves that blooms in the summer and fall on a lateral, arcuate to pendant, 10 to 15 [25 to 37.5 cm] long, racemose or rarely paniculate, laxly many flowered inflorescence with small triangular bracts and fragrant, fleshy, long-lived flowers that have an extremely long, beak-like rostellum.
FLOWER SIZE: About 2 inches [5 cm]
-- information provided by Jay Pfahl, author of the
Internet Orchid Species Encyclopedia (IOSPE).
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