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Bulbophyllum beccarii

Species of orchid from Borneo

Bulbophyllum beccarii

Species of orchid from Borneo

|Phyllorkis beccarii|(Rchb.f.) Kuntze}}

Bulbophyllum beccarii is by far the largest species in the genus Bulbophyllum and one of the largest in the orchid family, perhaps second only to Grammatophyllum speciosum.

Illustration showing the inflorescence of ''Bulbophyllum beccarii''.

The thick rhizome, reportedly up to 20 cm in diameter (but the thickest reliably reported has been 5 cm) snakes its way around tree trunks climbing up into the light. Exact length figures are not available, but its discoverer, Odoardo Beccari, reported that it climbed "to a great height". Along its length at intervals are the relatively small egg shaped pseudobulbs each with a huge thick, leathery leaf at their apex. They are up to 60 cm long and 20 cm wide, yellowish-green and point vertically. The huge bowl shaped leaves are designed to catch falling debris and turn it into fertilizers. The inflorescence is produced from the rhizome near one of the pseudobulbs and hangs downwards to about 20–22 cm and is composed of hundreds of small yellowish flowers netted with red that smell like rotting meat to attract various flies. It grows in the rainforests of Borneo.

References

References

  1. "''Bulbophyllum beccarii'' Rchb.f.".
  2. "Bulbophyllum beccarii Rchb. f. 1879 SECTION Leopardinae Bentham 1883". Internet Orchid Species Photo Encyclopedia.
  3. "''Bulbophyllum beccarii'' Rchb.f.".
  4. Beccari, Odoardo. (1904). "Wanderings in the Great Forests of Borneo". Archibald Constable.
  5. (2 September 2015). "Litter Trapping Plants: Filter Feeders of the Plant Kingdom". Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society of Loncon.
  6. Peter Parker. (8 June 2002). "The siren of the species". The Telegraph.
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