Crowned-Lip Eria is a miniature to medium sized,
warm to cold growing orchid found on tree or mossy limestone rocks.
Plants are hairless, turning black when dried. Rhizomes are creeping,
4-5 mm in diameter, often with funnel-shaped sheaths 6-7 mm.
Pseudobulbs are cylindric, 5-15 cm x 3-6 mm. Leaves are 2, at
branch-ends, stalkless, narrowly elliptic or obovate-elliptic, rarely
ovate-lanceshaped, 6-16 x 1-4 cm, pointed or blunt. Flowers arising
between leaves, in 10-30 cm long, 2-6-flowered clusters. Floral bracts
are lanceshaped or linear, rarely ovate-lanceshaped, 5-8 mm. Flowers
are white, with purple stripes on lip, flower-stalk and ovary about 1.5
cm. Dorsal sepal is elliptic-lanceshaped, about 17 x 5 mm, blunt,
lateral sepals sickle shaped-lanceshaped, about 15 x 5 mm, blunt.
Petals are oblong-lanceshaped, about 17 x 4.5 mm, blunt; lip oblong in
outline, 14-15 x 11-12 mm, 3-lobed; lateral lobes divaricate, nearly
round or suboblong; mid-lobe triangular or subsquare, about 5 x 4 mm,
pointed or subflat; disk with 3 entire or wavy lamellae running from
base to mid-lobe and with 2-4 additional rounded toothed or wavy
lamellae on mid-lobe. Column about 5 mm, foot about 5 mm. Capsules are
obovoid-cylindric, about 2 cm; fruiting flower-stalk about 3 mm.
Crowned-Lip Eria is found in the Himalayas, from Nepal to Bhutan,
Assam, SE Tibet, W. China, at altitudes of 200-2300 m. It is also found
in the Western Ghats. Flowering: October-November.
Identification credit: Pankaj Kumar
Photographed in Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve, Tamil Nadu.
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The flower labeled Crowned-Lip Eria is ...