Pink Hook-Spur Balsam is a beautiful balsam species, which
is named for George Bentham, 19th century English botanical author.
Flowers are nearly 2.5 cm across and as deep, purple ; sepals very
variable, ovate or lanceshaped, straight or sickle shaped ; standard
with a dorsal conical blunt horn or swelling; wings 2-lobed ; lip
pouch-like, longer than broad ; spur short, incurved.
Flower-cluster-stalks are slender, shorter than the leaves, with as
many lanceshaped bracteoles as there are flower-stalks.
Flower-cluster-stalks horizontal, with 1-4 large flowers. Stems are
square in cross-section, 1-1.5 ft tall, more or less crisply hairy on
the stem and leaves above, rarely hairless. Leaves are 2.5-7.5 cm long,
opposite, nearly stalkless, stipulate lanceshaped tapering sawtoothed.
sometimes ovate- or oblong-lanceshaped, teeth often fringed with hairs,
pale beneath. Capsules are 1.8 cm, hairless, ellipsoid, turgid in the
middle. Seeds oblong, compressed ; testa pale, membranous. Pink Hook-Spur
Balsam is found in Eastern Himalayas, in Khasi hills, at altitudes of
1300-2000 m.
Identification credit: Rajib Gogoi
Photographed in Meghalaya.
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The flower labeled Pink Hook-Spur Balsam is ...