Short-Lip Slipper Orchid is a small sized, terrestrial
orchid with 3-5, oblong-lanceshaped, dark blue green motttled paler on
top and mottled purple underneath leaves. It is named for F. Kingdon-Ward,
20th century English botanist in Asia. The plant blooms in the
mid-winter to early spring on an erect, 20 cm long, at branch-ends
inflorescence with lanceshaped, fringed with hairs, green flushed
purple, less than half as long as the ovary floral bracts carrying a
single glossy flower. Flower is 7-10 cm in diameter, dorsal sepal and
synsepal white or whitish green, veined with deep green; petals
greenish white, flushed with purplish brown and spotted throughout with
blackish brown. Lip is greenish to pale yellow-brown, veined and finely
spotted with brown; staminode greenish marbled, deep green centrally.
Lip is helmet-shaped, 3.4-4.6 cm, warty on incurved lateral lobes;
pouch 2.2-2.5 x 2-2.4 cm, outside slightly finely velvet-hairy. Short-Lip
Slipper Orchid is believed to be extinct in East Himalaya, but is found
in Myanmar to China. Flowering: December-March.
Identification credit: Jambey Tsering
Photographed in Sessa, West Kameng, Arunachal Pradesh.
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The flower labeled Short-Lip Slipper Orchid is ...