Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Black rot on orchids is caused by Pythium and Phytophthora species. [1] Black rot targets a variety of orchids but Cattleya orchids are especially susceptible. [1] Pythium ultimum and Phytophthora cactorum are known to cause black rot in orchids. [1] Pythium ultimum is a pathogen that causes damping-off and root rot on plants. [2]
Cymbidium suave, commonly known as the snake orchid [2] or grassy boat-lip orchid, [3] is a plant in the orchid family and is endemic to eastern Australia. It is an epiphytic orchid that forms long-lasting clumps of grass-like leaves. Up to fifty crowded olive green to dark or brownish green flowers are borne on an arching flowering stem.
Cymbidium / s ɪ m ˈ b ɪ d i ə m /, [2] commonly known as boat orchids, is a genus of evergreen flowering plants in the orchid family Orchidaceae. Orchids in this genus are epiphytic, lithophytic, terrestrial or rarely leafless saprophytic herbs usually with pseudobulbs. There are usually between three and twelve leaves arranged in two ranks ...
Cymbidium canaliculatum is an epiphytic, clump-forming herb with greyish green pseudobulbs 80–120 mm (3.1–4.7 in) long and 30–40 mm (1–2 in) wide. Each pseudobulb has between two and six rigid, fleshy, curved, deeply channelled leaves 300–500 mm (12–20 in) and 30–40 mm (1–2 in) wide.
Cymbidium chloranthum, the green-flowered cymbidium, is a species of orchid. Media related to Cymbidium chloranthum at Wikimedia Commons This page was ...
Cymbidium madidum, commonly known as the giant boat-lip orchid, [2] is a plant in the orchid family and is endemic to north-eastern Australia.It is a clump-forming epiphyte or lithophyte with crowded pseudobulbs, each with between four and eight flat, strap-shaped, thin leaves and up to seventy olive green flowers with the sepals and petals curving forwards.
Cymbidium iridioides, commonly known as the Iris-Like Cymbidium [1] is a species of boat orchid. It is a pseudobulbous epiphyte found from Himalaya to south-central China . [ 2 ]
Cymbidium: The name derives from the Greek word kumbos, which means "hole, cavity". This refers to the shape of the base of the lip. This refers to the shape of the base of the lip. According to other scholars it derives from the Greek kimbe , which means boat, for the shape of the ship that the lip assumes.