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The following article was written
for the Orchid Species Bulletin published by the Orchid
Species Society, which is based in Brisbane,
Queensland in April 2006.
Bear in mind that any cultivation notes refer to the sub-tropical conditions of Southern Queensland, Australia.
Cattleya lueddemanniana
Rchb.f. was
first sent to Mr. Pescatore at
St. Cloud
, Paris as C. maxima.
Upon flowering it proved to be a different species and was named by the
younger Reichenbach as C. lueddemanniana in Xenia
Orchidacea in 1854. Heinrich
Reichenbach named the species after Pescatore's gardener.
C.
lueddemanniana is a unifoliate plant with
pseudobulbs that are 7-27 cm long and 8-25 mm broad.
Borne along a rhizome at 1-3 cm intervals, the pseudobulb bears an apical
leaf that is 8.5-20 cm long and 3-6
cm wide. When compared to other
unifoliate species, C. lueddemanniana has more cylindrical and smoother pseudobulbs and
generally a narrower, longer leaf. Inflorescences
that are 3-13 cm long are produced from a sheath that is 3-10 cm long in spring.
The racemes usually bear 2-3 (rarely 4) large showy flowers that are
15-20 cm across. The development
from new growth through to flowering is continuous and the flowers last for
about 2-3 weeks.
The strongly perfumed flowers of C.
lueddemanniana vary from pale to medium, rarely dark,
rose-purple. The lip is rose-purple,
paler towards the base, with dull cream-yellow centrally at the base.
There are two pale yellow to sometimes white eye-like patches on either
side half way along the length. Purple
lines from the base, along the mid-line eventually radiate and grade to
irregular dark purple nerve lines and irregular spots and splashes on the apical
third which can sometimes be solidly coloured. Rarer
colour forms include fma. alba Hort.
ex Godefroy which has pure white flowers with yellow in the throat; fma. coerulea Hort. with blush violet-blue blooms that have a darker
violet-blue lip with yellow eyes; and semi-alba forms with white flowers that
have a dark purple lip. One famous
semi-alba cultivar is 'Stanleyi' FCC/RHS which has white flowers that have a
purple lip with deep yellow eyes.
Endemic to
Venezuela, C. lueddemanniana
is found in the lower, warm to hot regions of the north-facing slopes of the
Coastal
Range, generally west of
Caracas
between sea level and 700 m altitude.
It can be found growing on the upper trunks of trees but also on thorn
bushes and columnar cacti in drier forests.
During the day the habitat experiences temperatures greater than 30 oC
with nights dropping sometimes below 18 oC.
Carl Withner (1990) says that is best grown in a warmer part of the
greenhouse and needs plenty of light and fresh air, reflecting its sea level
habitats.
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