10 ORCHIDS OF JAMAICA 



ivVvVn; 



1. HABENARIA Willd. 



Terrestrial herbs, with tubers or fleshy roots. Stem erect, 

 simple, with a few leaves which are sheathing at their base. 

 Flowers shortly stalked, in a raceme. Sepals unequal, free ; 

 median hooded ; lateral spreading or deflexed. Petals smaller ,^ 

 2-partite, or simple. Lip continuous with the column, spreading 

 or pendulous, spurred, 3-partite, or simple. Column very short, 

 without a foot ; stigma produced into two papillose processes ; 

 anther-cells distant from one another ; pollinia in each cell 

 granulai', with long stalks lying in the anther-canals and each 

 ending in a naked gland. Capsule narrowly ellipsoidal. 



There are about 500 known species, natives mainly of the 

 warmer regions of both hemispheres. 



§ 1. Petals 2-partite ; lip 3-partite. 

 Stean leafy upwards. 



Spur much longer than ovary 1. H. viacroceratitis. 



Spur not much longer, or shorter, than 

 ovary. 



Stem erect, with short roots 2. H. monorrhiza. 



Stem creeping at base, with long roots 3. H. repens. 



Stem leafy at base only 4. H. distans. 



§ 2. Petals entire ; lip simple. 



Spur much longer than ovary 5. H. PurdieL 



Spur not much longer, or shorter, than ovary. 



Sepals and petals acute 6. H. alata. 



Sepals and petals obtuse. 



Spur tapering towards apex 7. H. socialis. 



Spur thickened towards apex 8. H. troy ana. 



• WIT' 



§ 1 . Petals 2-partite ; lip 3-partite. 



1. H. maeroeeratitis Willd. S^. PL iv. 44 (1805); leaves 

 reticulately many -nerved, oval to elliptical-oblong ; spike few- 

 flowered ; spur much longer than ovary, curved. — Griseb. FL Br. 

 W. Ind. 643; Cogn. in Symh. Ant. vi. 299; Ames Orch. iv. 222. 

 H. macroceras Spreng. Syst. Hi. 692 (1826); Hooh. in Bot. Mag. 

 t 2947 ; Lindl. Gen. d Sp. Orch. 308. Orchis habenaria L.* 

 Syst. ed. 10, 1242 (1759) & Herh. Linn.; Sic. Obs. Bot. 319, t. 9. 

 (PI. 1, f. 1.) 



On stony ground ; in fl. Oct.-Jan. ; Shakespear ! Swartz ! Bancroft ! 

 Waters I Alligator Pond, Purdie 1 Fairfield, WuUschlaegel, 1050 ! Moaeague, 

 Priori Marchl Lady Blake \ Bed Hills, J.P. 467, Morris I Stony Hill, 

 J.P. 241Q, 8ymel near Browns Town, Miss T. M. Barrett I Lacovia, 



* The species name is generally spelt with a capital initial, Habenaria 

 being the name of a genus. Linnseus, however, did not take the trivial 

 name from a generic name, as Habenaria was founded much later by 

 Willdenow (1805). As therefore the species name is not taken from a 

 generic name (see International Rules of Botanical Nomenclature (1905) 

 Rec. x) it should begin with a small letter as in Linnseus's original 

 description. 



