142 EPIDENDRE^. Chap. V 



This contrivance is not common to all the sjiecies of 

 the genus; for in neither D. higihhum nor D. formosum 

 was the filament of the anther elastic, nor was the 

 middle line of the labellum thickened. In D. tortile 

 the filament is elastic ; but as I examined only a 

 single flower, and before I had made out the structure 

 of D. ehrysanthum, I cannot say how it acts. 



Mr. Anderson states * that on one occasion the flowers 

 of his Dendrohium cretaceum did not expand, and yet 

 they produced capsules, one of which he sent me. 

 Almost all the numerous seeds in this capsule con- 

 tained embryos, thus differing greatly from the cases 

 j)resently to be given of the self-fertilised seeds from 

 the non-expanded flowers of a Cattleya. Mr. Anderson 

 remarks that Dendrobiums are the sole representatives 

 of the Malaxeffi which, as far as he has seen, spon- 

 taneously form capsules. He likewise states that in 

 the immense group of the Vandeae, hereafter to be 

 described, none of the species under his care, with 

 the exception of some belonging to the sub-division 

 of the Brassidae and of Sarcanthus imrisliii, has evei 

 spontaneously produced a capsule, 



EPIDENDEE.E. 



The EpidendrcjE and Malaxeae are characterised by 

 the pollen-grains cohering into large waxy masses. 

 In the latter of these groups the pollinia are said not 

 to be furnished with caudicles, but this is not uni- 

 versally the case, for they exist in Masdevcdlia fenes- 

 trata and some other sjsecies in an efiicient condition, 

 although unattached and of minute size. In the 

 Epidendrese, on the other hand, free or unattached 

 caudicles are always present. For my purpose these 



' Journal of Horticulture,' 1SG3, pp. 206, 287. 



1 



