386 orchid-grower's manual. 



E. GRAHAMII — See E. Phoeniceum. 



E. GUTTATUM.— See Oncidium luhidtjm guitatum. 



E. HANBURII, Lindl. — A distinct and well-marked species, which, though 

 not so showy as some of its congeners, is worth growing on account of its 

 pleasing colour. It has largish ovate pseudobulbs, broad ensiform leathery 

 leaves, and scapes about 2 feet high, bearing well-filled racemes of flowers ; the 

 spathulate sepals and petals are deep purple, and the three-lobed lip pale rose 

 with radiating crimson veins. It blooms during the spring months, lasting long 

 in beauty.— ilfeitico. 



Fl&.—Cfartenflora, t. 398. 



E. IBAGUENSE, HwnJj.et Kunth. — A very handsome species, with tall slender 

 stems as thick as a swan's quill, leafy in the upper portion, the leaves very 

 fleshy, oblong obtuse, and stem-clasping, the extreme end of the stem leafless, 

 and terminating in a dense almost globose head of orange-coloured flowers with 

 a yellow obcordate lip, the lateral lobes of which are cordate, rounded at the tip 

 and fimbriate. — New Grenada ; Peru. 



Fid.— Floral Mag., t. 390. 



E. IMPERATOR — See E. catillus. 



E. INCUMBENS — See E. akomaticum. 



E. INVERSUM, Lindl. — This is a pretty little species, one that is seldom seen 

 in collections however, but it is useful for its delicate colour, for its grateful 

 perfume, which is not powerful, and the time of year at which it blooms. It is 

 a plant that enjoys the temperature of the intermediate house. Pseudobulbs 

 elongate, slightly compressed, some 6 inches high, bearing a pair of oblong 

 obtuse leaves which are deep green ; scape terminal, bearing about six or eight 

 flowers, the lip uppermost as in E. cochleatum, sweet scented ; sepals and petals 

 nearly equal, linear-lanceolate, milk-white; lip ovate, acuminate, milk- white, 

 with a few streaks of purplish-mauve round the base. Flowers in the autumn 

 and winter months. — Frovinee of Minas Oeraes, Brazil. 



Fig.— Bevue Hurt. Beige, 1892, p. 169, t. 15. 



E. KARWINSKII — See E. bicameratum. 



E. KIENASTIANUNI, Bchb.f. — This new species was first flowered by Consul 

 Kienast ZoUy, Zurich, and is described by the late Prof. Reichenbach, in the 

 Gardeners' Chronicle, 1887, ii. p. 126, as follows : — " Tou may compare the bulbs 

 to those of a small E. aurantiaoum, as they are thinner and shorter. The 

 leaves, usually two, are cuneate-oblong acute, sometimes even more than an inch 

 wide, at others scarcely ^ an inch broad, 6 inches long, not of a considerably 

 thick substance ; the raceme has several flowers, two-thirds in extent of those of 

 E. nemorale, Lindl. ; the bracts are triangular, rather short, equalling one-fifth of 

 the stalked ovaries ; sepals lanceolate, the median one now dilated at the top, as 

 an exception ; petals much cuneate at the base, oblong acute ; lip tri-partite, side 

 partitions cuneate-ligulate, two-toothed outside, mid lacinia cuneate oblong acute, 

 wavy." — Mexico. 



