DECEMBER, 1903] THE ORCHID REVIEW. ; 369 
near Champon, (whence P. Godefroy originally came), growing on lime- 
stone cliffs facing the sea ; in Cambodia, whence it was sent by the late M. 
Godefroy-Lebeuf; and in Tonkin; so that it is a very widely diffused 
species. Several varieties have been described. 
P. BELLATULUM (fig. 56), was also introduced by Messrs. Hugh Low & 
Co., in the spring of 1888, from a locality unspecified, but Mr. Ridley has 
since recorded its habitat as Siam, just outside the boundary of the Malay 
Peninsula. Afterwards it was discovered in the Shan States, Upper Burma, 
by the late Mr. R. Moore, the discoverer of P. Charlesworthii, who described 
Fic. 56. PAPHIOPEDILUM BELLATULUM. 
it as generally distributed in the neighbourhood of Fort Stedman, within a 
radius of some thirty to fifty miles round Lake Inle, growing on low hills, 
in loam, among the undergrowth, or on rocks to some extent exposed to the 
sun (O. &., iil, pp. 169-170). No other species of the group was found there. 
It is a much more vigorous plant than P. Godefroye, and varies consider- 
ably in the amount of spotting on the flowers, the variety album (O. R., vi, 
p- 395, fig. 15) being quite unspotted. 
