24 THE ORCHID REVIEW. [ JANUARY, 1908 
many others. It isa discovery of the Rev. C. Parish, and was introduced 
by Messrs. Hugh Low & Co. in 1864. The specimen figured was grown 
in the collection of Walter C. Clarke, Esq., Sefton Park, Liverpool. Its 
nearest ally is the North Indian D. densiflorum, in which the sepals and 
petals are buff yellow. D. Farmeri is also very similar, but has pink sepals 
and petals. 
D. BRYMERIANUM (fig. 3) isa very remarkable yellow-flowered species, 
in which the lip is broken up into long branched fringes, not unlike a stag’s 
horn in appearance. It is a native of Burma, and was introduced 
Messrs. Hugh Low & Co. in 1874, and dedicated to W. E. Brymer, 
Fig. 3- DENDROBIUM Bryn ERIANUM. 
}-> gton House, Dorchester, in whose collection it first flowered. 
The character of the lip is quite un; in ¢ I 
ot the lip is quite unique in the genus, though a greatly 
reduced fringe is se | 
S en It ; hires fs , . c é 
hy ; : in D, fimbriat un Yl, a golden-yellow species, frequently 
laving a Jarge blackisl a g Sai ae ag ve 
5 Ne icKISN-maroon biotch on the lip’s disc. In that the 
flowers are borne j 1 
owers are borne in pendulous racemes, somewhat like those previously 
ent ioned but in D 3r [ | 
, La i ° rTmeeria inhaa t 7 ae > “TN ] i 
m Brymerianum they are borne singly or in groups of 
two or three ‘eisa histrioni 
J = a nere 1 Ve r1egty i r ) SL il 
; IS a variety histrionicum, described by Reichen a 
Ir turhicl } i. : ] : 
in which the fringe js lecsc d | 
Lic ‘ 1Pee 1S les Le A fj 
o5© 1S tess developed, and the flow lich are ud to 
