Vanilla barbellata Rchb. f. (redirected from: Vanilla articulata)
Family: Orchidaceae
[Vanilla articulata Northrop]
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Roots usually 1-2 per node, gray, 1-3 mm diam. when aerial, thicker and villous when in contact with substrate, glabrous. Stems occasionally branched, 3-9 mm diam., smooth. Leaves early deciduous; blade broad basally, otherwise narrowly lanceolate, relatively thin, to 4 × 0.8 cm. Inflorescences axillary on short lateral branches, several- to many-flowered racemes, 1.5-6 cm excluding peduncle; floral bracts broadly ovate, 4-12 mm, fleshy. Flowers: sepals and petals green, somewhat spreading, distinct and free; sepals oblong-oblanceolate, 3-4 × 0.9-1.2 cm; petals oblong-oblanceolate, slightly falcate, dorsally keeled, 3-4 × 1-1.3 cm, apex acute to obtuse; lip greenish abaxially, deep red adaxially, shading to white margin, with broad, yellow midrib, overall triangular-obovate, medially thickened, apex 3-lobed, lateral lobes arching over column, orbiculate, margins involute, sinuses 4-5 mm deep, middle lobe reflexed, fleshy; disc with tuft of rigid, retrorse bristles; claw and basal margins adnate to proximal 1/2 of column; column straight, semiterete, 2.3-3.3 cm; pedicellate ovary 3-4.5 cm. Berries pendent, fusiform-cylindric, slightly curved, 7-9 cm × 9-13 mm.

Flowering Apr--Jun. Mangroves, coastal hammocks, bay tree islands, rocky pinelands; 0--20 m; Fla.; West Indies.

Vanilla barbellata is known in the flora area from several keys in Everglades National Park, Miami, Miami-Dade and Monroe counties, Florida (P. M. Brown 2002).