Prosthechea cochleata var. triandra (Ames) W.E. Higgins (redirected from: Encyclia cochleata var. triandra)
Family: Orchidaceae
[Anacheilium cochleatum var. triandrum (Ames) Sauleda, Wunderlin & B.F. Hansen,  more...]
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Plants to 60 cm. Stems: pseudobulbs slightly spaced, ovoid to ellipsoid, usually elongate, flattened, 3-15 × 1-3.5 cm. Leaves 1-3, oblong-lanceolate to linear-lanceolate, 5-40 × 1-6 cm. Inflorescences racemes, rarely paniculate, pedunculate, elongate, loosely few-flowered, to 45 cm, base with 1 or 2 spathes. Flowers not resupinate, successive, usually 3-4 open at a time, sometimes with capsules present, green to yellowish green with a few purplish spots near base; sepals and petals similar, hanging, twisted, linear-lanceolate, 25-35 × 3-6 mm; lip deep purple, orbiculate-cordate, concave, 1.2-2.3 × 1.5-3 mm, base whitish marked with conspicuous purple veins, calli 2, yellowish, cushionlike, apex sharply mucronate; anthers 3, middle anther with 4 pollinia, laterals with 2 each, orange; column short, stout, 6-10 mm, apex 5-toothed. Capsules 2-4 × 0.8-1.5 cm.

Flowering Oct--Mar; fruiting Nov--May. In hammocks and cypress swamps, on trees and rocks; 0--30 m; Fla.

The autogamous, 3-anthered Prosthechea cochleata var. triandra is the only variety found in Florida (Broward, Collier, Miami-Dade, Lee, Martin, Monroe counties, and Florida Keys), probably because of the absence of a pollinator. Throughout the rest of the distribution of the species, 3-anthered, abnormal individuals seldom occur, and no populations have been reported. The 1-anthered var. cochleata occurs in Mexico, West Indies, Central America, and northern South America.