WHY I DO THIS BLOG ON RARE PLANTS

This blog is a labor of love. Because of my love for unusual, tropical plants and the ways to make them prosper, I searched high and low for information and data on the more obscure denizens of the plant Kingdom my information database grew and I realized that Much of the Data on Obscure Species was Unavailable or written in a cold scientific manner. In Addition, many things in garden books will not tell you of the potentially bad aspects of plant species because they were compiled by people who did not actually grow the plants themselves.Finally,as a gardener of unusual plants, I and others searched relentlessly for species, pictures, seeds, and descriptions of plants that are Unusual and easy to maintain yet many of which are never seen outside of a botanical garden.
I talked to people and found that many of my friends and associates wanted cuttings (and had as much success with them as I did) It occurred to me that there are a great deal of people out there that relish unusual and odd plants but the mainstream Plant distributors only carry "Safe" plants, Yet the dealers who deal in unusual make a killing in the plant business. How are People supposed to know about these Floral finds unless they are exposed to them.

According to the report “State of the worlds plants”by researchers at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, in the United Kingdom, there are about 391,000 species of vascular plants currently known to science. Of these, about 369,000 species (or 94 percent) are flowering plants.


By scanning through several plant databases, including the the Plant List, the International Plant Names Index and the World Checklist of Selected Plant Families, the team found that 391,000 vascular plants are currently known to science. Moreover, about 2,000 new plant species are discovered or described every year. Many of these newly described are already on The endangered list

#plantaddict #rareplant

#plantgeek


CATASETUM...THE ORCHID THAT BITES

Pronounced (kat-uh-SEE-tum) comes from a Greek preposition cata, meaning downward direction and from the Latin seta meaning bristles.
Catasetum's inflorescence is borne on the basis of sex of the flowers. Inflorescence of catasetums has fleshy unisexual flowers, which is exceptional for orchids. The colorful male and female flowers are seen on different plants. In rare cases there are few hermaphrodite plants also.... but that is extremely rare.
A characteristic feature of catasetum male flowers is the remarkable technique for the ejection of the pollinia. Trigger mechanism is one of the most unique feature among species of this highly evolved Orchids' family. . When anyone (or insect) touches the flower, the flower triggers and sends out a sticky pollinia, which is a characteristic feature of male catasetum..it actually closes on your finger…like jaws and sticks the dot of pollen onto your fingernail.
 I GIVE IT AN AWESOME RATING OF ABOUT 9.

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