Thanks, Peter. I found a picture of D. archipelagense at
gallery.orchidspng.com along with the note that it used to be referred
to as D. antennatum 'Apple Green.' It seems to be a fairly good
match. I will watch my plant to see if the flowers fade as they age,
because right now they are much
Nick,
This sounds like the taxon described as Dendrobium archipelagense by
Howcroft & Takeuchi in 2004. There is a photo on page 14 of of
"Spatulata Orchids of Papua New Guinea", by the Orchid Soc. of PNG
(2006). This same taxon is described & illustrated in my "Lowland
Orchids of PNG" (pages 236-
Drear OGD's
If anyone out there has Icones Pleurothallidinarum
Vol X
Vol XI
Vol XIII
Vol XX
Vol XXVI
Vol XXVIII
Contact me off list as I am very interested in botaining them as copies
or buying the book
Thanks
Jay Pfahl
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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___
the
Have you tried Ian Walters at Burliegh Park in Queensland ?
-Original Message-
From: "Glenn Behrman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: orchids@orchidguide.com
Sent: 12/20/06 11:48 PM
Subject: Re: [OGD] Flasking service in Australia needed
If you want to use a Thai lab, let us know.
Glenn
Glenn
Nick
It sounds like what Neville Howcroft has recently described as D
archipelagense.It has been around in collections for sometime . It is
found in New Ireland and New Britain by Neville and Stocker . There is
a photo of it also in Peter Obyrnes book on the lowland orchids of PNG.
Steven Kami
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