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#nervilia
olena · 7 years
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A wonderful surprise: I saw this long thing sticking up and went, "What the heck is that growing in my terrarium?!" Of course, when I looked closer I remembered — I had planted my ground orchid bulbs in here! 😂 This one is #Nervilia aragoana, which has beautiful pleated leaves once open. http://ift.tt/2sOb4Do
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malaysiantaxi-blog · 7 years
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at Pangsapuri Sri Nervilia, Kota Kemuning, Shah Alam
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ahmadsuyoko-blog · 7 years
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Some individuals of Nervilia aragoana (note the habit, what differentiates it from members of the family Araceae is the habit which is single leafy with purplish stalk, clear but not distinct veins, and water less-resistant leaves) Credit: Faiza Senja W. P.
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greeneyesplnts · 6 years
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Nervilia cf. marmorata
Nervilia cf. marmorata
THAILAND
小さな小さなネルビリア。
室内や朝の短い時間だけ日が差すような半屋外で栽培をしていたときは、どうしても葉柄が伸びてしまいとてもだらしない姿になってしまっていたんですが、完全に屋外で栽培していて出てきた葉はきっちり綺麗に展開してくれました。
素晴らしい…。
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orquidofilia · 8 years
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Nervilia plicata.
Orchidaceae: Gastrodieae.
By Khunchai Chang. [1] [2]
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agrivietorg · 4 years
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LAN THANH THIÊN QUÌ CẢNH – Nervilia plicata THỰC VẬT RỪNG
Thông tin chung
LAN THANH THIÊN QUÌ CẢNH là Lan đất tên la tin là Nervilia plicata thuộc họ Phong lan Orchidaceae bộ Phong lan Orchidales
Tên Việt Nam: LAN THANH THIÊN QUÌ CẢNH
Tên Latin: Nervilia plicata
Họ: Phong lan Orchidaceae
Bộ: Phong lan Orchidales
Lớp (nhóm): Lan đất
Hình ảnh
Phân bố
Cây mọc ở Nam bộ (Tây Ninh, Phước Bình, Dark Nông, và phân bố ở Lào, Ấn Độ, Mianma, Thái Lan, Trung Quốc, Philippin, Indonesia, Tân Ghi Nê, Australia…
Đặc điểm
Loài lan đất, củ tròn lớn, mùa hoa và lá xuất hiện so le nhau. Lá đơn độc dạng tròn hay chia thùy, gốc hình tim, có lông mềm, đường kính 5 – 10cm. Cụm hoa ngắn thẳng đứng. Hoa 2 – 3 chiếc lớn, màu trắng hay lục xám. Cánh môi màu hồng nhạt, đỉnh màu đậm hơn, gốc cánh nhạt.
Đặc tính
Công dụng
Tài liệu tham khảo
Phong lan Việt Nam – Trần Hợp – trang 156.
source https://agriviet.org/thuc-vat-rung/lan-thanh-thien-qui-canh-l937/
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riocloder-blog · 6 years
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Luang Prabang #4
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Nervilia sp.
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Ophiorrhiza sp. 
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Adiantum sp.
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Biophytum sp.
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Smilax sp.
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Smilax sp.
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Adiantum flabellulatum
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Fern
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Pyrrosia sp.
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Pyrrosia sp. “Cristata”
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Luang Prabang【R0816-01】 Luang Pranang, Laos 2016/08
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ahmadsuyoko-blog · 7 years
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Vacation-Tasted Survey
It was a bright Sunday. And the sun had risen up. The clock arms pointed at 07:10 am when I just woke up from the after-subuh sleep (you know take a capsule of medication after having sahur and it’s kinda sedative so I’ll fall asleep thereafter). Hence, I rushed to the bathroom cuz I was supposed to be at the campus at 07:30. Minutes after minutes and it’d been already 8:00 am and my team hadn’t been complete yet. We’d have a survey. I shoulda introduced my team beforehand, huh ? Ok, it’s me, Dian, Maya, Faiza, Himawan, and Mbak Nindy (no need to memorize, I just wanted to inform ya :D :P) We waited and it’s about 08:15 when we started our trip. We’d reach Bangunjiwo so we took our way and the adventure had just begun. We followed the maps and boom we ended up stuck somewhere among paddy-planted fields (take it easy, we’re still on the road not so stuck as you thought guys). It’s nobody at the place and we changed our way tryna find someone to get some info. And we got some. So we decided to visit a dukuh nearby.
Getting in the place, we still had to wait cuz there’s a toddler-aimed health service but it’s only 15 minutes. We talked to the dukuh head (sorry Pak, I forgot the name of padukuhan you rule :) ) and asked him about forests surrounding the village. So he recommended us Padukuhan Kenalan, Sambikerep, and Petung (fortunately those padukuhans situated close to one another and that’s a good idea). Then, we rode and reached somewhere in an alien padukuhan. Well, funny enough but it ain’t and yup we asked someone again (it’s always been suggested if you visit new places, then you feel like you’re lost and you should stop to ask as a famous Indonesian proverb says Malu bertanya, sesat di jalan-Ashamed to ask, then you’ll get lost on the way ).
To make it short, we finally met the head of  Padukuhan Sambikerep. He’s there for the mosque renovation. We talked to him and he told us that orchids weren’t common in the place. It’s normal when common people orchids are limited to those ornamental plants with showy flowers like those of Phalaenopsis or Dendrobium hybrids. But the thing that made us hopeless is when he told us that not many portions of natural forest exist. Forest is so important to explorers like us. OK! We’d still try, we didn’t wanna give up or lose faith. We started to explore the somewhat forested hill like area. I was the leader so I walked first and it’s such an honor (thank you guys for letting me be your leader, hehe). Then we found a suspect of terrestrial orchids - we weren’t sure but the bulb like structure ensured us. We kept walking and I found a patch of area with abundant Nervilias near the waterway under the shade of bamboo plants. We were so sure because it’s a single purplish stalked plicate leafy plant in habit (features differentiating it from members of Araceae). And it’s supposed to be Nervilia aragoana. Kept walking, I found a tall teak tree with a monopodial epiphytic orchid attaching to the bark. It has a symmetrically divided leaf tip and I guessed it should be an Agrostophyllum (laxum ?) (later examination revealed it could be Aerides :) ). As we reached some building ruins, my friend noticed another terrestrial orchid and unfortunately it has blacking dead habit (the leaves’d completely blackened and fell off) but it still bears some fruits. We guessed it’s a member of the subtribe Malaxidinae.
We browsed along and found a terrestrial orchid again. It looks like a Geodorum or Phaius. It has one much bigger and smaller leaves. We kept on track and found other Nervilias thriving on the clay soil under the shade of bamboo plants. We continued walking and it was near the meeting point with a path and we found 2 interesting orchids. They both bear fruits. One with leaves and another is just a fruity stalk. The fruits of the latter aren’t as ellipsoid as those of Spathoglottis plicata or Phaius tankervilleae. The size is also medium (S. plicata= small, P. tankervillae=bigger). The latter turned out to be Geodorum densiflorum. Near the unleafed plant, we also found one with only single leaf.   It resembles a Geodorum or Phaius. We passed the path to another hill. We kept browsing and found nothing. As I walked further, I saw a snake twining (I guessed it’s a nonvenomous one but it wasn’t very clear) and it moved away. Sigh, I could wildly scream if I just stepped on it. So I told my team and they started to develop uninteresting expressions and we decided to go downhill and finished our survey. Not a bad idea since majority of us were fasting. So we walked along the path, went through the woods (in some way looked like plantations). I must confess we’re lost. We were way too far from the starting point as it turned out when we asked the natives. So we turned around and tried to reach to the starting point. On our way back, some of us who walked behind found another Nervilia. It’s completely different from one we found so abundant. It’s Nervilia campestris. I felt a bit disappointed cuz I couldn’t see it with my own eyes. But the pic relieved. Yup, though just a little :D
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