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The name comes from the Ventian nobleman and physician Antonio Musa Brassavola. They are native to the lowlands of Central America and tropical South America. They are epiphytes, and a few are lithophytes. A single, apical and succulent leaf grows on an elongated pseudobulb. The orchid yields a single white or greenish white flower, or a raceme of a few flowers. The five greenish sepals are narrow and long. The base of the broad fringed lip enfolds partially the column. This column has a pair of falciform ears on each side of the front and contains twelve (sometimes eight) pollinia. Most Brassavola orchids are very fragrant, attracting pollinators with their citrusy smell. But they are only fragrant at night, in order to attract the right moth. In 1698 Brassavola nodosa was the first tropical orchid to be brought from the Caribbean island Curaçao to Holland. Thus began the propagation of this orchid and the fascination for orchids in general. Species
Missing image Brassavola-nodosa.jpg Lady-of-the-night Orchid (Brassavola nodosa)
Some Hybrids:
External linkBrassavola David Sanders (http://www.paphiopedilum.net/CNYOS.Jan.2002.pdf)
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