Pleione bulbocodioides is found in eastern Asia, in Yunnan China. It grows on mossy rocks or in stony soils on shrubby to thinly wooded slopes or on damp cliffs at elevations of 900 to 3600 meters.
Pleione bulbocodioides also called as The Bulbocodium-Like Pleione, Coelogyne bulbocodioides, Coelogyne delavayi, Coelogyne henryi, Coelogyne pogonioides, Pleione communis, Pleione delavayi, Pleione fargesii, Pleione ganchuenensis, Pleione henryi, Pleione mairei, Pleione pogonioides, Pleione rhombilabia, Pleione smithii, is a species of the genus Pleione. This species was described by Robert Allen Rolfe in 1903.
IDENTIFY PLEIONE BULBOCODIOIDES ORCHID PLANT
Pleione bulbocodioides is found in eastern Asia, in Yunnan China. It grows on mossy rocks or in stony soils on shrubby to thinly wooded slopes or on damp cliffs at elevations of 900 to 3600 meters.
It is a small sized, cool to cold growing terrestrial with clustered, narrowly ovoid, 1-2.5 x 1-2 cm pseudobulbs carrying 1 to 2, elliptic-lanceolate, acute, plicate, 10-25 x 2-5.8 cm leaf.
The Bulbocodium-Like Pleione blooms in the spring and early summer on a single flowered, 7.5 to 20 cm, sheathed inflorescence that arises at the same time as the leaf. The flowers are 7.5 cm in diameter, pink to pale purple, with dark purple marks on lip; pedicel and ovary 10-25 mm. Dorsal sepal lanceolate to oblanceolate, apex acute or obtuse; lateral sepals narrowly elliptic or oblong-oblanceolate, slightly oblique, apex subacute or obtuse. Petals oblanceolate, slightly oblique, apex acute; lip obovate or broadly obovate when flattened, base cuneate and adnate to column, obscurely 3-lobed, apical margin lacerate.
PLEIONE BULBOCODIOIDES ORCHID PLANT CARE AND CULTURE
Cultural information should only be used as a guide, and should be to be adapted to suit you. Your physical location; where you grow your plants, how much time you have to devote to their care, and many other factors, will need to be taken into account. Only then can you decide on the cultural methods that best suit you and your plants.
Light:
Pleione bulbocodioides needs a light level of 18000-30000 lux. This species prefer about 50%-70% shade and should not be placed in full sun.
Temperature:
The recommended temperature is 25°C in summer and 1-5°C in winter. However they will tolerate higher summer temperatures of 35°C for short periods. They need cool to cold temperatures in winter of between 1 and 5°C.
Humidity:
The Bulbocodium-Like Pleione need good air movement. Place them near the bottom of the shade house where it is coolest and humidity highest. Misting is beneficial in very hot weather.
Substrate, growing media and repotting:
Pleione bulbocodioides grow best in squat pots. This plant require a free draining open potting mix. Small sized bark mixed with perlite in a 3:1 ratio is a suitable mix. Some growers use sphagnum moss instead of perlite but this can become soggy and perlite is considered a better option.
The plant should be repotted when they are dormant in winter. Their roots die at the end of the season. When repotting remove all the roots leaving about 3 cm of roots to anchor the pseudobulb in the compost.
Watering:
This orchid should be watered regularly through the warmer months but totally dry in winter. Water in the early morning and not during the heat of the day. Roots start to grow as the flowers die and only a little water should be given from this time on as they have yet to develop roots. Keeping them drier at the start of the growing season also encourages the roots to penetrate. Over watering during the early root growth stage is a major cause of plant loss. Once leaves are well developed they can be watered freely. Stop watering when the leaves go yellow and allow them to become completely dry.
Fertilizer:
You can use regular but weak liquid fertilizer during their growing period but not when they are dormant. Use a lower Nitrogen fertiliser at the end of summer to encourage flower bud development.
Rest period:
Pleione bulbocodioides goes to sleep from late autumn to early spring. Watering should be stopped when the leaves begin to fall. Fertilization should be stopped during this period. When new sprouts appears, the rest period end, the amount of water and fertilizer can be back to normal level.
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