In terms of cold tolerance suitability...I have two ranking systems. One gives points primarily based on habitat information from
the Bakers and the other gives points based on everything else. Everything else includes grow lists and other books.
Here's a breakdown...
Dendrobium anosmum ______ 76 / -30
Dendrobium aphyllum _______143 / 48
Dendrobium chrysanthum ___154 / 54
Dendrobium devonianum ____157 / 18
Dendrobium falconeri _______154 / 18
Dendrobium loddigesii ______118 / 108
Dendrobium moschatum ____163 / 60
Dendrobium nobile _________155 / 156
Dendrobium parishii ________159 / 0
Dendrobium wardianum _____154 / 0
Aphyllum has 48 points because the only reference I've ever run across for it being grown outdoors in a somewhat cooler climate is on
this page (listed under pierardii). Despite the lack of supporting evidence I picked up a couple and they've taken it down to 33F no problem. The larger one is currently budding.
Anosmum has -30 points because nobody that I know of has grown it outdoors in cooler climates and
Botanica lists it for zones 10-12 as an I-H grower,
Friend lists it for subtropical and tropical gardens, and
Flora lists it as an I-H grower.
Wardianum has 0 points because nobody I know of has grown it outdoors in cooler climates,
Friend lists it for cooler and subtropical gardens but
Flora lists it as an I-H grower.
My chrysanthum is doing ok, haven't had it that long but it's starting to put out new growth. I killed a seedling devonianum...well...actually a gang of slugs killed it but it was putting out a lot of new growth after I discovered it liked being fairly moist during summer. My falconeri bit the dust because I mounted it without any moss and didn't notice that the overhead mister was missing it until it was too late. I've lost a couple loddigesii because they did not receive enough water when mounted but somehow I ended up with a couple more and I keep them in pots now...except for one...which is directly under a mister. My moschatum is pretty tough and survived quite a bit of neglect and abuse from bugs...I look forward to seeing if it's tougher than nobile.
The points system I use is definitely not a certain indicator of suitability...really I just use it to help prioritize which orchids to try next. I would probably spend $5 on an overgrown anosmum versus $50 for a near blooming size wardianum...but if they were the same size and price I'd base my decision on which has the most points.