There are quite a few setose (latin for haired or bristled) Section Latouria Dendrobiums. They all come from the area around New Guinea and can be warm to cool growers, but do need species specific temps to truly thrive. Look for D. eximium, D. finisterrae, D. macrophyllum, D. setigerum, D. forbesii (slightly setose) and D. polysema. In hybrids they tend to pass on the bristled gene.
The species may be difficult to ID, unless you have a reference for lip shapes and plant size. As an example, the difference between setigerum and macrophyllum (which has varieties) is the two-leaved bulbs in setigerum and comes from the Philippines. Some authours do not seperate the two and macrophyllum has precidence. It is the most widespread of the Latouria, found from the Philippines down to New Guinea and found from warm to cool conditions (sea level to 1700m).
All of them like to be kept evenly moist with only a short dryish rest in Winter. In nature they are always under humid conditions, thus never really dry.
This group (Latouria) is currently becoming popular and hybrids pop-up regularly. If they are interesting, get a few seedlings, as they quickly disappear from the market as the hybridizing moves on.
Here are picture of what i grow as D. macrophyllum and D. setigerum. Look carefully at the lips, how they wrap around the column and the markings. Very close, but seperable.
Jamie
Last edited by Regelian; 03-16-2018 at 05:14 AM..
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