Biology:Anguloa
Anguloa, commonly known as tulip orchids, is a small orchid genus closely related to Lycaste. Its abbreviation in horticulture is Ang. This genus was described by José Antonio Pavón and Hipólito Ruiz López in 1798. They named it in honor of Francisco de Angulo, Director-General of Mines of Spain.[1]
This genus is found on the forest floor at high elevations from Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Bolivia and Peru.[2][3][4] Anguloa is closely related to Lycaste and Ida, and can hybridize with Lycaste.[5]
Description

Pollination
When touched, the lip of the flower rocks back and forth inside the cup-shaped flower as if the lip was a child in a cradle. As a result, it is sometimes known as a cradle orchid. Similarly, it has been known in Columbia as cuna de Venus (cradle of Venus). When an orchid bee pollinator lands on the opening of the flower, its weight tips the flower forwards, and the lip moves down to allow the bee inside the flower. Having moved into the flower, the change in the centre of gravity tips the flower back, flipping the lip upwards, pressing the bee against the rostellum and sticky pollinia. On a return visit, the same maneuver presses the pollinia into the flower's stigma.[5]
Species
The genus is split into two sections. Section Guoloanga includes the yellow and red anguloas such as A. clowesii, A. hohenlohii, A. brevilabris, A. dubia, while section Euanguloa includes the white anguloas such as A. uniflora, A. eburnea, A. virginalis, and A. tognettiae.[5]
There are 13 species of tulip orchids, including 4 apparently of hybrid origin though established in the wild. Other hybrid tulip orchids are bred by horticulturalists, but do not occur in the wild. The following are currently accepted as of May 2014:[2]
| Image | Name | Described by | Distribution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anguloa × acostae (A. eburnea × A. hohenlohii) | Oakeley | Colombia | |
| Anguloa brevilabris | Rolfe | Colombia, Peru | |
| Anguloa cliftonii | J.G.Fowler | Colombia | |
| Anguloa cliftonii var. alba | Oakeley | Colombia | |
| Anguloa cliftonii var. concolor | Oakeley | Colombia | |
| Anguloa clowesii | Lindl. | Venezuela and Colombia | |
| Anguloa clowesii var. flava | A.DC | Venezuela and Colombia | |
| Anguloa dubia | Rchb.f. | Colombia and possibly Venezuela | |
| Anguloa eburnea | Linden ex B.S.Williams | Colombia, Peru, Ecuador | |
| Anguloa hohenlohii | C.Morren | Venezuela and Colombia | |
| Anguloa hohenlohii var. macroglossa | (Schltr.) Oakeley | Colombia | |
| Anguloa × rolfei (A. brevilabris × A. cliftonii) | Sander ex Rolfe | Colombia | |
| Anguloa × ruckeri (A. clowesii × A. hohenlohii) | Lindl. | Colombia, Venezuela, Peru | |
| Anguloa × speciosa (A. tognettiae × A. virginalis) | Linden | Venezuela, Colombia | |
| Anguloa tognettiae | Oakeley | Venezuela and Colombia | |
| Anguloa uniflora | Ruiz & Pav. | Peru | |
| Anguloa virginalis | Linden ex B.S.Williams | Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia | |
| Anguloa virginalis var. turneri | (B.S.Williams) Oakeley | Colombia |
References
- ↑ Angulo, Francisco. DB~e. La Real Academia de la Historia. [1]
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Kew World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
- ↑ Oakeley, Henry F. (1999) Anguloa: The species, the hybrids and a checklist of Angulocastes. Orchid Digest 63(4: Supplement) 1–32. Online version
- ↑ Dr. Henry F. Oakeley, 2008 : Lycaste, Ida and Anguloa: The Essential Guide
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Oakeley, Henry (2005). "522. ANGULOA TOGNETTIAE: Orchidaceae". Curtis's Botanical Magazine 22 (1): 63–70. ISSN 1355-4905. https://www.jstor.org/stable/45066090.
External links
Data related to Anguloa at Wikispecies- Anguloa photo gallery
Wikidata ☰ Q20956 entry
