Brassia is a genus of orchids classified in the subtribe Oncidiinae. It is native to Mexico, Central America, the West Indies, and northern South America, with one species (B. caudata) extending into Florida.
The genus was named after William Brass, a British botanist and illustrator, who collected plants in Africa under the supervision of Sir Joseph Banks. Its abbreviation in the horticultural trade is Brs.
Description
Brassia species and its popular hybrids are common in cultivation, and are notable for the characteristic long and spreading tepals (in some clones longer than 50 cm), which lend them the common name spider orchid.
This epiphytic genus occurs in wet forests from sea level to altitudes under 1500 m, with the Peruvian Andes as its center of diversity. Occurrence is mostly restricted to a certain area, but Brassia caudata can be found over the whole geographic area.
They have large elliptic-oblong pseudobulbs with one or two leaves at the apex, lateral, unbranched many-flowered inflorescences with small floral bracts. The lip is not attached to the column. The pollinarium shows a narrow stipe. There are two distichous, foliaceous sheaths around the base, from which the inflorescence emerges.
Brassia has a very specific method for pollination; it uses entomophily - pollination by insects - and in this case specifically by female spider-hunter wasps of the genera Pepsis and Campsomeris. Mistaken by the mimicry of Brassia, the wasp stings the lip, while trying to grasp its prey without any success. By these movements the wasp comes into contact with the pollinarium, that then sticks to its head. By flying to another Brassia flower, this flower gets pollinated.
List of species
, Plants of the World Online accepted the following species:
- Brassia allenii <small>L.O.Williams ex C.Schweinf.</small> â Honduras, Panama
- Brassia andina <small>(Rchb.f.) M.W.Chase</small> â Colombia, Ecuador, Peru
- Brassia andreettae <small>(Dodson) Senghas</small> â Ecuador
- Brassia angusta <small>Lindl.</small> â Venezuela, Guyana, northern Brazil
- Brassia angustilabia <small>Schltr.</small> â Panama, Brazil (Amazonas)
- Brassia arachnoidea <small>Barb.Rodr.</small> â Rio de Janeiro
- Brassia arcuigera <small>Rchb.f.</small> â Honduras, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru
- Brassia aurantiaca <small>(Lindl.) M.W.Chase</small> â Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador
- Brassia aurorae <small>D.E.Benn.</small> â Peru
- Brassia bennettiorum <small>(Dodson) Senghas</small> â Peru
- Brassia bidens <small>Lindl.</small> â Venezuela, Guyana, northern Brazil
- Brassia bowmanni <small>(Rchb.f.) M.W.Chase</small> â Colombia
- Brassia brachypus <small>Rchb.f.</small> â Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia
- Brassia brevis <small>(Kraenzl.) M.W.Chase</small> â Colombia, Ecuador
- Brassia brunnea <small>Archila</small> â Guatemala
- Brassia caudata <small>(L.) Lindl.</small> â Mexico, Central America, Florida, Greater Antilles, Trinidad, northern South America
- Brassia cauliformis <small>C.Schweinf.</small> â Peru
- Brassia chloroleuca <small>Barb.Rodr.</small> â Guyana, French Guiana, Brazil
- Brassia chlorops <small>Endrés & Rchb.f.</small> â Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama
- Brassia cochlearis <small>(H.R.Sweet) M.W.Chase</small>
- Brassia cochleata <small>Knowles & Westc.</small> â northern South America
- Brassia cyrtopetala <small>Schltr.</small> â Colombia
- Brassia diphylla <small>(H.R.Sweet) M.W.Chase</small> â Colombia
- Brassia dresslerorum <small>Archila</small> â Guatemala
- Brassia ecuadorensis <small>(Garay) M.W.Chase</small> â Ecuador
- Brassia endresii <small>(Kraenzl.) ined.</small> â Central America
- Brassia escobariana <small>Garay</small> â Colombia
- Brassia euodes <small>Rchb.f.</small> â Colombia, Ecuador, Peru
- Brassia farinifera <small>Linden & Rchb.f.</small> â Ecuador
- Brassia filomenoi <small>Schltr.</small> â Peru
- Brassia forgetiana <small>Sander</small> â Peru, Brazil, Venezuela
- Brassia garayana <small>M.W.Chase</small> â Ecuador, Peru
- Brassia gireoudiana <small>Rchb.f. & Warsz.</small> â Costa Rica, Panama
- Brassia glumacea <small>Lindl.</small> â Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru
- Brassia glumaceoides <small>M.W.Chase</small> â Colombia, Venezuela
- Brassia horichii <small>(I.Bock) M.W.Chase</small> â Costa Rica, Panama
- Brassia huebneri <small>Schltr.</small> â French Guiana, Brazil
- Brassia iguapoana <small>Schltr.</small> â Brazil (Amazonas)
- Brassia incantans <small>(Rchb.f.) M.W.Chase</small> â Colombia, Ecuador, Peru
- Brassia jipijapensis <small>Dodson & N.H.Williams</small> â Ecuador (ManabÃÂ)
- Brassia keiliana <small>Rchb.f. ex Lindl.</small> â Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana
- Brassia koehlerorum <small>Schltr.</small> â Peru
- Brassia lanceana <small>Lindl.</small> â Panama, Trinidad & Tobago, northern South America
- Brassia lehmannii <small>(Garay) M.W.Chase</small>
- Brassia macrostachya <small>Lindl.</small> â Venezuela, Guyana
- Brassia maculata <small>R.Br.</small> â Mexico, Central America, Cuba, Jamaica
- Brassia mendozae <small>(Dodson) Senghas</small> â Ecuador
- Brassia minutiflora <small>(Kraenzl.) M.W.Chase</small> â Colombia
- Brassia neglecta <small>Rchb.f.</small> â Guyana, Venezuela, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru
- Brassia ocanensis <small>Lindl.</small> â Venezuela, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru
- Brassia panamensis <small>(Garay) M.W.Chase</small> â Panama
- Brassia pascoensis <small>D.E.Benn. & Christenson</small> â Peru
- Brassia peruviana <small>Poepp. & Endl.</small> â Peru
- Brassia pozoi <small>(Dodson & N.H.Williams) Senghas</small> â Ecuador, Peru
- Brassia pumila <small>Lindl.</small> â Guyana, Venezuela, French Guiana, Colombia, Peru, Brazil
- Brassia revoluta <small>ÃÂ.Florián</small>
- Brassia rhizomatosa <small>Garay & Dunst.</small> â Venezuela, Peru
- Brassia rolandoi <small>(D.E.Benn. & Christenson) M.W.Chase</small> â Peru
- Brassia signata <small>Rchb.f.</small> â Peru, Bolivia, Oaxaca, Guerrero
- Brassia suavissima <small>Pupulin & BogarÃÂn</small> â Costa Rica
- Brassia sulphurea <small>(Rchb.f.) M.W.Chase</small> â Venezuela
- Brassia thyrsodes <small>Rchb.f.</small> â Bolivia
- Brassia transamazonica <small>D.E.Benn. & Christenson</small> â Peru
- Brassia verrucosa <small>Bateman ex Lindl.</small> â Mexico, Central America, Venezuela, Brazil
- Brassia villosa <small>Lindl.</small> â Guyana, Venezuela, Brazil
- Brassia wageneri <small>Rchb.f.</small> â Guyana, Venezuela, Brazil, Colombia, Peru
- Brassia warszewiczii <small>Rchb.f.</small> â Ecuador
- Brassia whewellii <small>J.M.H.Shaw</small>
- Brassia wyllisiana <small>K.G.Lacerda & V.P.Castro</small>
Intergeneric hybrids
This list does not include nothogenera based on genera that are synonyms of Oncidium, as for instance Cochlioda and Odontoglossum. These nothogenera are now synonyms with other nothogenera in this list, or with Brassia (in the case of Brassioda = Brassia ÃÂ Cochlioda).
Gallery
References
External links
April 2013 - - On line http://www.orchidselect.com/brassia-orchids/
- Dressler, R.L., and N.H. Williams. 2003. New combinations in Mesoamerican Oncidiinae (Orchidaceae). Selbyana 24(1):44âÂÂ45.
- van der Pijl, L., and C.H. Dodson. 1966. Orchid Flowers: Their Pollination and Evolution. University of Miami Press, Coral Gables.