Meyers Conservatory - troymeyers.com
Site Navigation
Flasking Home Page
Your Picks List
Comprehensive List
Articles in the Site
Search
Ready-To-Go Flasks
Fast-Turn Flasks
Greenhouse Plants
Current Reservations
Testimonials
 
Flasks of
Maxillaria densa 'MC856' × self
 
 
 
 
Number: TN2059
Name: Maxillaria densa 'MC856' × self
Type: self    (What's that?)
Seed Donor: Dale Borders
 
Click to Enlarge
Thumbnail
Pod Parent Flower
 
 
Culture Notes from Donor: Parent plant: Temperature range I (60-83°F)
 
For additional origin/habitat information supplied courtesy of Charles and Margaret Baker, see further below, near the bottom of this page.

Temperatures we attempt to use in the lab & greenhouse:
For Species:   Spring, Summer, Autumn: days average 80°F, nights 67°F; best fit is Intermediate 83-60°F (Source: Baker's Web OSC)
For Species:   Winter: days average 71°F, nights 60°F; best fit is Cool-Intermediate 75-58°F (Source: Baker's Web OSC)

About the name...
Etymology of densa   From Latin "densus" tightly, crowded. (Source: Mayr & Schmucker 1998)
Etymology of Maxillaria   From Latin "maxilla" jawbone. (Source: Pridgeon 1992)
Pronunciation of densa   DEN-sa (Source: Hawkes 1978)
Pronunciation of Maxillaria   max-ill-AIR-ee-a (Source: Pridgeon 1992)
If you would like to direct someone to this web page, please copy and paste this URL into your email:
http://troymeyers.com/d?012059

Flask Information
Availability: We have sold all of the flasks for this item.
You should: Consider getting individual plants or compots instead of a flask.
You can place a "Notify Flask Recipients" Request, and either we or a flask recipient may contact you when plants are available.

You may also place a "Notify Retries" Request, and if an identical pollination (the same parents) is done again, we'll let you know.

You may reserve a flask, but it's very unlikely you'll get one ...this could only happen if we found a flask that we didn't know we had.
Yield Estimate: 205 plants (based on flask surveys done 11/25/2002 through 11/23/2004)
Yield estimates are only approximate, but may appear to be fairly exact numbers because they are a combination of large rough estimates in remaining mother flasks and more accurate small estimates in reflasks.
Plantlet Sizes: From many flasks 10 - 45 mm plants (based on flask surveys done 01/02/2004 through 11/23/2004)
From one most recently surveyed flask 25 - 45 mm (11/23/2004)
You might also want to: View the seed assay for this item.
View items of the same species.
View items of the same genus.

Ordering Information
You are not currently logged in.
You must be a registered user and be logged in to reserve a flask or place a notification request. Please log in:
LOG IN
Registered Email Address

Password
  
Remember my login information:   (what's this for?)
  No!
  Remember email
  Remember email & password
 
 

The origin/habitat information below is supplied courtesy of Charles and Margaret Baker

The following information is based on the name of the plant provided by the donor, and assumes that the name is correct. If the plant has been misidentified, then the following information may not be correct.
This text is copyrighted by the Bakers and may not be reproduced without permission.

ORIGIN/HABITAT: Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, and Nicaragua. In Mexico, plants are found on slopes facing the Gulf of Mexico in the states of Puebla, Veracruz, Oaxaca, Tabasco, and Chiapas. They grow as epiphytes in dense shade in a variety of habitats from the lowlands to middle elevations and are found in mangrove swamps, tropical rainforest, mountain rainforest, tropical semideciduous forest, and oak forest from near sea level up to 4600 ft. (1400 m). In Guatemala, plants have been found at many locations around the country on trees in damp woods at low elevations, in higher elevation cloudforest, or as terrestrials in pine forests at elevations as high as 8200 ft. (2500 m). Collections have been reported from the departments of Alta Verapaz, Amatitlán, Chimaltenango, Guatemala, Huehuetenango, Izabal, Jalapa, Quezaltenango, San Marcos, Suchitepequez, Zacapa, and Vera Paz. In Belize, plants reportedly are fairly common in the Cayo and Toledo Districts where they grow on trees in wet forests. Plants have been found in the mountains of central Honduras as well as near the Caribbean Coast. In Nicaragua, plants have been found in the north-central mountains in the departments of Madriz, Matagalpa, and Jinotega at 3300-4600 ft. (1000-1400 m).
More about this information and the Bakers...
 
 

Go to Flasking Home Page -- Contact Us
Contents of all pages Copyright © 1999-2024. All rights reserved.