Scot Mitamura, orchid horticulturist for the Honolulu botanical gardens wrote :

"In the plant kingdom, there is no other family of plants that can match 
the fragrance of orchids.

Orchid fragrance is a relatively volatile substance made up of oils and is 
produced by specialized scent glands called osmopheres. Being volatile, 
these oils can vaporize at specific temperatures, becoming available when 
the pollinator is active. The osmopheres can be found anywhere on the flower.

Approximately 75 percent of all orchids are fragrant. Some of the 
fragrances are undetectable to our noses, others may be very pleasing to 
us, and still others may be totally repulsive.

Since orchids are specific in their pollinator, the fragrance must also 
coincide with their activity. Most orchids are either fragrant at day or by 
night, but rarely both.

... Brightly colored orchids, such as many... cattleyas, tend to have sweet 
and spicy fragrances and are pollinated by bees. Their fragrance is 
normally the strongest in the morning and often barely detectable on cloudy 
days or at night. Other orchids, such as the bulbophyllums, are also 
pollinated in the day but their pollinators are flies. Needless to say, the 
fragrance may not be as appealing, unless you like the scent of carrion or 
feces.

There are many wonderfully fragrant orchids that are pollinated 
nocturnally. Their flower colors are normally white as it is visible at 
night. Sweet fragrances such as jasmine, honeysuckle, or gardenia are 
common and often flowers have an abundance of nectar, all of which is used 
to attract moths to do the pollination. Common night scented flowers are 
the brassavolas, aerangis and angraecums.

One of the most famous orchids, Angraecum sequipedale, is a beautiful 
star-shaped white flower with a long 18-inch spur or nectary. In 1862, 
English naturalist Charles Darwin during his travels in Madagascar observed 
the flower and surmised that there was a moth with a proboscis long enough 
to reach the nectar at the end of the spur. Later, in 1903 after Darwin's 
death, this large moth, Xanthopan morganii praedicta, was discovered.

Orchid hybridizers have a long history of trying to perfect the shape, 
color, size and the blooming season of orchids, oftentimes forgetting about 
the importance of fragrance. Today, there seems to be a renewed interest in 
developing orchids specifically for their fragrance. One orchid popular in 
Hawai'i, o[O]ncidium Sharry Baby (registered by O'Flaherty 1983), actually 
smells like [vanillated] chocolate."

URL : 
http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080613/LIFE0401/806130335

photo : [caption : "Cattleya dowiana, which is native to Costa Rica, is... 
fragrant during the day to attract bees to pollinate the flower. The red 
lip acts as a landing pad and the yellow venation guides bees to the pollen."]

http://cmsimg.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/pbcsi.dll/bilde?Site=M1&Date=20080613&Category=LIFE0401&ArtNo=806130335&Ref=AR&Profile=1095&MaxW=550&MaxH=650&Q=90&title=0

***************
Regards,

VB


_______________________________________________
the OrchidGuide Digest (OGD)
[email protected]
http://orchidguide.com/mailman/listinfo/orchids_orchidguide.com

Reply via email to