Masdevallia
Genus Masdevallia
Masdevallia is one of the genera with the most species within the orchid family, with approximately 1,123 records according to KEW. 659 species have been recognized as valid names and 464 species as synonyms or invalid names.
The scientific name of the genus Masdevallia was given by H. Ruiz & J. Pavón in 1974 in honor of Mr. José Masdevall Terrades Llobet, a doctor and botanist at the court of Carlos III of Spain.
These species are distributed from Mexico to Brazil, with a greater presence in the Andean regions of Ecuador, Colombia, and Peru. They grow in habitats with different altitudinal ranges from 130 to 3800 meters above sea level. Generally, they are epiphytes, terrestrial, or lithophytes and prefer cloud forests and rainforests with high ambient humidity and good ventilation. Most species of Masdevallia grow in intermediate to cold climates.
At Ecuagenera, we have classified them as follows to optimize their development:
Cold Climate Masdevallias
These species grow in cloud forests, in temperatures ranging from 9°C to 18°C. The ambient humidity required for optimal growth ranges from approximately 70% to 80%, with shade regulated to 60%. Watering can be done twice a week, and it's essential to fertilize and provide excellent ventilation.
Intermediate Climate Masdevallias
In our nurseries, these are grown in temperatures ranging from 14°C to 26°C. These species develop more easily in an environment with excellent ambient humidity between 70% and 80%. Shade is crucial for optimal growth, and it's recommended to adjust it to 60%. Watering can be done twice a week, ensuring excellent ventilation and fertilization.
Warm Climate Masdevallias
Within the genus Masdevallia, some species come from warmer habitats, meaning lower altitudinal ranges. For optimal development, they should be cultivated in temperatures ranging from 20°C to 32°C, requiring ambient humidity between 80% and 90% and 60% shade. Watering should be done two to three times a week, depending on environmental conditions, with excellent ventilation and fertilization.
Cultivation Guidelines:
The suitable substrate for planting our Masdevallias is a mixture of 80% moss (Sphagnum) and 20% pumice or perlite. This last component allows better aeration to the root system, preventing rot risks. This growing medium lasts approximately seven months, after which it should be replaced.
Watering these species depends on their location. If our plants belong to a warm climate, they should be watered two to three times a week. If they belong to an intermediate or cold climate, watering should be once or twice a week. However, under any of the mentioned conditions, good air circulation is essential to ensure the root system achieves the required humidity, avoiding rot risks.
If we decide to grow them indoors, where there's not good air circulation, watering should be done once a week, as moisture in the root system will take longer to evaporate.
Creating good ambient humidity is essential, but it doesn't mean increasing watering. Instead, the intention is to create an environment similar to their natural habitat. It's recommended to place containers with water near the plants or grow Bromeliads among the orchids since they accumulate water in their leaves, creating excellent humidity for our orchids.
The best way to recognize if our plants need more or less watering is by daily checking the growing medium (substrate) to see if the humidity is adequate.
Light and Fertilization:
Light is crucial when talking about cultivating orchids, especially Masdevallias, which require around 40% light for optimal development. If placed indoors, they should be near a window to catch reflected sunlight.
Fertilization plays a vital role. When a plant leaves its natural habitat, it loses access to area nutrients. It's necessary to use balanced fertilizers containing Nitrogen, Phosphorus, and Potassium. Concentrations vary depending on the plant's stage. For example:
- If our plants are in the growth stage or have passed the flowering stage, apply fertilizers with higher nitrogen concentration to stimulate new growth, ensuring the next flowering.
- After a considerable period post-flowering (about three to four months), especially when we observe the maturation of new shoots, apply fertilizers with higher phosphorus concentration to stimulate flowering.
- To improve the root system and sap circulation in leaves, use fertilizers with higher potassium concentration. This provides more vitality to the plant and should be applied when floral spikes begin to appear, helping flowers become stronger, more durable, and colorful.
Foliar fertilizers should be applied every 15 days, always in the morning before the sunlight intensifies, to avoid leaf burns. It's recommended to spray the plants with water 10 minutes before applying foliar fertilizers to stimulate the stomata for better absorption.
Reproduction of orchids is usually done in vitro, using seeds. If we want to reproduce them at home, it's done vegetatively, separating a piece with at least seven leaves from the root to plant in a new pot. It's advisable to do this after the flowering stage.
Plant Health Indicators:
Plants are living beings that can show different reactions to indicate the need or excess of elements within their cultivation. For example:
- Lack of watering produces dryness and weakness in leaves.
- Excessive watering, especially in tender shoots, turns them yellow, indicating rot beginnings.
- Excessive sunlight causes yellow leaves, sometimes leading to burns.
- Lack of light causes leaves to turn darker green with weak, fragile shoots prone to breakage.
- Exposure to extremely hot climates results in leaf burns, noticeable from the tip toward the center.
- If the substrate or growing medium has outlived its usefulness, plants show yellow shoots and root rot.
- If the plant shows no new growth, it's time to check the root system for pests like slugs, which feed on tender shoots and hinder growth.
- If the plant shows no flowers, it may not be receiving adequate fertilization. Observe plant reactions to act promptly and improve conditions.
Masdevallia peristeria
A floriferous species from Andean cloud forests, producing dense clusters of flowers simultaneously from the base of the plant. Each bloom features...
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5.0 / 5.0
2 Recensioni
A robust species endemic to the cloud forests of Ecuador, with broad, fleshy leaves and large, pendulous flowers on long, arching ramicauls. The el...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia patriciana
4.0 / 5.0
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One of the most floriferous miniatures in the genus, from Andean cloud forests, forming dense, clumping mats that erupt with dozens of small flower...
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A striking species endemic to the cloud forests of Ecuador with a highly asymmetric, three-dimensional floral structure. The erect dorsal sepal ris...
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A compact, clumping species from Andean cloud forests, producing dozens of small flowers simultaneously on short ramicauls at foliage level. Each t...
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A captivating species from the cloud forests of the Andes, instantly recognizable by its elongated, thread-like caudas extending from each sepal ti...
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A remarkably free-flowering species from the Andean cloud forests, producing an abundance of small, creamy white to pale yellow-green flowers simul...
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5.0 / 5.0
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One of the most architecturally dramatic species in the genus, producing flowers with fully separated, spreading sepals and an exceptionally elonga...
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4.5 / 5.0
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A delicate and refined species from the high-altitude cloud forests of the Andes, producing small, pristine flowers with a clean, waxy texture and ...
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A remarkable miniaturist from the Andean cloud forests, producing an abundance of tiny, globose flowers clustered along branching, racemose inflore...
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One of the most widely distributed species in the genus, ranging from Mexico through Central America to the northern Andes, and among the most adap...
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A compact epiphyte from the Andean cloud forests, producing solitary flowers with a globose, ribbed sepaline tube and dramatically elongated, archi...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia naevia
A free-flowering epiphyte native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, producing multiple simultaneous blooms on slender upright scapes. The open, star-...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia murex
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A robust epiphyte native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, notable for its basal flowering habit — blooms emerge directly at the base of the plant a...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia morochoi
5.0 / 5.0
2 Recensioni
A compact and free-flowering epiphyte native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, producing multiple simultaneous blooms on short scapes among broad, g...
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3.0 / 5.0
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A prolific epiphyte native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, producing multiple simultaneous blooms among broad, glossy leaves in a characteristic b...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia molossoides
A remarkably floriferous epiphyte native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, producing dozens of simultaneous blooms in a pronounced basal habit — flo...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia microsiphon
A compact epiphyte native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, notable for its exceptionally long, thread-like scapes that rise well above the dense ro...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia menatoi
A robust epiphyte native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, notable for its racemose flowering habit — each erect scape carries multiple successive b...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia melanoxantha
5.0 / 5.0
1 Revisione
A slender epiphyte from the Andean cloud forests, bearing solitary flowers on erect scapes. The tightly closed, cylindrical tube is formed by fully...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia melanoglossa
A robust epiphyte native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, producing multiple simultaneous blooms on horizontal, racemose scapes among large, fleshy...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia mejiana
4.5 / 5.0
2 Recensioni
A floriferous epiphyte from the Andean cloud forests, producing multiple simultaneous blooms on erect scapes among large, glossy, ovate leaves. The...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia medusa
A captivating epiphyte native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, producing multiple simultaneous blooms on tall, slender, racemose scapes. Each flowe...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia lychniphora
5.0 / 5.0
3 Recensioni
One of the most floriferous species in the genus, native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, producing dozens of simultaneous blooms in a dense basal ...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia lucernula
4.25 / 5.0
4 Recensioni
An exceptionally floriferous epiphyte native to the Andean cloud forests, producing dozens of simultaneous blooms on erect scapes well above a comp...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia lintricula
A botanically fascinating epiphyte native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, bearing solitary flowers on pendent scapes among distinctively cylindric...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia lineolata
A floriferous epiphyte native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, producing multiple simultaneous blooms on slender erect scapes above long, arching, ...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia limax
A captivating epiphyte native to the cloud forests of Ecuador, bearing solitary flowers on sturdy scapes above a compact rosette of glossy, ovate l...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia pachyura f. leptoura
A distinctive form of Masd. pachyura distinguished by its notably slender tails — in contrast to the thicker tails of the typical species — with fl...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia leonardoi
A vigorous and free-flowering species that produces several blooms simultaneously from the base of the plant, each with widely spreading open sepal...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia lehmannii
One of the showiest species in the genus, producing a pendant raceme bearing multiple flowers simultaneously along the rachis — each with small, op...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia laucheana
A prolific bloomer that produces multiple flowers simultaneously, each with small, rounded, open sepals and strikingly long, slender, bright orange...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia lappifera
A fascinating species with a globose, open-faced flower whose fused sepals form a rounded cup boldly marked with dark spots and a richly contrastin...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia juan-albertoi
A unique species that features flowers with the fused sepal tube and the characteristic tapered tails of the genus, produced in slender, erect indi...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia ivanii
5.0 / 5.0
2 Recensioni
An eye-catching species bearing flowers with the broad, fused sepaline tube and graceful elongated tails typical of the genus, produced on upright ...
Visualizza tutti i dettagliMasdevallia instar
5.0 / 5.0
2 Recensioni
One of the more striking members of the genus, this species captivates with boldly patterned flowers whose fused sepals form a broad, open tube ado...
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