Paph curtisii and superbiens - the great debate

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I think you have to be very careful comparing back to old art work, not because of inaccuracy, but rather because plants were imported in their 10's of thousands, and just as now, great value was placed on those that were slightly different. There is no guarantee that the flower was representative of the batch, or even more concerning the habit at the time of collecting every single plant, and destroying those that they were not going to take in order to prevent another collector from getting them. That would have the effect of eradicating populations which may have been distinct, intermediate or exceptional.
 
Reichenbach, Day and the artist who did the drawings for Sanders, were excellent botanical artists, and both were trained in horticultural taxonomy. The would take the time to find a typical example, and illustrate that, rather than illustrating the exceptional. Even Hooker and Low were quite accurate in their drawings. A requisite to being a taxonomist in those days, before photography, was to trained in rendering detail drawings that reflected life. These artists can be counted on to do a good job of representing in their drawings and water colors an accurate representation of what was in front of them.
 
Leo,
it kind of reminds me of the 1980s discussion about the 'lost' sanderianum and how the Reichenbachia print by Moon was somehow a 'fake'. Turned out to be spot on! They took great care IMHO.
 
The best souce for identifications is:

Paph. curtisii

http://www.neeri-orchids.ch/Neerach/PaphGrossBilderSeiten/Paph_curtisii.htm

Paph. superbiens

http://www.neeri-orchids.ch/Neerach/PaphGrossBilderSeiten/Paph_superbiens.htm




In the last years some "experts" make crosses with this two typs of Paphs. - the identification is difficult....




In the last year the following plant provided for discussion:

DSC_0041.JPG



DSC_0062.JPG



DSC_0048.JPG





In an article in the German orchidmagazin "Orchideenjournal 4 / 2012" Holger Perner write, that this plant is the "lost" original Paph. superbiens.


On the left side the 136 years old original drawing from John Day - left the plant:


superbiens_neu.jpg





left = P. curtisii - center = "original" superbiens - right = "previous" superbiens

DSC_0069.JPG
 
The original drawing by John Day definitely supports my belief that we have the names mixed up in the hobby. And the fact that there is a living plant today, in Holger Perner's collection in Germany that matches the John Day drawing quite well says a lot. The true superbiens is the one in the center. The superbiens of commerce needs to be described and named, whether it is relegated to a variety of curtisii or whether it is given a new name, I will leave that to the taxonomists. But it is clear that what we today call superbiens does not match the John Day description. And no matter what has been printed over the years, it is John Day's description and its associated type specimen that counts. Later opinions don't matter.

John Day's image make it possible that Cymatodes 'Beechiense' is really the hybrid it was originally labelled as.

And the Paph superbiens var dayanum 'Mem. Clarence Schuber' is not that far away from Day's original drawing. Even the foliage of 'Mem Clarence Schubert' plant resemble the foliage of the Holger Perner new superbiens.

Thanks UweM, you have shed a lot of light on this.
 
Thanks for the foliage photos. The leaves on the middle (original) superbiens are more similar to the v. curtsii on the left than the one on the right, at least to me. :eek:
 
Foliage patterns are not "conservative traits" so are not usually used as key indicators to define a species, but foliage patterns can and are included in the constellation of supporting traits that go with recognizing a species, especially in the field. So, I'm not sure what to think about the foliage.
 
Has anyone here seen the 'type' superbiens in the middle offered for asle here in the USA? :eek:

When I was first starting to collect Paphs, back in the early 1980's I had a couple from Ray Rands, that more or less were like the middle superbiens. But they did not survive the test of time, I didn't know enough about growing Paphs then. Ray Rands only imported one batch, I doubt if there are any survivors from that importation I have not seen nor heard of one since. In those days, were were all looking for the dark color curtisii type. That superbiens just wasn't spectacular enough to be interesting. Who knew?

If I knew then what I know know I'd have an incredible Paph collection. But, Rick Lockwood and Ray B and Bill Argo hadn't invented K-Lite yet, nor did Al Gore get around to inventing the internet. We actually corresponded by US Mail. Amazing times those were.
 
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