Collabium Explained
Collabium is a genus of flowering plants in the orchid family, Orchidaceae. Species of Collabium are typically terrestrial and grow under shade in forests. They are distributed in southeast Asia from the Himalayas in India, Burma to China, and to the island groups in Malaysia, the Philippines, the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia, and Fiji.[1]
Species
Species accepted by the Plants of the World Online as of February 2021:
- Collabium acuticalcar
- Collabium bicameratum
- Collabium carinatum
- Collabium chapaense
- Collabium chinense
- Collabium chloranthum
- Collabium delavayi
- Collabium evrardii
- Collabium formosanum
- Collabium nebulosum
- Collabium ovalifolium
- Collabium pumilum
- Collabium simplex
- Collabium vesicatum
- Collabium yunnanense
See also
Notes and References
- Pridgeon, AM, PJ Cribb, MW Chase, and FN Rasmussen, eds. Genera Orchidacearum: Epidendroideae (Part one). Volume 4. pp. 132-134.