And then you get the intergeneric hybrid of the two, which is Maxillariella, also very easily confused for both of the parent genera. I mean Jesus Christ, taxonomists. Is the thrill completely gone from changing the names around every five minutes, that now you have to invent new ways to upset and confuse everybody?
[noise of irritation and disgust]
Anyway. Name aside, I don't have any particularly strong feelings about this one. We've seen previous Maxi[mumble]a species in 2015 (M. cucullata), 2012, and 2014 (both M. tenuifolia) The foliage on Maui Coconut is more interesting than usual, I suppose, but the flowers are small and unshowy.
I'm pretty sure this is supposed to have a fragrance, and my notes say that I might have gotten a whiff of something coconuty at the show but I wasn't sure about that.
I'm also not actually that big a fan of the smell of coconut, so even if I were certain about the fragrance, it wouldn't improve my opinion of the hybrid much.
Maxillariella Maui Coconut = Maxillariella sanguinea x Maxillariella tenuifolia (Ref.)
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1 Not quite actual anagrams, but about as close as a pair of non-anagrams could get; they differ by one letter. Both start with "Maxi," both end in "a," both contain a double-L and an "ar," but they remain one letter apart. (maxiarElla; maxillarIa)



*sigh*. Had not heard about that particular name change. I'm in full agreement with you as to the idiocy of the whole naming scheme.
ReplyDeleteThere was a time when I thought of taxonomists as serious scientists. Not any more, now I'm convinced they are all crazy and possibly drunk. I'd been suspecting that for a while, and then I found this site: http://www.curioustaxonomy.net/, and spent hours laughing about it, and now I will never believe anything else.
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