[Ceratostema odoratissimum Willdenow ex Klotzsch, Linnaea 24: 31. 1851, as a synonym, nom. illegit. Art. 34.]Orthaea lehmannii Fedtschenko & Basilevskaja, Bot. Mater. Gerb. Glavn. Bot. Sada SSSR 6: 24. 1926. Type. Colombia. El Valle: Upper Río Digua, 1500 m, Lehmann 2954 (holotype: LE(?), n.v.; isotypes: B , n.v., BM, fragment R, K, US, photo NY neg. 9148).
Epiphytic or terrestrial shrub to 1-2.5 m tall;
stem base 1-5 cm in diam.; mature branches terete, striate, glabrous,
reddish-brown; bark reddish-brown; twigs terete or more commonly
bluntly angled, smooth or striate, glabrous, reddish-brown or tan.
Leaves subcoriaceous, bullate, elliptic, lance-elliptic, or lanceolate,
rarely ovate, (3.5-)6-11(-14) x (1-)1.5-4(-5) cm, basally acute or obtuse
or rounded and short-atenuate, usually somewhat short-decurrent on petiole,
apically acuminate or caudate-acuminate, nitid, glabrous; 5(-7)-lpinerved,
midrib and lateral nerves deeply impressed above but raised and very conspicuous
beneath, veinlets raised or impressed and very conspicuous above, plane
or slightly raised and often obscure beneath; petioles terete or
subterete, smooth, minutely striate or somewhat rugose, (3-)5-7(-9) mm
long and 1-1.5 mm in diam., sparsely puberulous or glabrous when immature
but glabrous at maturity. Inflorescence (8-)12-20(-25)-flowered;
rachis subterete or bluntly angled, minutely striate, glabrous, 2-5(-6)
cm long and 1-2 mm in diam., pinkish-green at anthesis but turning pale
green or reddish; floral bracts smooth, conduplicate and slightly
keeled, ascending with respect to rachis, oblong, elliptic, or lanceolate,
10-25 x 5-10 mm, glabrous, basally slightly clasping the rachis, apically
acute, marginally glandular-fimbriate, pink or red; pedicels swollen distally,
often coarsely striate or rugose, glabrous, (5-)8-16(-19) mm long (usually
8-11 mm at anthesis) and 0.5-1 mm in diam., pinkish-green at anthesis but
turning pale green or red; bracteoles basal, lanceolate, oblong,
or linear-lanceolate rarely ovate, 1-2.5(-5) x 0.5-1(-2) mm, apically acute
or obtuse, marginally glandular-fimbriate, pink or red. Flowers:
calyx often slightly stipitate at anthesis, glabrous, 2.5-5 mm long;
hypanthium cylindric but pentagonal in cross-section with broad, blunt
angles, smooth or rugose, 1.5-2 mm long, nonapophysate, green or pinkish-green
at anthesis but turning green or red; limb cylindric, slightly spreading
or campanulate, 2-3.5 mm long, orangish- to reddish-green at anthesis;
lobes ovate or oblong, bluntly apiculate, 1-1.5 x 15-2 mm, connivent after
anthesis, marginally thin lacerate-glandular, secreting a translucent filmy
layer between lobes when in bud, orangish- or reddish-green; sinuses
acute; corolla bottle-shaped and bluntly 5-angled when fresh, slightly
constricted basally and narrowing to throat, glabrous, 7-11(-13) mm long
and 3-6(-7) mm in diam. at widest point, tube whitish at constricted base
then orange or reddish-orange through the middle half and with white limb
and lobes, lobes ca. 1 mm long, slightly flaring but not reflexed at anthesis;
stamens alternately 5.5-7.5 mm and 8-9.5 mm long; filaments alternately
1.5-2(-3.5) mm and (2.5-)3.5-5 mm long, the short ones glabrous, the long
ones with short, stout trichomes distally; anthers alternately (4.5-)5.5-7.5
mm and (3.5-)5-6.5 mm long; thecae 1.5-3 mm long; style 8.5-11
mm long. Berry 7-11 mm in diam.
Distribution (Map). Costa Rica to western Panama (Prov. Chiriquí) and in the Cordillera Occidental (Valle and Nariño Depts.) of Colombia, in rain forest and montane cloud forest, or disturbed areas along trails or roadsides, at elevations of 400-1830(-2350) m. It flowers and fruits sporadically throughout the year.
Local names. Costa Rica: colmillo (San José). Colombia: quereme (Valle).
Uses. Plants of this species are cultivated
locally in Cauca and Valle Depts., Colombia, and are sold in markets in
Cali (Valle Dept.). I have also been told by local residents (Colombia)
that bouquets of flowering twigs are exchanged between young people as
tokens of their affection. García-Barriga (1975) stated that
in Valle Dept. a decoction is made from this species to remove the salicylic
acid which is then taken or applied to relieve toothaches and rheumatism.