Wiki/Nepenthes/Nepenthes spectabilis

Nepenthes spectabilis

highlandintermediate Wikipedia

Shawn Mayes · CC BY-SA 3.0

About

A notable tropical pitcher plant, *Nepenthes spectabilis*, is characterized by its climbing habit and the striking contrast between its light green, speckled pitchers and the dark brown speckling. It is endemic to Sumatra and is known for its considerable morphological variation across different populations.

Field notes

Morphology

The plant is a climbing species with stems reaching up to 6 m and up to 7 mm in diameter. Leaves are coriaceous and sessile, with oblong laminae up to 16 cm long by 6 cm wide. Lower pitchers are narrowly ovoid to cylindrical, growing up to 12 cm in height and 4 cm in width, featuring a waxy zone and a round, flat mouth. Upper pitchers are much larger, reaching 26 cm in height and 4.5 cm in width, and have a steeply oblique mouth. The peristome is cylindrical, and the operculum has a strongly cordate base and a very long, unbranched spur (up to 30 mm).

Distribution & habitat

Endemic to Sumatra, with a natural range stretching from the Lake Toba region to Mount Kemiri. It grows at elevations between 1,400 and 2,200 m above sea level, typically in mossy forest and stunted upper montane forest.

Ecology

The plant traps prey using both lower and upper pitchers. Observations indicate that the majority of prey consists of beetles, and the pitchers also contain infaunal mosquito larvae. It is found growing terrestrially and may also be epiphytic, often in Sphagnum moss.

History & etymology

The first known collection was made by Julius August Lörzing in 1920. B. H. Danser formally described *Nepenthes spectabilis* in his 1928 monograph, designating Lörzing 7308 as the type specimen. The specific epithet spectabilis is Latin for "visible" or "notable".

Conservation

The species is listed as Vulnerable on the 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species due to its patchy distribution.

Habitat

Altitude
1,400–2,200 m
Altitude Class
highland
Native To
Indonesia
IUCN Status
Vulnerable

Taxonomy

Described
1928
Authority
Danser

Cultivation

Difficulty
intermediate
Temperature
Day 18–25°C / Night 10–18°C
Humidity
75–90%

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