Stanhopea tigrina Bateman ex Lindl. - Orchidaceae - tiger-spotted stanhopea, **Getigerte Stanhopea** Spectacular epiphytic orchid, endemic to Mexico; flowers in groups of 2-4 in a pendulous inflorescence up to 15 cm long; marked with distinctive purplish-brown streaks and stripes on a yellowish background; heavily scented. \\ "Pollination is by male euglossine bees (also known as orchid bees), which collect floral fragrance compounds from the lip of the flowers." \\ [[http://powo.science.kew.org/taxon/urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:658613-1]] The genus of Stanhopea (occurring throughout much of the Neotropics from northwestern Mexico to southeastern Brazil) was used as a detailed example of the variation and species specificity in floral fragrance composition. Components of the floral fragrance (adsorbed at a Tenax tube and desorbed with microdistillation) of S.tigrina were p-cymene (2.0%), phenylethanol (6.5%), benzyl acetate (1.0%), phenylethyl acetate (69.4%), indole (3.4%), (Z?)-cinnamyl acetate (1.0%), and (E?)-cinnamyl acetate (15.8%). \\ [Williams, Norris H., and W. Mark Whitten. "Orchid floral fragrances and male euglossine bees: methods and advances in the last sesquidecade." The Biological Bulletin 164.3 (1983): 355-395] |{{:phenylethylacetate.jpg|2-phenylethyl acetate}} \\ 2-phenylethyl acetate | {{:coumarin.jpg|coumarin}} \\ coumarin | {{:raspberry_ketone.jpg|raspberry ketone}} \\ raspberry ketone | {{:vanillin.jpg| vanillin}} \\ vanillin | "Its diffusive, 'aromatic-spicy-floral' scent is extremly sweet. One would not expect to contain more than 90% phenylethyl acetate; in fact, it is difficult even to detect this well-knwon substance in the scent... the unusual accord is attributeable to minor constituents accompaning phenylethyl acetate, in particular β-ionone and derivatives, coumarin, p-hydroxy phenylbutanone (raspberry ketone), and vanillin." \\ The accord of raspberry ketone with vanilline and coumarin is extremly heavy and probably unique among orchid scents. \\ [R.Kaiser, The scent of orchids, Basel 1993, 80-81 and 244] Main component of the headspace of S.tigrina flowers was phenylethyl acetate (87-93%), minor components were e.g. benzyl acetate (1.4-3.2%), (E)-cinnamyl acetate (0-6.4%), phenylethyl alcohol (0.7-1.5%), methyl salicylate (0.2-1.6%), indole (0-1.4%), and vanillin (0-0.2%). \\ [Gerlach, Günter. "Stanhopeinae Mesoamericanae, V. El aroma floral de las Stanhopeas de Mexico." Lankesteriana International Journal on Orchidology 9.3 (2009)] [[http://www.redalyc.org/pdf/443/44339819008.pdf]] {{:stanhopea_tigrina.jpg}} Stanhopea tigrina Bateman ex Lindl. \\ Lindenia, Iconographie des orchidées [E. von Lindemann], Plates 49-96, vol.2 t.51 (1886) [P. de Pannemaeker] \\ [[http://plantillustrations.org/species.php?id_species=971681]] {{:stanhopea_tigrina2012.jpg}} \\ Stanhopea tigrina [[https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/de/|CC BY-SA 3.0]], Author: [[https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Orchi|Orchi]] [[https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Stanhopea_tigrina_Orchi_2012-07-28_003.jpg|Wikimedia Commons]]